PostSharpDeveloping Custom AspectsConsuming Dependencies from an AspectUsing Contextual Dependency Resolution
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Using Contextual Dependency Resolution

The dependency resolution strategy does not necessarily need to resolve to the same service implementation for all occurrences of the dependency. It is possible to design a strategy that depends on the context. For instance, the service locator could accept the aspect type and the target element of code as parameters. Test code could configure the service locator to resolve dependencies to specific implementations for a given context.

Evaluating context-sensitive rules may be CPU-intensive, but it needs to be done only during testing. In production mode, dependency resolution can be delegated to a global service catalog.

Example: testable logging aspect with contextual dependency resolution

The following code snippet shows a logging aspect and how it could be used in production code:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel.Composition;
using System.ComponentModel.Composition.Hosting;
using System.ComponentModel.Composition.Primitives;
using System.Reflection;
using PostSharp.Aspects;
using PostSharp.Extensibility;
using PostSharp.Serialization;

namespace DependencyResolution.Contextual
{
    public interface ILogger
    {
        void Log(string message);
    }

    public static class AspectServiceLocator
    {
        private static CompositionContainer container;
        private static HashSet<object> rules = new HashSet<object>();

        public static void Initialize(ComposablePartCatalog catalog)
        {
            container = new CompositionContainer(catalog);
        }

        public static Lazy<T> GetService<T>(Type aspectType, MemberInfo targetElement) where T : class
        {
            return new Lazy<T>(() => GetServiceImpl<T>(aspectType, targetElement));
        }

        private static T GetServiceImpl<T>(Type aspectType, MemberInfo targetElement) where T : class
        {
            // The rule implementation is naive but this is for testing purpose only.
            foreach (object rule in rules)
            {
                DependencyRule<T> typedRule = rule as DependencyRule<T>;
                if (typedRule == null) continue;

                T service = typedRule.Rule(aspectType, targetElement);
                if (service != null) return service;
            }

            if (container == null)
                throw new InvalidOperationException();

            // Fallback to the container, which should be the default and production behavior.
            return container.GetExport<T>().Value;
        }

        public static IDisposable AddRule<T>(Func<Type, MemberInfo, T> rule)
        {
            DependencyRule<T> dependencyRule = new DependencyRule<T>(rule);
            rules.Add(dependencyRule);
            return dependencyRule;
        }

        private class DependencyRule<T> : IDisposable
        {
            public DependencyRule(Func<Type, MemberInfo, T> rule)
            {
                this.Rule = rule;
            }

            public Func<Type, MemberInfo, T> Rule { get; private set; }

            public void Dispose()
            {
                rules.Remove(this);
            }
        }
    }

    [PSerializable]
    public class LogAspect : OnMethodBoundaryAspect
    {
        private Lazy<ILogger> logger;


        public override void RuntimeInitialize(MethodBase method)
        {
            logger = AspectServiceLocator.GetService<ILogger>(this.GetType(), method);
        }


        public override void OnEntry(MethodExecutionArgs args)
        {
            logger.Value.Log("OnEntry");
        }
    }

    internal class Program
    {
        private static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            AspectServiceLocator.Initialize(new TypeCatalog(typeof (ConsoleLogger)));

            LoggedMethod();
        }

        [LogAspect]
        public static void LoggedMethod()
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Hello, world.");
        }
    }


    [Export(typeof (ILogger))]
    internal class ConsoleLogger : ILogger
    {
        public void Log(string message)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(message);
        }
    }
}

The following code snippet shows how the logging aspect can be tested:

using System;
using System.Text;
using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting;

namespace DependencyResolution.Contextual.Test
{
    [TestClass]
    public class TestLogAspect
    {
        [TestMethod]
        public void TestMethod()
        {
            // The ServiceLocator can be initialized for each test.
            using (
                AspectServiceLocator.AddRule<ILogger>(
                    (type, member) =>
                    type == typeof (LogAspect) && member.Name == "TargetMethod" ? new TestLogger() : null)
                )
            {
                TestLogger.Clear();
                TargetMethod();
                Assert.AreEqual("OnEntry" + Environment.NewLine, TestLogger.GetLog());
            }
        }

        [LogAspect]
        public void TargetMethod()
        {
        }
    }

    internal class TestLogger : ILogger
    {
        public static readonly StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();

        public void Log(string message)
        {
            stringBuilder.AppendLine(message);
        }

        public static string GetLog()
        {
            return stringBuilder.ToString();
        }

        public static void Clear()
        {
            stringBuilder.Clear();
        }
    }
}