In a MVC3-application with Ninject.MVC 2.2.0.3 (after merge), instead of injecting repostories directly into controllers I'm trying to make a service-layer that contain the businesslogic and inject the repostories there. I pass the ninject-DependencyResolver to the service-layer as a dynamic object (since I don't want to reference mvc nor ninject there). Then I call GetService on it to get repositories with the bindings and lifetimes I specify in NinjectHttpApplicationModule. EDIT: In short, it failed.
How can the IoC-container be passed to the service-layer in this case? (Different approaches are also very welcome.)
EDIT: Here is an example to illustrate how I understand the answer and comments.
I should avoid the service locator (anti-)pattern and instead use dependency injection. So lets say I want to create an admin-site for Products and Categories in Northwind. I create models, repositories, services, controllers and views according to the table-definitions. The services call directly to the repositories at this point, no logic there. I have pillars of functionality and the views show raw data. These bindings are configured for NinjectMVC3:
private static void RegisterServices(IKernel kernel)
{
kernel.Bind<ICategoryRepository>().To<CategoryRepository>();
kernel.Bind<IProductRepository>().To<ProductRepository>();
}
Repository-instances are created by ninject via two layers of constructor injection, in the ProductController:
private readonly ProductsService _productsService;
public ProductController(ProductsService productsService)
{
// Trimmed for this post: nullchecks with throw ArgumentNullException
_productsService = productsService;
}
and ProductsService:
protected readonly IProductRepository _productRepository;
public ProductsService(IProductRepository productRepository)
{
_productRepository = productRepository;
}
I have no need to decouple the services for now but have prepared for mocking the db.
To show a dropdown of categories in Product/Edit I make a ViewModel that holds the categories in addition to the Product:
public class ProductViewModel
{
public Product Product { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<Category> Categories { get; set; }
}
The ProductsService now needs a CategoriesRepository to create it.
private readonly ICategoryRepository _categoryRepository;
// Changed constructor to take the additional repository
public ProductsServiceEx(IProductRepository productRepository,
ICategoryRepository categoryRepository)
{
_productRepository = productRepository;
_categoryRepository = categoryRepository;
}
public ProductViewModel GetProductViewModel(int id)
{
return new ProductViewModel
{
Product = _productRepository.GetById(id),
Categories = _categoryRepository.GetAll().ToArray(),
};
}
I change the GET Edit-action to return View(_productsService.GetProductViewModel(id));
and the Edit-view to show a dropdown:
@model Northwind.BLL.ProductViewModel
...
@Html.DropDownListFor(pvm => pvm.Product.CategoryId, Model.Categories
.Select(c => new SelectListItem{Text = c.Name, Value = c.Id.ToString(), Selected = c.Id == Model.Product.CategoryId}))
One small problem with this, and the reason I went astray with Service Locator, is that none of the other action-methods in ProductController need the categories-repository. I feel it's a waste and not logical to create it unless needed. Am I missing something?
You don't need to pass the object around you can do something like this
// global.aspx
So in this one I setup all the ninject stuff. I make a kernal with 3 files to split up all my binding so it is easy to find.
In my service layer class you just pass in the interfaces you want. This service class is in it's own project folder where I keep all my service layer classes and has no reference to the ninject library.
// service.cs
This is how my ServiceModule looks like(what is created in the global.aspx)
Seee how I bind the interface to the repo. Now every time it see that interface it will automatically bind the the Repo class to it. So you don't need to pass the object around or anything.
You don't need worry about importing .dll into your service layer. For instance I have my service classes in their own project file and everything you see above(expect the service class of course) is in my webui project(where my views and global.aspx is).
Ninject does not care if the service is in a different project since I guess it is being referenced in the webui project.
Edit
Forgot to give you the NinjectDependecyResolver