.NET Core IServiceScopeFactory.CreateScope() vs IServiceProvider.CreateScope() extension

独自空忆成欢 提交于 2019-12-18 12:08:51

问题


My understanding is that when using the built in the dependency injection, a .NET Core console app will require you to create and manage all scopes yourself whereas a ASP.NET Core app will create and manage the HttpRequest scope by default through defined middleware(s).

With ASP.NET Core, you can optionally create and manage your own scopes that by calling CreateScope() for when you need services that live outside of a HttpRequest.

It is clear that calling IServiceScopeFactory.CreateScope() will create a new IServiceScope every time; however, does calling the IServiceProvider.CreateScope() extension method also create a new IServiceScope every time?

Basically, is there a meaningful difference between the following ways to create scope in both ASP.NET Core and .NET Core console apps:

public class Foo()
{
    public Foo(IServiceProvider serviceProvider)
    {
        using(var scope = serviceProvider.CreateScope())
        {   
            scope.ServiceProvider.GetServices<>();           
        }
    }
}

and

public class Bar()
{
    public Bar(IServiceScopeFactory scopeFactory)
    {
        using(var scope = scopeFactory.CreateScope())
        {   
            scope.ServiceProvider.GetServices<>();           
        }
    }
}

回答1:


CreateScope from IServiceProvider resolve IServiceScopeFactory and call CreateScope() on it:

public static IServiceScope CreateScope(this IServiceProvider provider)
{
    return provider.GetRequiredService<IServiceScopeFactory>().CreateScope();
}

So, as said @Evk

functionally both methods are identical

IServiceProvider just wrapped call CreateScope() from IServiceScopeFactory



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50200200/net-core-iservicescopefactory-createscope-vs-iserviceprovider-createscope-e

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