Scrutor - I search or examine thoroughly; I probe, investigate or scrutinize
From scrūta, as the original sense of the verb was to search through trash. - https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/scrutor
Assembly scanning and decoration extensions for Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection
Install the Scrutor NuGet Package.
Install-Package Scrutor
dotnet add package Scrutor
The library adds two extension methods to IServiceCollection
:
-
Scan
- This is the entry point to set up your assembly scanning. -
Decorate
- This method is used to decorate already registered services.
See Examples below for usage examples.
var collection = new ServiceCollection();
collection.Scan(scan => scan
// We start out with all types in the assembly of ITransientService
.FromAssemblyOf<ITransientService>()
// AddClasses starts out with all public, non-abstract types in this assembly.
// These types are then filtered by the delegate passed to the method.
// In this case, we filter out only the classes that are assignable to ITransientService.
.AddClasses(classes => classes.AssignableTo<ITransientService>())
// We then specify what type we want to register these classes as.
// In this case, we want to register the types as all of its implemented interfaces.
// So if a type implements 3 interfaces; A, B, C, we'd end up with three separate registrations.
.AsImplementedInterfaces()
// And lastly, we specify the lifetime of these registrations.
.WithTransientLifetime()
// Here we start again, with a new full set of classes from the assembly above.
// This time, filtering out only the classes assignable to IScopedService.
.AddClasses(classes => classes.AssignableTo<IScopedService>())
// Now, we just want to register these types as a single interface, IScopedService.
.As<IScopedService>()
// And again, just specify the lifetime.
.WithScopedLifetime()
// Generic interfaces are also supported too, e.g. public interface IOpenGeneric<T>
.AddClasses(classes => classes.AssignableTo(typeof(IOpenGeneric<>)))
.AsImplementedInterfaces()
// And you scan generics with multiple type parameters too
// e.g. public interface IQueryHandler<TQuery, TResult>
.AddClasses(classes => classes.AssignableTo(typeof(IQueryHandler<,>)))
.AsImplementedInterfaces());
var collection = new ServiceCollection();
// First, add our service to the collection.
collection.AddSingleton<IDecoratedService, Decorated>();
// Then, decorate Decorated with the Decorator type.
collection.Decorate<IDecoratedService, Decorator>();
// Finally, decorate Decorator with the OtherDecorator type.
// As you can see, OtherDecorator requires a separate service, IService. We can get that from the provider argument.
collection.Decorate<IDecoratedService>((inner, provider) => new OtherDecorator(inner, provider.GetRequiredService<IService>()));
var serviceProvider = collection.BuildServiceProvider();
// When we resolve the IDecoratedService service, we'll get the following structure:
// OtherDecorator -> Decorator -> Decorated
var instance = serviceProvider.GetRequiredService<IDecoratedService>();