Immediate.Handlers 1.3.1

There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Immediate.Handlers --version 1.3.1                
NuGet\Install-Package Immediate.Handlers -Version 1.3.1                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Immediate.Handlers" Version="1.3.1" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Immediate.Handlers --version 1.3.1                
#r "nuget: Immediate.Handlers, 1.3.1"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Immediate.Handlers as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Immediate.Handlers&version=1.3.1

// Install Immediate.Handlers as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Immediate.Handlers&version=1.3.1                

Immediate.Handlers

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Immediate.Handlers is an implementation of the mediator pattern in .NET using source-generation. All pipeline behaviors are determined and the call-tree built at compile-time; meaning that all dependencies are enforced via compile-time safety checks. Behaviors and dependencies are obtained via DI at runtime based on compile-time determined dependencies.

Examples

Installing Immediate.Handlers

You can install Immediate.Handlers with NuGet:

Install-Package Immediate.Handlers

Or via the .NET Core command line interface:

dotnet add package Immediate.Handlers

Either commands, from Package Manager Console or .NET Core CLI, will download and install Immediate.Handlers.

Using Immediate.Handlers

Creating Handlers

Create a Handler by adding the following code:

[Handler]
public static partial class GetUsersQuery
{
    public record Query;

    private static ValueTask<IEnumerable<User>> HandleAsync(
        Query _,
        UsersService usersService,
        CancellationToken token
	)
    {
        return usersService.GetUsers();
    }
}

This will automatically create a new class, GetUsersQuery.Handler, which encapsulates the following:

  • attaching any behaviors defined for all queries in the assembly
  • using a class to receive any DI services, such as UsersService

Any consumer can now do the following:

public class Consumer(GetUsersQuery.Handler handler)
{
	public async Task Consumer(CancellationToken token)
	{
		var response = await handler.HandleAsync(new(), token);
		// do something with response
	}
}

For Command handlers, use a ValueTask, and Immediate.Handlers will insert a return type of ValueTuple to your handler automatically.

[Handler]
public static partial class CreateUserCommand
{
    public record Command(string Email);

    private static async ValueTask HandleAsync( 
        Command command,
        UsersService usersService,
        CancellationToken token
	)
    {
        await usersService.CreateUser(command.Email);
    }
}

In case your project layout does not allow direct for references between consumer and handler, the handler will also be registered as an IHandler<TRequest, Response>.

public class Consumer(IHandler<Query, IEnumerable<User>> handler)
{
	public async Task Consumer(CancellationToken token)
	{
		var response = await handler.HandleAsync(new(), token);
		// do something with response
	}
}

Creating Behaviors

Create a behavior by implementing the Immediate.Handlers.Shared.Behaviors<,> class, as so:

public sealed class LoggingBehavior<TRequest, TResponse>(ILogger<LoggingBehavior<TRequest, TResponse>> logger)
	: Behavior<TRequest, TResponse>
{
	public override async ValueTask<TResponse> HandleAsync(TRequest request, CancellationToken cancellationToken)
	{
		logger.LogInformation("LoggingBehavior.Enter");
		var response = await Next(request, cancellationToken);
		logger.LogInformation("LoggingBehavior.Exit");
		return response;
	}
}

This can be registered assembly-wide using:

[assembly: Behaviors(
	typeof(LoggingBehavior<,>)
)]

or on an individual handler using:

[Handler]
[Behavior(
	typeof(LoggingBehavior<,>)
)]
public static class GetUsersQuery
{
	// ..
}

Once added to the pipeline, the behavior will be called as part of the pipeline to handle a request.

Note: adding a [Behavior] attribute to a handler will disregard all assembly-wide behaviors for that handler, so any global behaviors necessary must be independently added to the handler override behaviors list.

Behavior Constraints

A constraint can be added to a behavior by using:

public sealed class LoggingBehavior<TRequest, TResponse>
	: Behavior<TRequest, TResponse>
	where TRequest : IRequestConstraint
	where TResponse : IResponseConstraint

When a pipeline is generated, all potential behaviors are evaluated against the request and response types, and if either type does not match a given constraint, the behavior is not added to the generated pipeline.

Registering with IServiceCollection

Immediate.Handlers supports Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection.Abstractions directly.

Registering Handlers
services.AddHandlers();

This registers all classes in the assembly marked with [Handler].

Registering Behaviors
services.AddBehaviors();

This registers all behaviors referenced in any [Behaviors] attribute.

Using with Swashbuckle

For Swagger to work the JSON schema generated is required to have unique schemaId's. To achieve this, Swashbuckle uses class names as simple schemaId's. When using Immediate Handlers classes with a controller action inside, you might end up with Swashbuckle stating an error similar to this:

Swashbuckle.AspNetCore.SwaggerGen.SwaggerGeneratorException: Failed to generate schema for type - MyApp.Api.DeleteUser+Command. See inner exception
System.InvalidOperationException: Can't use schemaId "$Command" for type "$MyApp.Api.DeleteUser+Command". The same schemaId is already used for type "$MyApp.Api.CreateUserCommand+Command"

This error indicates Swashbuckle is trying to use two classes named Command from two (or more) different Handlers in different namespaces.

To fix this, you have to define the following options in your SwaggerGen configuration:

builder.Services.AddSwaggerGen( options =>
{
    options.CustomSchemaIds(x => x.FullName?.Replace("+", ".", StringComparison.Ordinal));
});

Performance Comparisons

All performance benchmarks reported use the following environment:

// * Summary *

BenchmarkDotNet v0.13.12, Windows 11 (10.0.22621.3007/22H2/2022Update/SunValley2)
12th Gen Intel Core i7-12700H, 1 CPU, 20 logical and 14 physical cores
.NET SDK 8.0.101
  [Host]     : .NET 8.0.1 (8.0.123.58001), X64 RyuJIT AVX2
  DefaultJob : .NET 8.0.1 (8.0.123.58001), X64 RyuJIT AVX2
Benchmarks.Simple

This benchmark tests the various mediator implementations with a single request/response handler.

Method Mean Error Ratio Rank Allocated
SendRequest_Baseline 0.7701 ns 0.0180 ns 1.00 1 -
SendRequest_IHandler 15.6780 ns 0.0476 ns 20.36 2 -
SendRequest_ImmediateHandler 16.6023 ns 0.0561 ns 21.56 3 -
SendRequest_Mediator 27.2993 ns 0.4269 ns 35.49 4 -
SendRequest_IMediator 31.3420 ns 0.1006 ns 40.64 5 -
SendRequest_MediatR 68.3384 ns 0.3453 ns 88.73 6 240 B
Benchmarks.Large

This benchmark tests the various mediator implementations in the face of 999 request/response handlers.

Method Mean Error Ratio Rank Allocated
SendRequest_Baseline 0.5656 ns 0.0252 ns 1.00 1 -
SendRequest_ImmediateHandler 15.4346 ns 0.0516 ns 27.34 2 -
SendRequest_IHandler 16.0959 ns 0.0552 ns 28.50 3 -
SendRequest_Mediator 27.4104 ns 0.0449 ns 48.54 4 -
SendRequest_MediatR 80.0953 ns 0.4749 ns 141.83 5 240 B
SendRequest_IMediator 435.3890 ns 1.6399 ns 771.01 6 -
Benchmarks.Behaviors

This benchmark tests a more realistic scenario of using 1 behavior and 1 service.

Method Mean Error Ratio Rank Allocated
SendRequest_Baseline 56.71 ns 0.174 ns 1.00 1 40 B
SendRequest_IHandler 78.90 ns 0.304 ns 1.39 2 40 B
SendRequest_ImmediateHandler 80.02 ns 0.288 ns 1.41 3 40 B
SendRequest_Mediator 101.23 ns 0.263 ns 1.78 4 40 B
SendRequest_IMediator 104.92 ns 0.297 ns 1.85 5 40 B
SendRequest_MediatR 201.27 ns 1.023 ns 3.55 6 560 B
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
  • net8.0

    • No dependencies.

NuGet packages (3)

Showing the top 3 NuGet packages that depend on Immediate.Handlers:

Package Downloads
Immediate.Validations

Source generated validations for Immediate.Handlers parameters.

Immediate.Apis

A source generator to bind Immediate.Handlers handlers to minimal APIs.

Immediate.Cache

A collection of classes that simplify caching responses from Immediate.Handlers handlers.

GitHub repositories (1)

Showing the top 1 popular GitHub repositories that depend on Immediate.Handlers:

Repository Stars
SSWConsulting/SSW.VerticalSliceArchitecture
An enterprise ready solution template for Vertical Slice Architecture. This template is just one way to apply the Vertical Slice Architecture.
Version Downloads Last updated
2.0.0 303 11/13/2024
1.7.1 81 11/13/2024
1.7.0 798 10/12/2024
1.6.1 967 9/10/2024
1.6.0 98 9/9/2024
1.5.0 1,547 7/13/2024
1.4.0 2,773 5/4/2024
1.3.1 621 4/8/2024
1.3.0 528 3/25/2024
1.2.0 448 3/21/2024
1.1.0 791 2/5/2024
1.0.0 196 1/19/2024
0.5.0 106 1/16/2024
0.4.0 117 1/15/2024
0.3.0 100 1/15/2024
0.2.0 118 1/13/2024
0.1.0 140 1/10/2024
0.1.0-preview.0.160 71 1/9/2024