I'm building a Web API with ASP.NET Core 2.1. I have controllers that user can access through HTTP requests. Controllers then call service classes. I'm trying to inject my DbContext to my custom service class but whenever I do that I get response 500 from server. In my startup class i have
services.AddDbContext<CatalogueContext>(options => options.UseSqlServer(_config.GetConnectionString("DefaultConnection")));
If I put like this in controller class everything works
private readonly ITrackServices _service;
private readonly CatalogueContext _dbContext;
public TrackController(ITrackServices service, CatalogueContext dbContext)
{
_service = service;
_dbContext = dbContext;
}
But I don't want to inject dbContext to controller. If I delete that injection from controller and try same thing in my service class like this
private readonly CatalogueContext _dbContext;
public TrackService(CatalogueContext dbContext)
{
_dbContext = dbContext;
}
it doesn't work. So when ever I try to access endpoint that uses TrackService I get 500 from server.
TrackService
is registered as a singleton:
services.AddSingleton<ITrackServices, TrackService>();
I don't know what I'm doing wrong. Should I implement some interface on TrackService to enable dependency injection or what?
services.AddScoped<ITrackService, TrackService>()
Exception.ToString()
. That includes any inner exceptions and the call stack that led to the exception. This will show what the actual problem is. An unregistered depencency? Or an ObjectDisposedException that's probably caused becauseITrackServices
is a singleton when the DbContext is scoped?