I have a tag helper with multiple constructors in my ASP.NET Core application. This causes the following error at runtime when ASP.NET 5 tries to resolve the type:
InvalidOperationException: Multiple constructors accepting all given argument types have been found in type 'MyNameSpace.MyTagHelper'. There should only be one applicable constructor.
One of the constructors is parameterless and the other has some arguments whose parameters are not registered types. I would like it to use the parameterless constructor.
Is there some way to get the ASP.NET 5 dependency injection framework to select a particular constructor? Usually this is done through the use of an attribute but I can't find anything.
My use case is that I'm trying to create a single class that is both a TagHelper, as well as a HTML helper which is totally possible if this problem is solved.
Illya is right: the built-in resolver doesn't support types exposing multiple constructors... but nothing prevents you from registering a delegate to support this scenario:
Note: support for multiple constructors was added in later versions, as indicated in the other answers. Now, the DI stack will happily choose the constructor with the most parameters it can resolve. For instance, if you have 2 constructors - one with 3 parameters pointing to services and another one with 4 - it will prefer the one with 4 parameters.
ASP.NET Core 2.1 and higher
You can use
ActivatorUtilitiesConstructorAttribute
on the constructor which you want to be used in DI:Answer is no. ASP.NET 5 DI doesn't support types with multiple public constuctors.
Dependency Injection in ASP.NET Core (vNext)
Dependency Injection in ASP.NET vNext
ASP.NET Core 1.0 Answer
The other answers are still true for parameter-less constructors i.e. if you have a class with a parameter-less constructor and a constructor with arguments, the exception in the question will be thrown.
If you have two constructors with arguments, the behaviour is to use the first matching constructor where the parameters are known. You can look at the source code for the
ConstructorMatcher
class for details here.ASP.NET Core Answer
I've ended up with the following workaround until they fix/improve this.
First, declare only one constructor in your controller (passing your required configuration settings only), considering that the settings objects passed in the constructor can be null (.NET Core will inject them automatically if you configure them in the Startup method):
Then, in your tests methods you can instantiate the controller in two ways:
From this point you can have full testing with dependency injection and mocking ready in .NET Core.
Hope it helps