It's hard to tell whether this is an applicable solution without seeing your code, but if you have a DI-friendly app architecture you can implement an interceptor and have your favorite IoC container emit the appropriate type for you, at run-time.
Esoteric? A little. Consider an interface like this:
public interface ISomeService
{
IEnumerable<SomeEntity> GetSomeEntities();
// ...
}
This interface might be implemented like this:
public class SomeService : ISomeService
{
private readonly DbContext _context // this is a dependency!
private readonly IQueryTweaker _tweaker; // this is a dependency!
public SomeService(DbContext context, IQueryTweaker tweaker) // this is constructor injection!
{
_context = context;
_tweaker = tweaker;
}
public IEnumerable<SomeEntity> GetSomeEntities()
{
return _tweaker.TweakTheQuery(_context.SomeEntities).ToList();
}
}
Every time you implement a method of the ISomeService
interface, there's always a call to _tweaker.TweakTheQuery()
that wraps the IQueryable
, and that not only gets boring, it also feels like something is missing a feature - the same feeling you'd get by wrapping every one of these calls inside a try
/catch
block, or if you're familiar with MVVM in WPF, by raising this annoying PropertyChanged
event for every single property setter in your ViewModel.
With DI Interception, you factor this requirement out of your "normal" code and into an "interceptor": you basically tell the IoC container that instead of binding ISomeService
directly to the SomeService
implementation, you're going to be decorating it with an interceptor, and emit another type, perhaps SomeInterceptedService
(the name is irrelevant, the actual type only exists at run-time) which "injects" the desired behavior into the desired methods. Simple? Not exactly.
If you haven't designed your code with DI in mind (are your dependencies "injected" into your classes' constructor?), it could mean a major refactoring.
The first step breaks your code: remove the IQueryTweaker
dependency and all the TweakTheQuery
calls from all ISomeService
implementations, to make them look like this - notice the virtual
ness of the method to be intercepted:
public class SomeService : ISomeService
{
private readonly DbContext _context
public SomeService(DbContext context)
{
_context = context;
}
public virtual IEnumerable<SomeEntity> GetSomeEntities()
{
return _context.SomeEntities.ToList();
}
}
The next step is to configure the IoC container so that it knows to inject the SomeService
implementation whenever a type's constructor requires an ISomeService
:
_kernel.Bind<ISomeService>().To<SomeService>();
At that point you're ready to configure the interception - if using Ninject this could help.
But before jumping into that rabbit's hole you should read this article which shows how decorator and interceptor are related.
The key point is, you're not intercepting anything that's internal to LINQ to SQL or the .NET framework itself - you're intercepting your own method calls, wrapping them with your own code, and with a little bit of help from any decent IoC container, you'll be intercepting the calls to methods that call upon Linq to SQL, rather than the direct calls to Linq to SQL itself. Essentially the IQueryTweaker
dependency becomes a dependency of your interceptor class, and you'll only code its usage once.
An interesting thing about DI interception, is that interceptors can be combined, so you can have a ExecutionTimerServiceInterceptor
on top of a AuditServiceInterceptor
, on top of a CircuitBreakerServiceInterceptor
... and the best part is that you can configure your IoC container so that you can completely forget it exists and, as you add more service classes to the application, all you need to do is follow a naming convention you've defined and voilà, you've just written a service that not only accomplishes all the strictly data-related tasks you've just coded, but also a service that will disable itself for 3 minutes if the database server is down, and will remain disabled until it's back up; that service also logs all inserts, updates and deletes, and stores its execution time in a database for performance analysis. The term automagical seems appropriate.
This technique - interception - can be used to address cross-cutting concerns; another way to address those is through AOP, although some articles (and Mark Seeman's excellent Dependency Injection in .NET) clearly demonstrate how AOP frameworks are a less ideal solution over DI interception.