One DbContext per web request... why?
Solution 1:
NOTE: This answer talks about the Entity Framework's
DbContext
, but it is applicable to any sort of Unit of Work implementation, such as LINQ to SQL'sDataContext
, and NHibernate'sISession
.
Let start by echoing Ian: Having a single DbContext
for the whole application is a Bad Idea. The only situation where this makes sense is when you have a single-threaded application and a database that is solely used by that single application instance. The DbContext
is not thread-safe and and since the DbContext
caches data, it gets stale pretty soon. This will get you in all sorts of trouble when multiple users/applications work on that database simultaneously (which is very common of course). But I expect you already know that and just want to know why not to just inject a new instance (i.e. with a transient lifestyle) of the DbContext
into anyone who needs it. (for more information about why a single DbContext
-or even on context per thread- is bad, read this answer).
Let me start by saying that registering a DbContext
as transient could work, but typically you want to have a single instance of such a unit of work within a certain scope. In a web application, it can be practical to define such a scope on the boundaries of a web request; thus a Per Web Request lifestyle. This allows you to let a whole set of objects operate within the same context. In other words, they operate within the same business transaction.
If you have no goal of having a set of operations operate inside the same context, in that case the transient lifestyle is fine, but there are a few things to watch:
- Since every object gets its own instance, every class that changes the state of the system, needs to call
_context.SaveChanges()
(otherwise changes would get lost). This can complicate your code, and adds a second responsibility to the code (the responsibility of controlling the context), and is a violation of the Single Responsibility Principle. - You need to make sure that entities [loaded and saved by a
DbContext
] never leave the scope of such a class, because they can't be used in the context instance of another class. This can complicate your code enormously, because when you need those entities, you need to load them again by id, which could also cause performance problems. - Since
DbContext
implementsIDisposable
, you probably still want to Dispose all created instances. If you want to do this, you basically have two options. You need to dispose them in the same method right after callingcontext.SaveChanges()
, but in that case the business logic takes ownership of an object it gets passed on from the outside. The second option is to Dispose all created instances on the boundary of the Http Request, but in that case you still need some sort of scoping to let the container know when those instances need to be Disposed.
Another option is to not inject a DbContext
at all. Instead, you inject a DbContextFactory
that is able to create a new instance (I used to use this approach in the past). This way the business logic controls the context explicitly. If might look like this:
public void SomeOperation()
{
using (var context = this.contextFactory.CreateNew())
{
var entities = this.otherDependency.Operate(
context, "some value");
context.Entities.InsertOnSubmit(entities);
context.SaveChanges();
}
}
The plus side of this is that you manage the life of the DbContext
explicitly and it is easy to set this up. It also allows you to use a single context in a certain scope, which has clear advantages, such as running code in a single business transaction, and being able to pass around entities, since they originate from the same DbContext
.
The downside is that you will have to pass around the DbContext
from method to method (which is termed Method Injection). Note that in a sense this solution is the same as the 'scoped' approach, but now the scope is controlled in the application code itself (and is possibly repeated many times). It is the application that is responsible for creating and disposing the unit of work. Since the DbContext
is created after the dependency graph is constructed, Constructor Injection is out of the picture and you need to defer to Method Injection when you need to pass on the context from one class to the other.
Method Injection isn't that bad, but when the business logic gets more complex, and more classes get involved, you will have to pass it from method to method and class to class, which can complicate the code a lot (I've seen this in the past). For a simple application, this approach will do just fine though.
Because of the downsides, this factory approach has for bigger systems, another approach can be useful and that is the one where you let the container or the infrastructure code / Composition Root manage the unit of work. This is the style that your question is about.
By letting the container and/or the infrastructure handle this, your application code is not polluted by having to create, (optionally) commit and Dispose a UoW instance, which keeps the business logic simple and clean (just a Single Responsibility). There are some difficulties with this approach. For instance, were do you Commit and Dispose the instance?
Disposing a unit of work can be done at the end of the web request. Many people however, incorrectly assume that this is also the place to Commit the unit of work. However, at that point in the application, you simply can't determine for sure that the unit of work should actually be committed. e.g. If the business layer code threw an exception that was caught higher up the callstack, you definitely don't want to Commit.
The real solution is again to explicitly manage some sort of scope, but this time do it inside the Composition Root. Abstracting all business logic behind the command / handler pattern, you will be able to write a decorator that can be wrapped around each command handler that allows to do this. Example:
class TransactionalCommandHandlerDecorator<TCommand>
: ICommandHandler<TCommand>
{
readonly DbContext context;
readonly ICommandHandler<TCommand> decorated;
public TransactionCommandHandlerDecorator(
DbContext context,
ICommandHandler<TCommand> decorated)
{
this.context = context;
this.decorated = decorated;
}
public void Handle(TCommand command)
{
this.decorated.Handle(command);
context.SaveChanges();
}
}
This ensures that you only need to write this infrastructure code once. Any solid DI container allows you to configure such a decorator to be wrapped around all ICommandHandler<T>
implementations in a consistent manner.
Solution 2:
There are two contradicting recommendations by microsoft and many people use DbContexts in a completely divergent manner.
- One recommendation is to "Dispose DbContexts as soon as posible" because having a DbContext Alive occupies valuable resources like db connections etc....
- The other states that One DbContext per request is highly reccomended
Those contradict to each other because if your Request is doing a lot of unrelated to the Db stuff , then your DbContext is kept for no reason. Thus it is waste to keep your DbContext alive while your request is just waiting for random stuff to get done...
So many people who follow rule 1 have their DbContexts inside their "Repository pattern" and create a new Instance per Database Query so X*DbContext per Request
They just get their data and dispose the context ASAP. This is considered by MANY people an acceptable practice. While this has the benefits of occupying your db resources for the minimum time it clearly sacrifices all the UnitOfWork and Caching candy EF has to offer.
Keeping alive a single multipurpose instance of DbContext maximizes the benefits of Caching but since DbContext is not thread safe and each Web request runs on it's own thread, a DbContext per Request is the longest you can keep it.
So EF's team recommendation about using 1 Db Context per request it's clearly based on the fact that in a Web Application a UnitOfWork most likely is going to be within one request and that request has one thread. So one DbContext per request is like the ideal benefit of UnitOfWork and Caching.
But in many cases this is not true. I consider Logging a separate UnitOfWork thus having a new DbContext for Post-Request Logging in async threads is completely acceptable
So Finally it turns down that a DbContext's lifetime is restricted to these two parameters. UnitOfWork and Thread