Maybe this question has some explanation around but could not find the best solution to this:
I was reading this blog post from Mark Seemann about the captive dependencies and as far as I understand at the end of the post he comes to conclusion never use or at least try to avoid the captive dependencies otherwise there will be troubles (so far is OK). Here is another post from Autofac documentation.
They suggest using captive dependencies only by purpose (when you know what you are doing!). This made me think about a situation I have on my website. I have like 10 services, all of them rely on DbContext
for database operations. I think they could easily be registered as InstancePerLifetimeScope
if I fix the problem for DbContext
not to hold it forever in memory attached to my services. (I am using Autofac in my case). So, I thought a good starting point would be to create all of these as per lifetime instances and the DbContext
as instance per request. Then in my services, I would use something like that:
public class MyService
{
private readonly IDbContext _dbContext = DependencyResolver.Current.GetService<IDbContext>();
private MyModel GetMyModel() => Mapper.Map<MyModel>(_dbContext.MyTable.FirstOrDefault());
}
And then in my startup class I have:
builder.RegisterType<ApplicationDbContext>().As<IDbContext>().InstancePerRequest();
builder.RegisterType<MyService>().As<IMyService>().InstancePerLifetimeScope();
Does this pattern work correctly, I mean not keeping the dbContext
forever attached to any service, so it will be disposed at the end of the request and if it works, is there any performance issue from this line:
private readonly IDbContext _dbContext = DependencyResolver.Current.GetService<IDbContext>();
compared to constructor injection(There are many invocations from dbContext to database so I am afraid to get IDbContext
every time I want to use it because it might be resource consuming) ?
The reason I want dbContext
to be instance per request and not instance per dependency is that I have implemented the unit of work pattern on top of the dbContext
object.
A normal method in my controller would look like:
public ActionResult DoSth()
{
using(var unitOfWork = UnitOfWorkManager.NewUnitOfWork())
{
//do stuff
try
{
unitOfWork.Commit();
return View();
}
catch(Exception e)
{
unitOfWork.RollBack();
LoggerService.Log(e);
return View();
}
}
}
If this works fine then there is another issue I am concerned of. So, if I can make my services as instances per lifetime (except DbContext), is there any issue to apply async-await on every method inside of the services to make them non-blocking methods. I am asking this if there is any issue using async-await for the dbContext
instance, so, for example, I would have something like this:
public async MyModel GetMyModel()
{
var result = //await on a new task which will use dbcontext instance here
return Mapper.Map<MyModel>(result);
}
Any advice or suggestion is much appreciated!
MyService
example is using Service Locator as apposed explicit dependency principle.MyService
depends on ondbContext
and is registered with a longer lifetime thandbContext
thendbContext
is effectively registered with the longer lifetime with respect toMyService
. e.g. IfdbContext
is per request andMyService
is a singleton thendbContext
is captured and effectively a singleton with the respect toMyService
DependencyResolver.Current.GetService<IDbContext>
is an implementation of the Service Locator anti-pattern (Mark's blog). You should always prefer Constructor Injection.