.NET 8 Dependency Injection Changes: Keyed Services

Keyed Services in .NET 8

It has been quite some time since my last post on dependency injection (DI). In it I tried to talk a bit about the history of DI (or dependency resolution); now, a change is about to come in .NET 8: named (or keyed) services! Essentially, it consists of the possibility to register multiple times the same type under different names, and to inject a specific type/name combo.

To make this possible, a new interface is introduced, IKeyedServiceProvider, which extends our old friend IServiceProvider with two new methods:

  • object? GetKeyedService(Type serviceType, object? serviceKey);
  • object GetRequiredKeyedService(Type serviceType, object? serviceKey);

I guess these are pretty straightforward. In order to register objects we have overloads that take keys on IServiceCollection, for example, for the singleton lifetime:

builder.Services.AddKeyedSingleton<IMyService, AService>("a");
builder.Services.AddKeyedSingleton<IMyService, BService>("b");

And to inject, we have a new attribute, [FromKeyedServices]:

public IActionResult Get([FromKeyedServices("a")] IMyService svc) { ... }

By default, if you pass an empty string as the key, you will get the default, no-key, implementation.

I think this is a great idea, as it gives you more flexibility: if you don't need it, by all means, don't use it, but if you do, hey, it's a great addition! Looking forward for .NET 8 to arrive!

                             

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