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I'm currently looking to add PostSharp logging (and possibly other custom aspects) to an ASP.NET Core API project. The problem I'm running into is that we have a multitenant design where the tenant info is stored in the user claims, and there doesn't seem to be a good way to get at the current session from a PostSharp aspect, so there doesn't seem to be a good way to access the proper tenant's database.

Am I just barking up the wrong tree? Is there a different AOP framework I should be looking at?

1 Answer 1

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For completeness' sake, here's the solution I came up with, which uses both PostSharp and AutoFac.

PostSharp aspects can create properties on classes that they're applied to at compile time. Using AutoFac's InjectUnsetProperties function, we can inject properly-scoped members into these classes even if we don't know about them at compile time.

So, we set up our PostSharp aspect:

    [PSerializable]
    public class LoggingAspect : OnMethodBoundaryAspect, IInstanceScopedAspect
    {
        [IntroduceMember(Visibility = Visibility.Public, OverrideAction = MemberOverrideAction.Ignore)]
        [CopyCustomAttributes(typeof(ImportMemberAttribute))]
        public IInjectedObject InjectedObject { get; set; }

        [ImportMember("InjectedObject", IsRequired = true)]
        public Property<IInjectedObject> InjectedObjectProperty;

        public override void OnEntry(MethodExecutionArgs args)
        {
            var data = InjectedObjectProperty.Get().MyData;

            Debug.Print($"OnEntry: {args.Method.Name}, Data: {data}\n");
        }

        public object CreateInstance(AdviceArgs adviceArgs)
        {
            return MemberwiseClone();
        }

        public void RuntimeInitializeInstance()
        {
        }
    }

then register the service that we want to use the aspect on in our Startup method:

public IServiceProvider ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
    services.AddMvc().SetCompatibilityVersion(CompatibilityVersion.Version_2_2);

    var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
    builder.Populate(services);

    builder.RegisterType<TestService>().As<ITestService>()
        .InstancePerLifetimeScope()
        .OnActivated(e => e.Context.InjectUnsetProperties(e.Instance))
        ;
    builder.RegisterType<InjectedObject>().As<IInjectedObject>()
        .InstancePerLifetimeScope()
        ;

    var container = builder.Build();

    return new AutofacServiceProvider(container);
}

and add the aspect to the method we want to log:

public class TestService : ITestService
{
    public TestService()
    {
        Debug.Print("TestService ctor\n");
    }

    private int _myData = 100;

    [LoggingAspect]
    public int GetData()
    {
        return _myData++;
    }
}

When the service is created during a request, a new one is created scoped to that request, and it gets a new IInjectedObject stuck into it which is also scoped to the request, even though the IInjectedObject property doesn't appear in our source code.

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