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Dependency injection in requirement handlers in ASP.NET Core

Authorization handlers must be registered in the service collection during configuration using dependency injection.

Suppose you had a repository of rules you wanted to evaluate inside an authorization handler and that repository was registered in the service collection. Authorization resolves and injects that into the constructor.

For example, to use the .NET logging infrastructure, inject ILoggerFactory into the handler, as shown in the following example:

public class SampleAuthorizationHandler : AuthorizationHandler<SampleRequirement>
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public SampleAuthorizationHandler(ILoggerFactory loggerFactory)
        => _logger = loggerFactory.CreateLogger(GetType().FullName);

    protected override Task HandleRequirementAsync(
        AuthorizationHandlerContext context, SampleRequirement requirement)
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("Inside my handler");

        // ...

        return Task.CompletedTask;
    }
}

The preceding handler can be registered with any service lifetime. The following code uses AddSingleton to register the preceding handler:

builder.Services.AddSingleton<IAuthorizationHandler, SampleAuthorizationHandler>();

An instance of the handler is created when the app starts, and DI injects the registered ILoggerFactory into its constructor.

Note

Don't register authorization handlers that use Entity Framework (EF) as singletons.

Authorization handlers must be registered in the service collection during configuration using dependency injection.

Suppose you had a repository of rules you wanted to evaluate inside an authorization handler and that repository was registered in the service collection. Authorization resolves and injects that into the constructor.

For example, to use the .NET logging infrastructure, inject ILoggerFactory into the handler, as shown in the following example:

public class SampleAuthorizationHandler : AuthorizationHandler<SampleRequirement>
{
    private readonly ILogger _logger;

    public SampleAuthorizationHandler(ILoggerFactory loggerFactory)
        => _logger = loggerFactory.CreateLogger(GetType().FullName);

    protected override Task HandleRequirementAsync(
        AuthorizationHandlerContext context, SampleRequirement requirement)
    {
        _logger.LogInformation("Inside my handler");

        // ...

        return Task.CompletedTask;
    }
}

The preceding handler can be registered with any service lifetime. The following code uses AddSingleton to register the preceding handler:

services.AddSingleton<IAuthorizationHandler, SampleAuthorizationHandler>();

An instance of the handler is created when the app starts, and DI injects the registered ILoggerFactory into its constructor.

Note

Don't register authorization handlers that use Entity Framework (EF) as singletons.