Autofac is an IoC container for Microsoft .NET. It manages the dependencies between classes so that applications stay easy to change as they grow in size and complexity. This is achieved by treating regular .NET classes as components.
Please file issues and pull requests for this package in this repository rather than in the Autofac core repo.
- Documentation - .NET Core Integration
- Documentation - ASP.NET Core Integration
- NuGet
- Contributing
- Open in Visual Studio Code
This quick start shows how to use the IServiceProviderFactory{T}
integration that ASP.NET Core supports to help automatically build the root service provider for you. If you want more manual control, check out the documentation for examples.
- Reference the
Autofac.Extensions.DependencyInjection
package from NuGet. - In your
Program.Main
method, where you configure theHostBuilder
, callUseAutofac
to hook Autofac into the startup pipeline. - In the
ConfigureServices
method of yourStartup
class register things into theIServiceCollection
using extension methods provided by other libraries. - In the
ConfigureContainer
method of yourStartup
class register things directly into an AutofacContainerBuilder
.
The IServiceProvider
will automatically be created for you, so there's nothing you have to do but register things.
public class Program
{
public static async Task Main(string[] args)
{
// The service provider factory used here allows for
// ConfigureContainer to be supported in Startup with
// a strongly-typed ContainerBuilder.
var host = Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
.UseServiceProviderFactory(new AutofacServiceProviderFactory())
.ConfigureWebHostDefaults(webHostBuilder => {
webHostBuilder
.UseContentRoot(Directory.GetCurrentDirectory())
.UseIISIntegration()
.UseStartup<Startup>()
})
.Build();
await host.RunAsync();
}
}
public class Startup
{
public Startup(IWebHostEnvironment env)
{
var builder = new ConfigurationBuilder()
.SetBasePath(env.ContentRootPath)
.AddJsonFile("appsettings.json", optional: true, reloadOnChange: true)
.AddJsonFile($"appsettings.{env.EnvironmentName}.json", optional: true)
.AddEnvironmentVariables();
this.Configuration = builder.Build();
}
public IConfiguration Configuration { get; private set; }
// ConfigureServices is where you register dependencies. This gets
// called by the runtime before the ConfigureContainer method, below.
public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
// Add services to the collection. Don't build or return
// any IServiceProvider or the ConfigureContainer method
// won't get called.
services.AddOptions();
}
// ConfigureContainer is where you can register things directly
// with Autofac. This runs after ConfigureServices so the things
// here will override registrations made in ConfigureServices.
// Don't build the container; that gets done for you. If you
// need a reference to the container, you need to use the
// "Without ConfigureContainer" mechanism shown later.
public void ConfigureContainer(ContainerBuilder builder)
{
builder.RegisterModule(new AutofacModule());
}
// Configure is where you add middleware. This is called after
// ConfigureContainer. You can use IApplicationBuilder.ApplicationServices
// here if you need to resolve things from the container.
public void Configure(
IApplicationBuilder app,
ILoggerFactory loggerFactory)
{
loggerFactory.AddConsole(this.Configuration.GetSection("Logging"));
loggerFactory.AddDebug();
app.UseMvc();
}
}
Our ASP.NET Core integration documentation contains more information about using Autofac with ASP.NET Core.
Need help with Autofac? We have a documentation site as well as API documentation. We're ready to answer your questions on Stack Overflow or check out the discussion forum.