How to build a graph of resolved instances with Autofac?










0















After all registrations, I am doing ContainerBuilder.RegisterCallback and subscribing to all IComponentRegistration.Preparing and IComponentRegistration.Activating events to be able to handle all activations. With this two events I am able to build a tree, the order of events looks like this:



  • Preparing: Root

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_A

    • Activating: FirstLevel_A

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_B

      • Preparing: SecondLevel_C

      • Activating: SecondLevel_C


    • Activating: FirstLevel_B


  • Activating: Root

But what if some registrations are not Per Dependency and I will have a graph instead of a tree. Is it possible to handle this case?










share|improve this question






















  • I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:43











  • I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:46















0















After all registrations, I am doing ContainerBuilder.RegisterCallback and subscribing to all IComponentRegistration.Preparing and IComponentRegistration.Activating events to be able to handle all activations. With this two events I am able to build a tree, the order of events looks like this:



  • Preparing: Root

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_A

    • Activating: FirstLevel_A

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_B

      • Preparing: SecondLevel_C

      • Activating: SecondLevel_C


    • Activating: FirstLevel_B


  • Activating: Root

But what if some registrations are not Per Dependency and I will have a graph instead of a tree. Is it possible to handle this case?










share|improve this question






















  • I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:43











  • I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:46













0












0








0








After all registrations, I am doing ContainerBuilder.RegisterCallback and subscribing to all IComponentRegistration.Preparing and IComponentRegistration.Activating events to be able to handle all activations. With this two events I am able to build a tree, the order of events looks like this:



  • Preparing: Root

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_A

    • Activating: FirstLevel_A

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_B

      • Preparing: SecondLevel_C

      • Activating: SecondLevel_C


    • Activating: FirstLevel_B


  • Activating: Root

But what if some registrations are not Per Dependency and I will have a graph instead of a tree. Is it possible to handle this case?










share|improve this question














After all registrations, I am doing ContainerBuilder.RegisterCallback and subscribing to all IComponentRegistration.Preparing and IComponentRegistration.Activating events to be able to handle all activations. With this two events I am able to build a tree, the order of events looks like this:



  • Preparing: Root

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_A

    • Activating: FirstLevel_A

    • Preparing: FirstLevel_B

      • Preparing: SecondLevel_C

      • Activating: SecondLevel_C


    • Activating: FirstLevel_B


  • Activating: Root

But what if some registrations are not Per Dependency and I will have a graph instead of a tree. Is it possible to handle this case?







c# autofac graph-theory ioc-container






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asked Nov 15 '18 at 11:39









astefastef

3,44432757




3,44432757












  • I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:43











  • I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:46

















  • I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:43











  • I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

    – astef
    Nov 15 '18 at 11:46
















I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

– astef
Nov 15 '18 at 11:43





I want to build something like "execution plan" on initial Resolve call and then propose a user to execute it (call a method) or not. I don't want to model this behavior in all components I have in a container, looking for a fast solution.

– astef
Nov 15 '18 at 11:43













I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

– astef
Nov 15 '18 at 11:46





I know there are few assumptions involved: should be no side effects in constructors/destructors (it's ok); some dependencies can be misleading (I'm hiding them). But in general it should work, except this case in question

– astef
Nov 15 '18 at 11:46












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














Not an answer, but it is too big for a comment.



AutoFac is a great IoC container, but it has 2 major problems. One is the awful registration API and the other one is a complete lack of diagnostics. The original author of AutoFac once tried to create an application that would help with this: Whitebox. The development has stopped and moved on to Autofac Analysis, that hasn't been active in years.



What you want to do requires a lot of insight into the inner workings of AutoFac, so you might want to check out the sources for ideas on how to accomplish what you need.






share|improve this answer






























    0














    According to this answer there's another way of handling these events:




    If you want to get fancier, you can set up some event handlers on the
    container ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning, ResolveOperationBeginning,
    ResolveOperationEnding, and CurrentScopeEnding events.



    • During ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning you'd need to set up something to
      automatically attach to any child lifetime ResolveOperationBeginning
      events.


    • During ResolveOperationBeginning you'd log what is going to be
      resolved.


    • During ResolveOperationEnding you'd log any exceptions
      coming out.


    • During CurrentScopeEnding you'd need to unsubscribe from
      any events on that scope so the garbage collector can clean up the
      lifetime scope with all of its instances.




    It's harder, but should do the job.






    share|improve this answer






















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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      1














      Not an answer, but it is too big for a comment.



      AutoFac is a great IoC container, but it has 2 major problems. One is the awful registration API and the other one is a complete lack of diagnostics. The original author of AutoFac once tried to create an application that would help with this: Whitebox. The development has stopped and moved on to Autofac Analysis, that hasn't been active in years.



      What you want to do requires a lot of insight into the inner workings of AutoFac, so you might want to check out the sources for ideas on how to accomplish what you need.






      share|improve this answer



























        1














        Not an answer, but it is too big for a comment.



        AutoFac is a great IoC container, but it has 2 major problems. One is the awful registration API and the other one is a complete lack of diagnostics. The original author of AutoFac once tried to create an application that would help with this: Whitebox. The development has stopped and moved on to Autofac Analysis, that hasn't been active in years.



        What you want to do requires a lot of insight into the inner workings of AutoFac, so you might want to check out the sources for ideas on how to accomplish what you need.






        share|improve this answer

























          1












          1








          1







          Not an answer, but it is too big for a comment.



          AutoFac is a great IoC container, but it has 2 major problems. One is the awful registration API and the other one is a complete lack of diagnostics. The original author of AutoFac once tried to create an application that would help with this: Whitebox. The development has stopped and moved on to Autofac Analysis, that hasn't been active in years.



          What you want to do requires a lot of insight into the inner workings of AutoFac, so you might want to check out the sources for ideas on how to accomplish what you need.






          share|improve this answer













          Not an answer, but it is too big for a comment.



          AutoFac is a great IoC container, but it has 2 major problems. One is the awful registration API and the other one is a complete lack of diagnostics. The original author of AutoFac once tried to create an application that would help with this: Whitebox. The development has stopped and moved on to Autofac Analysis, that hasn't been active in years.



          What you want to do requires a lot of insight into the inner workings of AutoFac, so you might want to check out the sources for ideas on how to accomplish what you need.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 15 '18 at 11:56









          JeroenJeroen

          726521




          726521























              0














              According to this answer there's another way of handling these events:




              If you want to get fancier, you can set up some event handlers on the
              container ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning, ResolveOperationBeginning,
              ResolveOperationEnding, and CurrentScopeEnding events.



              • During ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning you'd need to set up something to
                automatically attach to any child lifetime ResolveOperationBeginning
                events.


              • During ResolveOperationBeginning you'd log what is going to be
                resolved.


              • During ResolveOperationEnding you'd log any exceptions
                coming out.


              • During CurrentScopeEnding you'd need to unsubscribe from
                any events on that scope so the garbage collector can clean up the
                lifetime scope with all of its instances.




              It's harder, but should do the job.






              share|improve this answer



























                0














                According to this answer there's another way of handling these events:




                If you want to get fancier, you can set up some event handlers on the
                container ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning, ResolveOperationBeginning,
                ResolveOperationEnding, and CurrentScopeEnding events.



                • During ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning you'd need to set up something to
                  automatically attach to any child lifetime ResolveOperationBeginning
                  events.


                • During ResolveOperationBeginning you'd log what is going to be
                  resolved.


                • During ResolveOperationEnding you'd log any exceptions
                  coming out.


                • During CurrentScopeEnding you'd need to unsubscribe from
                  any events on that scope so the garbage collector can clean up the
                  lifetime scope with all of its instances.




                It's harder, but should do the job.






                share|improve this answer

























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  According to this answer there's another way of handling these events:




                  If you want to get fancier, you can set up some event handlers on the
                  container ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning, ResolveOperationBeginning,
                  ResolveOperationEnding, and CurrentScopeEnding events.



                  • During ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning you'd need to set up something to
                    automatically attach to any child lifetime ResolveOperationBeginning
                    events.


                  • During ResolveOperationBeginning you'd log what is going to be
                    resolved.


                  • During ResolveOperationEnding you'd log any exceptions
                    coming out.


                  • During CurrentScopeEnding you'd need to unsubscribe from
                    any events on that scope so the garbage collector can clean up the
                    lifetime scope with all of its instances.




                  It's harder, but should do the job.






                  share|improve this answer













                  According to this answer there's another way of handling these events:




                  If you want to get fancier, you can set up some event handlers on the
                  container ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning, ResolveOperationBeginning,
                  ResolveOperationEnding, and CurrentScopeEnding events.



                  • During ChildLifetimeScopeBeginning you'd need to set up something to
                    automatically attach to any child lifetime ResolveOperationBeginning
                    events.


                  • During ResolveOperationBeginning you'd log what is going to be
                    resolved.


                  • During ResolveOperationEnding you'd log any exceptions
                    coming out.


                  • During CurrentScopeEnding you'd need to unsubscribe from
                    any events on that scope so the garbage collector can clean up the
                    lifetime scope with all of its instances.




                  It's harder, but should do the job.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 15 '18 at 12:07









                  astefastef

                  3,44432757




                  3,44432757



























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