Latest approach says about injecting DbContext
instance right to the MVC\WebAPI controller. It has a number of pros but I have one question which is not answered yet - performance of the DbContext
instance creation which will not be used.
According to this question: What happens when i instantiate a class derived from EF DbContext? DbContext
creation is not so cheap operation (both memory and CPU). And it's twice bad when:
- Your action doesn't need the DbContext at all (so you have a mix actions which use and not use the DB)
- Some logic (e.g. conditions) doesn't allow to access the
DbContext
(e.q.ModelState.IsValid
). So action will return result BEFORE access to theDbContext
instance.
So in both (an maybe some other cases) DI creates a scoped instance of the DbContext
, wastes resources on it and then just collect it at the end of the request.
I didn't make any performance tests, just googled for some articles firsts. I don't say that it will be 100% lack of the performance. I just thought: "hey man, why have you created the instance of the object if I will not use it at all".