Reputation: 18107
I have implemented my first Generic repository in MVC app. Works fine but how to put repositories in Transaction scope?
public interface IRepository<TEntity> where TEntity : class
{
List<TEntity> FetchAll();
IQueryable<TEntity> Query { get; }
void Add(TEntity entity);
void Delete(TEntity entity);
void Save();
}
public class Repository<T> : IRepository<T> where T : class
{
private readonly DataContext _db;
public Repository(DataContext db)
{
_db = db;
}
#region IRepository<T> Members
public IQueryable<T> Query
{
get { return _db.GetTable<T>(); }
}
public List<T> FetchAll()
{
return Query.ToList();
}
public void Add(T entity)
{
_db.GetTable<T>().InsertOnSubmit(entity);
}
public void Delete(T entity)
{
_db.GetTable<T>().DeleteOnSubmit(entity);
}
public void Save()
{
_db.SubmitChanges();
}
#endregion
}
private void RegisterDependencyResolver()
{
var kernel = new StandardKernel();
var connectionString = ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["ConnectionString"].ConnectionString;
kernel.Bind(typeof(DataContext)).ToMethod(context => new DataContext(connectionString));
kernel.Bind(typeof(IRepository<>)).To(typeof(Repository<>));
DependencyResolver.SetResolver(new NinjectDependencyResolver(kernel));
}
public class AdminController : Controller
{
private readonly IRepository<User> _userRepository;
private readonly IRepository<Order> _orderRepository;
public AdminController(IRepository<User> userRepository, IRepository<Order> orderRepository)
{
_userRepository = userRepository;
_orderRepository = orderRepository;
}
public ActionResult InsertUser(UserViewModel model)
{
//Skip Code
//Do not commit data to database if _orderRepository is failed to save data
_userRepository.Add(user);
_userRepository.Save();
//Skip Code
_orderRepository.Add(order);
_orderRepository.Save();
}
}
What would be best method to wrap repository code with Transaction scope in InsertUser action?
Upvotes: 6
Views: 6895
Reputation: 172646
You are missing an abstraction here. You should place all your business logic inside command handlers and create a command handler decorator that implements transaction behavior. This article describes how to do this, but in short:
Define an ICommandHandler<TCommand>
interface:
public interface ICommandHandler<TCommand>
{
void Handle(TCommand command);
}
Create commands that define the contract of a business operation. Commands are simply DTOs (with only data and no behavior). For instance:
public class ShipOrderCommand
{
public int OrderId { get; set; }
public ShippingInfo Info { get; set; }
}
Implement command handlers that will contain the business logic / behavior for those commands:
public class ShipOrderCommandHandler
: ICommandHandler<ShipOrderCommand>
{
private readonly IRepository<Order> repository;
public ShipOrderCommandHandler(
IRepository<Order> repository)
{
this.repository = repository;
}
public void Handle(ShipOrderCommand command)
{
// do some useful stuf with the command and repository.
}
}
Let your MVC Controllers depend on the ICommandHandler<T>
abstraction:
public ShipOrderController : Controller
{
private readonly ICommandHandler<ShipOrderCommand> handler;
public ShipOrderController(
ICommandHandler<ShipOrderCommand> handler)
{
this.handler = handler;
}
public void Ship(int orderId, ShippingInfo info)
{
this.handler.Handle(new ShipOrderCommand
{
OrderId = orderId,
Info = info
});
}
}
Define a generic decorator that implements transaction logic:
public TransactionalCommandHandlerDecorator<TCommand>
: ICommandHandler<TCommand>
{
private ICommandHandler<TCommand> decoratedHandler;
public TransactionalCommandHandlerDecorator(
ICommandHandler<TCommand> decoratedHandler)
{
this.decoratedHandler = decoratedHandler;
}
public void Handle(TCommand command)
{
using (var scope = new TransactionScope())
{
this.decoratedHandler.Handle(command);
scope.Complete();
}
}
}
Ensure that each ShipOrderCommandHandler
is decorated with a TransactionalCommandHandlerDecorator
and injected into ShipOrderController
. You can do this with your favorite DI container, or by hand:
protected override IController GetControllerInstance(
RequestContext requestContext, Type controllerType)
{
if (controllerType == typeof(ShipOrderController))
{
return new ShipOrderController(
new TransactionalCommandHandlerDecorator<ShipOrderCommand>(
new ShipOrderCommandHandler(
new OrderRepository())));
}
return base.GetControllerInstance(requestContext, controllerType);
}
With this in place you can run all your business logic inside a transaction, without the need for the business logic to be aware of that.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 6557
There's a pattern called Unit of work. Here's an explanation.
Upvotes: 1