Based on your comments I hereby revise my answer :)
ModelStateDictionary
is clearly not a service that should be resolved by the container, but rather data that should be provided at instantiation time. We can tell that from the fact that ModelState is owned by each Controller instance and is thus not available to the container at "resolve time".
Furthermore, each ModelValidation
instance will be bound to a ModelStateDictionary
instance and is thus also to be considered as data.
In Autofac, when data must be passed to constructors (optionally in addition to other dependencies), we must use factory delegates. These delegates will handle dependency and data passing to the constructor. The sweet thing with Autofac is that these delegates can be autogenerated.
I propose the following solution:
Since both ModelValidation and CustomerService requires data in their constructors, we need two factory delegates (note: the parameter names must match the names in their corresponding constructor):
public delegate IModelValidation ModelValidationFactory(ModelStateDictionary msd);
public delegate CustomerService CustomerServiceFactory(ModelStateDictionary msd);
Since your controllers shouldn't know where these delegates comes from they should be passed to the controller constructor as dependencies:
public class EditCustomerController : Controller
{
private readonly CustomerService _customerService;
public EditCustomerController(CustomerServiceFactory customerServiceFactory
/*, ...any other dependencies required by the controller */
)
{
_customerService = customerServiceFactory(this.ModelState);
}
}
The CustomerService should have a constructor similar to this (optionally handle some of this in a ServiceBase class):
public class CustomerService
{
private readonly IModelValidation _modelValidation;
public CustomerService(ModelStateDictionary msd,
ModelValidationFactory modelValidationFactory)
{
_modelValidation = modelValidationFactory(msd);
}
To make this happen we need to build our container like this:
var builder = new ContainerBuilder();
builder.Register<ModelValidation>().As<IModelValidation>().FactoryScoped();
builder.Register<CustomerService>().FactoryScoped();
builder.RegisterGeneratedFactory<ModelValidationFactory>();
builder.RegisterGeneratedFactory<CustomerServiceFactory>();
builder.Register<EditCustomerController>().FactoryScoped();
So, when the controller is resolved (eg when using the MvcIntegration module), the factory delegates will be injected into the controllers and services.
Update: to cut down on required code even more, you could replace CustomerServiceFactory
with a generic factory delegate like I've described here.