Dependency Injection with Ninject, MVC 3 and using the Service Locator Pattern

瘦欲@ 提交于 2019-11-30 06:49:35

Consider the following:

public class MyClass
{
  IMyInterface _myInterface;
  IMyOtherInterface _myOtherInterface;

  public MyClass(IMyInterface myInterface, IMyOtherInterface myOtherInterface)
  {
    // Foo

    _myInterface = myInterface;
    _myOtherInterface = myOtherInterface;
  }
}

With this design I am able to express the dependency requirements for my type. The type itself isn't responsible for knowing how to instantiate any of the dependencies, they are given to it (injected) by whatever resolving mechanism is used [typically an IoC container]. Whereas:

public class MyClass
{
  IMyInterface _myInterface;
  IMyOtherInterface _myOtherInterface;

  public MyClass()
  {
    // Bar

    _myInterface = ServiceLocator.Resolve<IMyInterface>();
    _myOtherInterface = ServiceLocator.Resolve<IMyOtherInterface>();
  }
}

Our class is now dependent on creating the specfic instances, but via delegation to a service locator. In this sense, Service Location can be considered an anti-pattern because you're not exposing dependencies, but you are allowing problems which can be caught through compilation to bubble up into runtime. (A good read is here). You hiding complexities.

The choice between one or the other really depends on what your building on top of and the services it provides. Typically if you are building an application from scratch, I would choose DI all the time. It improves maintainability, promotes modularity and makes testing types a whole lot easier. But, taking ASP.NET MVC3 as an example, you could easily implement SL as its baked into the design.

You can always go for a composite design where you could use IoC/DI with SL, much like using the Common Services Locator. You component parts could be wired up through DI, but exposed through SL. You could even throw composition into the mix and use something like the Managed Extensibility Framework (which itself supports DI, but can also be wired to other IoC containers or service locators). It's a big design choice to make, generally my recommendation would be for IoC/DI where possible.

Your specific design I wouldn't say is wrong. In this instance, your code is not responsible for creating an instance of the model binder itself, that's up to the framework so you have no control over that but your use of the service locator could probably be easily changed to access an IoC container. But the action of calling resolve on the IoC container...would you not consider that service location?

With an abstract factory pattern the factory is specialised at creating specific types. You don't register types for resolution, you essentially register an abstract factory and that builds any types that you may require. With a Service Locator it is designed to locate services and return those instances. Similar from an convention point of view, but very different in behaviour.

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