Here is an example on how you can implement a DbContextFactory
or a DbContextProxy<T>
which will create the correct provider and return it.
public interface IDbContextFactory
{
ApplicationContext Create();
}
public class DbContextFactory() : IDbContextFactory, IDisposable
{
private ApplicationContext context;
private bool disposing;
public DbContextFactory()
{
}
public ApplicationContext Create()
{
if(this.context==null)
{
// Get this value from some configuration
string providerType = ...;
// and the connection string for the database
string connectionString = ...;
var dbContextBuilder = new DbContextOptionsBuilder();
if(providerType == "MSSQL")
{
dbContextBuilder.UseSqlServer(connectionString);
}
else if(providerType == "Sqlite")
{
dbContextBuilder.UseSqlite(connectionString);
}
else
{
throw new InvalidOperationException("Invalid providerType");
}
this.context = new ApplicationContext(dbContextBuilder);
}
return this.context;
}
public void Dispose(){
Dispose(true);
GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
}
protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing){
if (disposing){
disposing?.Dispose();
}
}
}
Also make sure you implement the disposable pattern as show above, so the context gets disposed as soon as the factory gets disposed, to prevent the DbContext remaining in memory longer than necessary and free unmanaged resources as soon as possible.
Finally register the factory as scoped, as you would the context itself:
services.AddScopedd<IDbContextFactory, DbContextFactory>();
A more advanced and generic/extendable approach is by creating a IDbContextProxy<T>
class which uses a bit of reflection to get the correct constructor and the DbContextOptionsBuilder
to it.
Also possible to create a IDbContextBuilder
which abstracts the provider creation.
public class SqlServerDbContextBuilder IDbContextBuilder
{
public bool CanHandle(string providerType) => providerType == "SqlServer";
public T CreateDbContext<T>(connectionString)
{
T context = ... // Create the context here
return context;
}
}
Then you can pick the correct provider w/o a hard coded if/else
or switch
block just by doing
// Inject "IEnumerable<IDbContextBuilder> builders" via constructor
var providerType = "SqlServer";
var builder = builders.Where(builder => builder.CanHandle(providerType)).First();
var context = builder.CreateDbContext<ApplicationContext>(connectionString);
and adding new types of provider is as easy as adding the dependencies and an XxxDbContextBuilder
class.
See here, here or here for more information about this and similar approaches.
AddDbContext
in startup and resolve your DB Context via an abstract factory which reads a configuration value and choose the right provider and constructs it manually, but then you'll need to manage its lifetime yourself (i.e. disposing it) – Tseng Nov 19 '16 at 0:03