3

I'm trying to resolve a mixed open-closed generic type with constraints using Castle Windsor. This should be able to resolve any open generics if Foo implements IFoo<>:

container.Register(Component.For(typeof(IFoo<>).ImplementedBy(typeof(Foo<>)));

My situation is slightly more complex:

I have the following Handler class:

public abstract class CommandHandlerBase<TCommand, TResponse>
    : IRequestHandler<TCommand, TResponse>
    where TCommand : IRequest<TResponse>
{
    public abstract Task<TResponse> Handle(
        TCommand request, CancellationToken cancellationToken);
}

public class AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler<TNewEntityData>
    : IRequestHandler<TNewEntityData, Response>
    where TNewEntityData : IRequest<Response>
{
    public Task<Response> Handle(
        TNewEntityData request, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
    {
       // ...
    }
}

The idea is that AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler will be a generic command handler that can handle any type of contract of type TNewEntityData.

Since I'm using Mediatr, my contracts have to implement IRequest<,>, which they do. In this case, I'm enforcing that all the handlers should return a Response.

Example usage:

Response response = await mediator.Send(new AddMasterDataEntityCommand<NewPlace>());

I created a simple console app to isolate this behavior:

    public static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        var container = new WindsorContainer();

        container.Register(Types.FromThisAssembly()
                                .BasedOn(typeof(IRequestHandler<,>))
                                .Unless(t => t.IsAbstract || t.IsInterface)
                                .WithServices(typeof(IRequestHandler<,>))
                                .LifestyleTransient());

        var instance = container.Resolve(typeof(IRequestHandler<NewData, Response>));
    }

However, a test throws an exception indicating an error in my code:

Castle.MicroKernel.Handlers.GenericHandlerTypeMismatchException: 'Types ConsoleApp4.NewData, ConsoleApp4.Response don't satisfy generic constraints of implementation type ConsoleApp4.AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler'1 of component 'ConsoleApp4.AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler'1'. This is most likely a bug in your code.'

I don't see the issue here, CW should be able to resolve open/closed generics, right? Furthermore, the problem seems to be related to the additional Response parameter as a TResponse type. Did I register the component the wrong way? I'm confident I didn't mess up the generic constraints...

Thanks in advance to anyone who can take a look.

5
  • 1
    It appears that NewData does not implement IRequest<Response>. Jan 14, 2019 at 21:55
  • does it work when you go new AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler<NewData>()? Jan 15, 2019 at 4:10
  • @PhilDegenhardt NewData does implement IRequest<Response>
    – rumblefx0
    Jan 15, 2019 at 15:08
  • @KrzysztofKozmic Yes, constructing it manually does work.
    – rumblefx0
    Jan 15, 2019 at 15:10
  • 1
    Complicated open generic components are tricky to support so you may have hit an edge case. There's a hook to manually handle that: IGenericImplementationMatchingStrategy which may help. See this for example: kozmic.net/2013/07/24/… Jan 16, 2019 at 3:26

1 Answer 1

1

Krzysztof Kozmic led me into the right direction:

I initially tried an implementation with IGenericImplementationMatchingStrategy but couldn't get this working to it only being able to handle a type with one generic. I ended up registering like this with a bit of reflection magic:

private void RegisterGenericMasterDataCommandHandlers(IWindsorContainer container) {
    foreach (Type contractType in contractTypes) {
        Type requestedType = typeof(IRequestHandler<,>).MakeGenericType(typeof(AddMasterDataEntityCommand<>).MakeGenericType(contractType), typeof(Response));
        Type implementedType = typeof(AddMasterDataEntityCommandHandler<>).MakeGenericType(contractType);

        container.Register(Component.For(requestedType, implementedType));
    }
}
2
  • 1
    can you fill in the complete code like what contractTypes is...
    – Denis
    Oct 21, 2021 at 15:25
  • I don't have access to this code anymore since I left the company since I posted this question, but I believe contractTypes was the list of request types. Basically you can construct the types such as IRequestHandler<AddMasterDataEntityCommand<SomeEntity>,Response> at runtime. SomEntity is the contractType in this case.
    – rumblefx0
    Mar 16, 2022 at 11:48

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