The examples I've seen in the Unity documentation have you specifying the lifetime manager by putting new LifetimeManager()
inline. So I have this code:
container.RegisterType<ApplicationDbContext>(new PerRequestLifetimeManager());
container.RegisterType<IUserStore<ApplicationUser>, UserStore<ApplicationUser>>(new PerRequestLifetimeManager(),
new InjectionConstructor(typeof (ApplicationDbContext)));
container.RegisterType<UserManager<ApplicationUser>>(new PerRequestLifetimeManager());
Fine, but I wonder why I'm creating so many instances. Is there any reason why I shouldn't write it like this instead?
var lifetimeManager = new PerRequestLifetimeManager();
container.RegisterType<ApplicationDbContext>(lifetimeManager);
container.RegisterType<IUserStore<ApplicationUser>, UserStore<ApplicationUser>>(lifetimeManager,
new InjectionConstructor(typeof (ApplicationDbContext)));
container.RegisterType<UserManager<ApplicationUser>>(lifetimeManager);
It seems obvious but reading through the PDF all the examples are in the former style without comment so I'm wondering if I'm not understanding something about how it works.