I tend to split the layers out into several projects/DLLs even for small projects. For one thing, it helps keep your separation of concerns - for example, if your business layer has no way to talk to the database, but can only talk to your repository project, then you're guaranteed that you will go through the appropriate path.
With that same concept, you can expose interfaces from layer-to-layer, without exposing the underlying classes. This helps you code by contract, since one layer cannot talk directly to a class in another layer, but has to use its interface, which is connected through an IoC library like Ninject.
As your project grows, it's also nice to have them separate, if you have multiple developers working on a project. You can have a front-end dev, a service dev, a database dev, etc., who will never conflict with each other because they're working on entirely different projects.
EDIT
Regarding the comment:
1) You can still use interfaces within a layer, with DI. A simple example would be:
public interface IUserManager{}
internal class UserManager : IUserManager{}
public interface ICustomerManager{}
internal class CustomerManager : ICustomerManager {
private readonly IUserManager _userManager;
public CustomerManager(IUserManager userManager) {
// DI library automatically populates this object
_userManager = userManager;
}
void SomeMethod() {
var user = _userManager.GetUser(42);
}
}
2) I'd say if you go to the trouble of working with interfaces, then use them all the time and don't give yourself the option not to. For example:
// Repository project
public interface IUserRepository{}
internal class UserRepository : IRepository{}
The business project only knows about the IUserRepository
, not the UserRepository
, so there's no way it can ever get a direct reference. Another alternative is to keep your interfaces and your implementations in two separate projects, and the caller would only have a direct reference to the interfaces project.
It just keeps you honest.
But if you have no reason to use interfaces at all - for example, if you have no intention of ever mocking out your database or switching to a different layer which implements the same interface - then I'd just say leave them out completely. Only code with interfaces if it offers you some kind of potential benefit, otherwise you're just adding complexity for no reason.