I am trying to abstract any connection information away from my ApplicationDbContext class so that I can take advantage of different databases for development, staging, production. I start by registering a service from Startup.cs
services.AddDbContext<ApplicationDbContext>(options =>
options.UseSqlServer(Configuration.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection")));
My ApplicationDbContext class:
public class ApplicationDbContext : IdentityDbContext<ApplicationUser>
{
public ApplicationDbContext(DbContextOptions<ApplicationDbContext> options)
: base(options)
{
}
protected override void OnModelCreating(ModelBuilder builder)
{
base.OnModelCreating(builder);
}
}
When running this application I get the following error:
InvalidOperationException: Could not create an instance of type 'SquadApps.Data.ApplicationDbContext'. Model bound complex types must not be abstract or value types and must have a parameterless constructor.
So naturally I tried adding a parameterless constructor
public ApplicationDbContext() { }
Now getting another error:
InvalidOperationException: No database provider has been configured for this DbContext. A provider can be configured by overriding the DbContext.OnConfiguring method or by using AddDbContext on the application service provider. If AddDbContext is used, then also ensure that your DbContext type accepts a DbContextOptions object in its constructor and passes it to the base constructor for DbContext.
If I go back to having a connection string stored in the ApplicationDbContext class like so:
protected override void OnConfiguring(DbContextOptionsBuilder optionsBuilder)
{
optionsBuilder.UseSqlServer("........");
}
Then everything works fine but obviously this is not ideal and probably a bad practice. I think there is something i'm missing about the DI process and any suggestions or advice would be appreciated.