I am attempting to do some basic constructor DI with Simple Injector, and it seems that it is unable to resolve the dependencies for Web API controllers.
- I have an API controller in an "API" folder, that is outside the "Controllers" folder.
- I have also tried placing it within the "Controllers" folder, but that did not seem to make much of a difference. The stack trace that I receive is similar to the one presented in this question.
- I am using a fresh install of the "Simple Injector MVC Integration Quick Start" NuGet Package (v. 2.1.0).
- I have the base
SimpleInjectorWebApiDependencyResolver
from the documentation, which is also the same as found here. - I am using Entity Framework, and have looked at the discussion thread about changes to correctly load the context.
This does not seem to be a problem, but I still receive the following error:
Type 'MyProject.API.ArticleController' does not have a default constructor
System.ArgumentException at
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.New(Type type) at System.Web.Http.Internal.TypeActivator.Create[TBase](Type instanceType) at System.Web.Http.Dispatcher.DefaultHttpControllerActivator.GetInstanceOrActivator(HttpRequestMessage request, Type controllerType, Func`1& activator) at System.Web.Http.Dispatcher.DefaultHttpControllerActivator.Create(HttpRequestMessage request, HttpControllerDescriptor controllerDescriptor, Type controllerType)
It would be appreciated if someone could offer me some suggestions, on whether anything should be modified from its current state/call order.
ArticleController (basic structure):
public class ArticleController : ApiController
{
private readonly IArticleRepository articleRepository;
private readonly IUserRepository userRepository;
private readonly IReleaseRepository releaseRepository;
public ArticleController(IArticleRepository articleRepository, IUserRepository userRepository, IReleaseRepository releaseRepository)
{
this.articleRepository = articleRepository;
this.userRepository = userRepository;
this.releaseRepository = releaseRepository;
}
// GET api/Article
public IEnumerable<Article> GetArticles(){ // code }
// GET api/Article/5
public Article GetArticle(int id){ // code }
// PUT api/Article/5
public HttpResponseMessage PutArticle(int id, Article article){ // code }
// POST api/Article
public HttpResponseMessage PostArticle(ArticleModel article){ // code }
// DELETE api/Article/5
public HttpResponseMessage DeleteArticle(int id){ // code }
}
SimpleInjectorInitializer:
public static class SimpleInjectorInitializer
{
public static void Initialize()
{
var container = new Container();
InitializeContainer(container);
container.RegisterMvcControllers(Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly());
container.RegisterMvcAttributeFilterProvider();
container.Verify();
DependencyResolver.SetResolver(new SimpleInjectorDependencyResolver(container));
}
private static void InitializeContainer(Container container)
{
container.Register<IArticleRepository, ArticleRepository>();
container.Register<IUserRepository, UserRepository>();
container.Register<IReleaseRepository, ReleaseRepository>();
}
}
Global.asax.cs:
public class WebApiApplication : System.Web.HttpApplication
{
private void ConfigureApi()
{
// Create the container as usual.
var container = new Container();
// Verify the container configuration
// container.Verify();
// Register the dependency resolver.
GlobalConfiguration.Configuration.DependencyResolver =
new SimpleInjectorWebApiDependencyResolver(container);
}
protected void Application_Start()
{
AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
ConfigureApi();
WebApiConfig.Register(GlobalConfiguration.Configuration);
FilterConfig.RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilters.Filters);
RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
BundleConfig.RegisterBundles(BundleTable.Bundles);
}
}
ConfigureApi
method is actually run? Did you set a break point in it? – StevenContainer
instance for your Web API configuration? – Steven