@loopback/metadata
This module contains utilities to help developers implement
TypeScript decorators,
define/merge metadata, and inspect metadata.
- Reflector: Wrapper of
reflect-metadata
- Decorator factories: A set of factories for class/method/property/parameter
decorators to apply metadata to a given class and its static or instance
members.
- MetadataInspector: High level APIs to inspect a class and/or its members to
get metadata applied by decorators.
Basic Use
To create a class decorator
import {ClassDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
export interface MyClassMetadata {
name: string;
description?: string;
}
function myClassDecorator(spec: MyClassMetadata): ClassDecorator {
return ClassDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<MyClassMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-class-decorator',
spec,
{decoratorName: '@myClassDecorator'},
);
}
Alternatively, we can instantiate the factory and create a decorator:
function myClassDecorator(spec: MyClassMetadata): ClassDecorator {
const factory = new ClassDecoratorFactory<MyClassMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-class-decorator',
spec,
);
return factory.create();
}
Now we can use @myClassDecorator
to add metadata to a class as follows:
@myClassDecorator({name: 'my-controller'})
class MyController {}
To create a method decorator
import {MethodDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
export interface MyMethodMetadata {
name: string;
description?: string;
}
function myMethodDecorator(spec: MyMethodMetadata): MethodDecorator {
return MethodDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<MyMethodMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-decorator',
spec,
);
}
Now we can use @myMethodDecorator
to add metadata to a method as follows:
class MyController {
@myMethodDecorator({name: 'my-method'})
myMethod(x: string): string {
return 'Hello, ' + x;
}
@myMethodDecorator({name: 'another-method'})
anotherMethod() {}
@myMethodDecorator({name: 'my-static-method'})
static myStaticMethod() {}
}
To create a decorator that can be used multiple times on a single method
Instead of a single immutable object to be merged, the
MethodMultiDecoratorFactory
reduced parameters into a flat array of items.
When fetching the metadata later, you will receive it as an array.
import {MethodMultiDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
function myMultiMethodDecorator(spec: object): MethodDecorator {
return MethodMultiDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<object>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-multi-decorator',
spec,
);
}
Now, you can use it multiple times on a method:
class MyController {
@myMultiMethodDecorator({x: 1})
@myMultiMethodDecorator({y: 2})
@myMultiMethodDecorator({z: 3})
public point() {}
}
class MyOtherController {
@myMultiMethodDecorator([{x: 1}, {y: 2}, {z: 3}])
public point() {}
}
And when you access this data:
const arrayOfSpecs = MetadataInspector.getMethodMetadata<object>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-multi-decorator',
constructor.prototype,
op,
);
Typescript
applies decorators in reverse order
per class, from the parent down. The metadata array resurned by getOwnMetadata
will be in this order:
class Parent {
@myMultiMethodDecorator('A')
@myMultiMethodDecorator('B')
public greet() {}
}
class Child extends Parent {
@myMultiMethodDecorator(['C', 'D'])
public greet() {}
}
class Grandchild extends Child {
@myMultiMethodDecorator('E')
@myMultiMethodDecorator('F')
public greet() {}
}
You can also create a decorator that takes an object that can contain an array:
interface Point {
x?: number;
y?: number;
z?: number;
}
interface GeometryMetadata {
points: Point[];
}
function geometry(...points: Point[]): MethodDecorator {
return MethodMultiDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<GeometryMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-multi-decorator',
points,
);
}
class MyGeoController {
@geometry({x: 1})
@geometry({x: 2}, {y: 3})
@geometry({z: 5})
public abstract() {}
}
const arrayOfSpecs = MetadataInspector.getMethodMetadata<GeometryMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-multi-decorator',
constructor.prototype,
op,
);
To create a property decorator
import {PropertyDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
export interface MyPropertyMetadata {
name: string;
description?: string;
}
function myPropertyDecorator(spec: MyPropertyMetadata): PropertyDecorator {
return PropertyDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<MyPropertyMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-property-decorator',
spec,
);
}
Now we can use @myPropertyDecorator
to add metadata to a property as follows:
class MyController {
@myPropertyDecorator({name: 'my-property'})
myProperty: string;
@myPropertyDecorator({name: 'another-property'})
anotherProperty: boolean;
@myPropertyDecorator({name: 'my-static-property'})
static myStaticProperty: string;
}
To create a parameter decorator
import {ParameterDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
export interface MyParameterMetadata {
name: string;
description?: string;
}
function myParameterDecorator(spec: MyParameterMetadata): ParameterDecorator {
return ParameterDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<MyParameterMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-parameter-decorator',
spec,
);
}
Now we can use @myParameterDecorator
to add metadata to a parameter as
follows:
class MyController {
constructor(
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'logging-prefix'}) public prefix: string,
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'logging-level'}) public level: number,
) {}
myMethod(
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'x'}) x: number,
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'y'}) y: number,
) {}
static myStaticMethod(
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'a'}) a: string,
@myParameterDecorator({name: 'b'}) b: string,
) {}
}
To create method decorator for parameters
import {MethodParameterDecoratorFactory} from '@loopback/metadata';
export interface MyParameterMetadata {
name: string;
description?: string;
}
function myMethodParameterDecorator(
spec: MyParameterMetadata,
): MethodDecorator {
return MethodParameterDecoratorFactory.createDecorator<MyParameterMetadata>(
'metadata-key-for-my-method-parameter-decorator',
spec,
);
}
Now we can use @myMethodParameterDecorator
to add metadata to a parameter as
follows:
class MyController {
@myMethodParameterDecorator({name: 'x'})
@myMethodParameterDecorator({name: 'y'})
myMethod(x: number, y: number) {}
}
WARNING: Using method decorators to provide metadata for parameters is
strongly discouraged for a few reasons:
- Method decorators cannot be applied to a constructor
- Method decorators depends on the positions to match parameters
We recommend that ParameterDecorator
be used instead.
Decorator options
An object of type DecoratorOptions
can be passed in to create decorator
functions. There are two flags for the options:
- allowInheritance: Controls if inherited metadata will be honored. Default to
true
. - cloneInputSpec: Controls if the value of
spec
argument will be cloned.
Sometimes we use shared spec for the decoration, but the decorator function
might need to mutate the object. Cloning the input spec makes it safe to use
the same spec (template
) to decorate different members. Default to true
. - decoratorName: Name for the decorator such as
@inject
for error and
debugging messages.
Customize inheritance of metadata
By default, the decorator factories allow inheritance with the following rules:
-
If the metadata is an object, we merge the spec
argument from the
decorator function into the inherited value from base classes. For metadata
of array and other primitive types, the spec
argument is used if provided.
- We can override
inherit
method of the decorator factory to customize how
to resolve spec
against the inherited metadata. For example:
protected inherit(inheritedMetadata: T | undefined | null): T {
return this.spec;
}
-
Method/property/parameter level metadata is applied to the class or its
prototype as a map keyed method/property names. We think this approach is
better than keeping metadata at method/property level as it's not easy to
inspect a class to find static/instance methods and properties with
decorations. The metadata for a class is illustrated below:
- MyClass (the constructor function itself)
{
'my-class-decorator-key': MyClassMetadata,
'my-static-parameter-decorator-key': {
'': [MyConstructorParameterMetadata],
'myStaticMethod1': [MyStaticMethodParameterMetadata],
'myStaticMethod2': [MyStaticMethodParameterMetadata],
},
'my-static-method-decorator-key': {
'myStaticMethod1': MyStaticMethodMetadata,
'myStaticMethod2': MyStaticMethodMetadata,
},
'my-static-property-decorator-key': {
'myStaticMethod1': MyStaticPropertyMetadata,
'myStaticMethod1': MyStaticPropertyMetadata,
}
}
{
'my-instance-parameter-decorator-key': {
'myMethod1': [MyMethodParameterMetadata],
'myMethod2': [MyMethodParameterMetadata],
},
'my-instance-method-decorator-key': {
'myMethod1': MyMethodMetadata,
'myMethod2': MyMethodMetadata,
},
'my-instance-property-decorator-key': {
'myProperty1': MyPropertyMetadata,
'myProperty2': MyPropertyMetadata,
}
}
The following methods in DecoratorFactory
allow subclasses to customize how to
merge the spec
with existing metadata for a class, methods, properties, and
method parameters. Please note M
is a map for methods/properties/parameters.
protected mergeWithInherited(
inheritedMetadata: M,
target: Object,
member?: string,
descriptorOrIndex?: TypedPropertyDescriptor<any> | number,
): M {
}
protected mergeWithOwn(
ownMetadata: M,
target: Object,
member?: string,
descriptorOrIndex?: TypedPropertyDescriptor<any> | number,
): M {
}
- The default implementation throws errors if the same decorator function is
applied to a given target member (class/method/property/parameter) more than
once. For example, the following usage will report an error at runtime.
@myClassDecorator({name: 'my-controller'})
@myClassDecorator({name: 'your-controller'})
class MyController {}
Inspect metadata
MetadataInspector
provides API to inspect metadata from a class and its
members.
Inspect metadata of a class
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const meta = MetadataInspector.getClassMetadata(
'my-class-decorator-key',
MyController,
);
Inspect own metadata of a class
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const meta = MetadataInspector.getClassMetadata<MyClassMetaData>(
'my-class-decorator-key',
MyController,
{
ownMetadataOnly: true,
},
);
Inspect metadata of a method
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const allMethods = MetadataInspector.getAllMethodMetaData<MyMethodMetadata>(
'my-method-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
);
const myMethod = MetadataInspector.getMethodMetaData<MyMethodMetadata>(
'my-method-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
'myMethod',
);
Inspect metadata of a property
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const allProps = MetadataInspector.getAllPropertyMetaData<MyPropertyMetadata>(
'my-property-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
);
const myProp = MetadataInspector.getMethodMetaData<MyMethodMetadata>(
'my-property-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
'myProp',
);
Inspect metadata of method parameters
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const allParamsForMyMethod =
MetadataInspector.getAllParameterMetaData<MyParameterMetadata>(
'my-parameter-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
'myMethod',
);
const firstParamForMyMethod =
MetadataInspector.getMyParameterMetaData<MyParameterMetadata>(
'my-parameter-decorator-key',
MyController.prototype,
'myMethod',
0,
);
const allParamsForConstructor =
MetadataInspector.getAllParameterMetaData<MyParameterMetadata>(
'my-parameter-decorator-key',
MyController,
'',
);
Use strong-typed metadata access key
You can use MetadataAccessor to provide type checks for metadata access via
keys. For example,
const CLASS_KEY = MetadataAccessor.create<MyClassMetadata, ClassDecorator>(
'my-class-decorator-key',
);
const myClassDecorator = ClassDecoratorFactory.createDecorator(CLASS_KEY);
const myClassMeta = MetadataInspector.getClassMetaData(CLASS_KEY, MyController);
Please note MetadataKey can be an instance of MetadataAccessor or a string.
Inspect design-time metadata of properties/methods
import {MetadataInspector} from '@loopback/metadata';
const myPropType = MetadataInspector.getDesignTypeForProperty(
MyController.prototype,
'myProp',
);
const myConstructor = MetadataInspector.getDesignTypeForMethod(
MyController,
'',
);
const myMethod = MetadataInspector.getDesignTypeForMethod(
MyController.prototype,
'myMethod',
);
Installation
npm install --save @loopback/metadata
Contributions
Tests
Run npm test
from the root folder.
Contributors
See
all contributors.
License
MIT