It is possible but you need to apply some workarounds. First you need to register each IParser with a name in the Unity Container. Second you need to register a mapping from IParser[] to IEnumerable<IParser> in the container. Otherwise the container cannot inject the parsers to the constructor. Here´s how i have done it before.
IUnityContainer container = new UnityContainer();
container.RegisterType<IParser, SuperParser>("SuperParser");
container.RegisterType<IParser, DefaultParser>("DefaultParser");
container.RegisterType<IParser, BasicParser>("BasicParser");
container.RegisterType<IEnumerable<IParser>, IParser[]>();
container.RegisterType<Crawler>();
Crawler crawler = container.Resolve<Crawler>();
I have discarded this solution by introducing a factory, that encapsulates unity to construct the needed types. Here´s how i would do it in your case.
public interface IParserFactory{
IEnumerable<IParser> BuildParsers();
}
public class UnityParserFactory : IParserFactory {
private IUnityContainer _container;
public UnityParserFactory(IUnityContainer container){
_container = container;
}
public IEnumerable<IParser> BuildParsers() {
return _container.ResolveAll<IParser>();
}
}
public class Crawler {
public Crawler(IParserFactory parserFactory) {
// init here...
}
}
With this you can register the types as follows:
IUnityContainer container = new UnityContainer();
container.RegisterType<IParser, SuperParser>();
container.RegisterType<IParser, DefaultParser>();
container.RegisterType<IParser, BasicParser>();
container.RegisterType<IParserFactory, UnityParserFactory>();
Crawler crawler = container.Resolve<Crawler>();