Prepare for a wall of code... It's a long read, but it's as verbose as I can get.
In response to Still lost on Repositories and Decoupling, ASP.NET MVC
I think I am starting to get closer to understanding this all. I'm trying to get used to using this. Here is what I have so far.
Project
Project.Web (ASP.NET MVC 3.0 RC)
- Uses Project.Models
- Uses Project.Persistence
Project
Project.Models (Domain Objects)
Membership.Member
Membership.IMembershipProvider
Project
Project.Persistence (Fluent nHibernate)
- Uses Project.Models
- Uses Castle.Core
Uses Castle.Windsor
Membership.MembershipProvider : IMembershipProvider
I have the following class in Project.Persistence
using Castle.Windsor;
using Castle.MicroKernel.Registration;
using Castle.MicroKernel.SubSystems.Configuration;
namespace Project.Persistence
{
public static class IoC
{
private static IWindsorContainer _container;
public static void Initialize()
{
_container = new WindsorContainer()
.Install(
new Persistence.Containers.Installers.RepositoryInstaller()
);
}
public static T Resolve<T>()
{
return _container.Resolve<T>();
}
}
}
namespace Persistence.Containers.Installers
{
public class RepositoryInstaller : IWindsorInstaller
{
public void Install(IWindsorContainer container, IConfigurationStore store)
{
container.Register(
Component
.For<Membership.IMembershipProvider>()
.ImplementedBy<Membership.MembershipProvider>()
.LifeStyle.Singleton
);
}
}
}
Now, in Project.Web
Global.asax
Application_Start
, I have the following code.
protected void Application_Start()
{
AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
// Register the Windsor Container
Project.Persistence.IoC.Initialize();
}
Now then, in Project.Web.Controllers.MembershipController
I have the following code.
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Register( Web.Models.Authentication.Registration model)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
var provider = IoC.Resolve<Membership.IMembershipProvider>();
provider.CreateUser(model.Email, model.Password);
}
// If we got this far, something failed, redisplay form
return View(model);
}
So I am asking first of all..
Am I on the right track?
How can I use Castle.Windsor for my ISessionFactory
I have my SessionFactory working like this ...
namespace Project.Persistence.Factories
{
public sealed class SessionFactoryContainer
{
private static readonly ISessionFactory _instance = CreateSessionFactory();
static SessionFactoryContainer()
{
}
public static ISessionFactory Instance
{
get { return _instance; }
}
private static ISessionFactory CreateSessionFactory()
{
return Persistence.SessionFactory.Map(@"Data Source=.SQLEXPRESS;Initial Catalog=FluentExample;Integrated Security=true", true);
}
}
}
namespace Project.Persistence
{
public static class SessionFactory
{
public static ISessionFactory Map(string connectionString, bool createSchema)
{
return FluentNHibernate.Cfg.Fluently.Configure()
.Database(FluentNHibernate.Cfg.Db.MsSqlConfiguration.MsSql2008
.ConnectionString(c => c.Is(connectionString)))
.ExposeConfiguration(config =>
{
new NHibernate.Tool.hbm2ddl.SchemaExport(config)
.SetOutputFile("Output.sql")
.Create(/* Output to console */ false, /* Execute script against database */ createSchema);
})
.Mappings(m =>
{
m.FluentMappings.Conventions.Setup(x =>
{
x.AddFromAssemblyOf<Program>();
x.Add(FluentNHibernate.Conventions.Helpers.AutoImport.Never());
});
m.FluentMappings.AddFromAssemblyOf<Mapping.MembershipMap>();
}).BuildSessionFactory();
}
So basically, within my Project.Persistence
layer, I call the SessionFactory like this..
var session = SessionFactoryContainer.Instance.OpenSession()
Am I even getting close to doing this right? I'm still confused - I feel like the ISessionFactory
should be part of Castle.Windsor
, but I can't seem to figure out how to do that. I'm confused also about the way I am creating the Repository in the Controller. Does this mean I have to do all of the 'mapping' each time I use the Repository? That seems like it would be very resource intensive.