Seatbelt
Tool to define implementation interfaces that should be decoupled from their
implementations. (A Ruby header file approach.)
Development instructions
Install RSpec Git Pre-commit hook
To get a working testsuite before committing code to the repository you have to install a Git pre-commit hook that prevends you from committing unless your specs passed or are pending.
If you haven't wget
installed already, install it using homebrew:
brew install wget
Install the hook:
wget -O .git/hooks/pre-commit https://raw.github.com/markhazlett/RSpec-Pre-commit-Git-Hook/master/rspec-precommit
After installing, call
chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
to make it executable.
Testing
Although running the testsuite with Guard I highly recommened the
RubyTest Sublime Text package.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'seatbelt'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install seatbelt
Usage
Defining API classes and API meta-methods
Defining classes that act like API classes is a very simple step. Define a plain
Ruby class and include the
Seatbelt::Ghost
module.
That gives you access to the interface
class method. API meta-methods are not implemented, they will only be defined. Be sure that you have a specification of these methods like passing how many arguments and if a block is required.
interface
takes an argument that defines which object level the method should be
callable at (The implementation class has to define a matcher for this. See below.)
class Hotel
include Seatbelt::Gate
interface :class do
define :find_nearby,
:args => [:options]
end
end
define
expects at least one argument, it's method name. The second argument is optional but has to be a Hash
.
If your API meta-method expects arguments you have to specify the list of arguments.
define :find_nearby,
:block_required => false,
:args => [:options]
With this, a class method find_nearby
is defined at the Hotel
class. Calling that method is straight forward:
Hotel.find_nearby(:city => "London")
To define an instance API meta-method at the Hotel
class, just pass :instance
to :interface
method:
interface :instance do
define :number_of_rooms_with_tv_sets
end
And, like above, calling is just pure Ruby:
hotel = Hotel.new
hotel.number_of_rooms_with_tv_sets
If your API meta-method specification says that the method requires a block, just pass truthy
to the :block_required
key.
A note about method argument specification:
define :foo,
:args => ["name", "*args", "&block"]
expects that you have an implementation body - let's say - like this:
def implement_foo(name, *args, &block)
# ...
end
Defining API properties
If the API class should provide properties use the define_property
for single property or define_properties
for multiple property definiton.
interface :instance do
define_property :foo
define_properties :bar, :foobar
end
If you want to update a bunch of properties at once, you must mark them as accessible.
interface :instance do
define_property :foo
define_properties :bar, :foobar
property_accessible :foo, :bar
end
foo = Foo.new
foo.properties = { :foo => 12, :bar => "glasses", :foobar => "of beer." }
In the example above, the foobar
property will not be set, because it's not marked as accessible.
Implementing API meta-methods
Defining API meta-methods is simple, but how do you implement the logic of these methods? Use a plain Ruby class and include the Seatbelt::Gate
module.
Then it's possible to associate the implemention method with the API meta-method definition.
class ImplementHotel
include Seatbelt::Gate
implementation "Hotel", :class do
match 'hotels_nearby_city' => 'find_nearby'
match 'all' => 'all'
end
def hotels_nearby_city(options={})
end
def self.all
end
end
The implementation
directive takes two arguments. The first one is the method name of the API class, the second one is the object level the implementation is defined on (:instance
, :class
).
The match
directive takes an Hash containing the implementation method name as key and the API method as value.
class ImplementHotel
include Seatbelt::Gate
implementation "Hotel", :class do
match 'hotels_nearby_city' => 'find_nearby'
end
implementation "Hotel", :instance do
match 'rooms_with_tv' => 'number_of_rooms_with_tv_sets'
end
def hotels_nearby_city(options={})
end
def rooms_with_tv
end
end
With the match
directive it is also possible to bind an implementation method from the superclass to the given interface class:
class MetaBook
def general_stuff_for_books
end
end
class ImplementationNovel < MetaBook
include Seatbelt::Gate
implementation "Novel", :instance do
match 'general_stuff_for_books' => 'publisher', :superclass => true
end
end
Note that this is only possible for :instance
level implementations.
(Thanks to @LarsM for suggesting this feature.)
Using delegated methods
If you want to use a method as implementation method that is delegated to another object you can mark these methods as
delegated and Seatbelt will recognize them too.
class BookImplementation
delegate :distributor_name, to: :@distributor
implementation "Book", :instance do
match 'distributor_name' => 'distributor', delegated: true
end
end
Implementing API properties
Similiar to match
associate the properties of your implementation class and your API class with match_property
.
implementation "Book", :instance do
match_property 'author'
end
implementation "Book", :instance do
match_property 'implementation_title' => 'title'
end
implementation "Novel", :instance do
match_property :publisher, :superclass => true
end
Accessing the API class in implementations of API meta-methods
You can access the API class within the implementation methods through the
proxy
object.
Depending the type of method you are implementing, proxy
will be a different scope:
- implementing a later class method,
proxy
is the class of the API class defined in implementation
- implementing a later instance method,
proxy
is the instance of the API class defined in implementation
The proxy
object provides a call
method to access the proxy
methods. It expects the method name to call, an argument list and an optional block.
def rooms_with_tv
excluded_rooms = proxy.call(:second_floor)
room_criteria = proxy.call(:criteria, :not => :gallery)
end
#call
could be omitted and message send directly to the API class or instance receiver.
def rooms_with_tv
excluded_rooms = proxy.second_floor
room_criteria = proxy.criteria(:not => :gallery)
end
Hint: Chaining API classes is possible by returning proxy.object
from the implementation method.
Note: If you want to delegate a class method of your implementation class to a class API method by using the :type
key, the proxy object acts as the class object of the API class.
Defining attributes in API classes
You can define attributes within an API class by including the Seatbelt::Document
module.
class Airport
include Seatbelt::Ghost
include Seatbelt::Document
attribute :name, String
attribute :lat, Float
attribute :lng, Float
interface :instance do
define :identifier
end
end
To access the attributes within an implementation class use the proxy
and it's call
method.
For more informations about attributes see the Virtus project.
A note about attributes and Mongoid: If you include mongoid
in your project and any attribute
should be a boolean, you have use the full path to the type:
attribute :is_read, Virtus::Attribute::Boolean
For further informations see: https://github.com/solnic/virtus/issues/132#issuecomment-11611142
Defining associations between objects
Associations between objects is possible in two ways if Seatbelt::Document
is included in the class.
one-to-many
module Seatbelt
module Models
class Airport
include Seatbelt::Document
has_many :flights, Seatbelt::Models::Flight
end
end
end
A has_many
relationship definition takes two arguments:
- the association name
- the class used for a single item in the relationship collection
That creates an accessor method acts like an Array
.
You can add items to the collection (association) in two ways:
instance level
airport = Seatbelt::Models::Airport.where(:name => "London Stansted")
Flights.find_to(airport.name).each do |flight|
aiport.flights << flight
end
attribute level
airport = Seatbelt::Models::Airport.where(:name => "London Stansted")
GetFromTheInternet.fetch_flights.each do |flight|
aiport.flights << {:number => flight["fn_num"], :return_flight_at => flight["RRUECK"]}
end
one-to-one
module Seatbelt
module Models
class Hotel
include Seatbelt::Document
has :region
end
end
end
A has
association takes two arguments where the last one is optional.
- the association name
- the class used for the assocation
If the second argument is omitted has
guessed the corrosping model class. In the example above it will use the
Seatbelt::Models::Region
class.
You can assign an object to the association the same way as assigning an attribute.
Synthesize objects
Synthesizing objects is only available at the instance level. By now Seatbelt will only synthesize the state of an object, not its behaviour!
To synthesize an implementation class instance and the proxy object, add synthesize
to the Implementation class.
class ImplementationAirport
include Seatbelt::Gate
include Mongoid::Document
field :name, :type => String
field :lat, :type => Float
field :lng, :type => Float
synthesize :from => "Seatbelt::Models::Airport",
:adapter => "Seatbelt::Synthesizers::Mongoid"
end
Then - every time proxy.[attribute_name]
is changed within the implementation class - the instance of the implementation class is changed too. And vice versa:
aiport = Seatbelt::Models::Airport.new(:name => "London Stansted")
def something
proxy.name = "London Gatewick"
p self.name
end
If attribute names are the same on both sides, all is fine. If not, the implementation class has to implement a synthesize_map
method where the keys are the attributes from the API class
and the values are attributes from the implementation class
.
class ImplementAirport
include Seatbelt::Gate
include Mongoid::Document
field :l_name, :type => String
field :gidd_lat, :type => Float
field :gidd_lng, :type => Float
synthesize :from => "Seatbelt::Models::Airport",
:adapter => "Seatbelt::Synthesizers::Mongoid"
synthesize_map :name => :l_name, :lat => :gidd_lat, :lng => :gidd_lng
end
Defining custom synthesizers
Seatbelt provides to synthesizers:
Seatbelt::Synthesizers::Document
Seatbelt::Synthesizers::Mongoid
The first one synthesizes Seatbelt::Document
or Virtus
based implementation classes. The second one synthesizes Mongoid::Document
based implementation classed.
Defining custom synthesizers helpful, if
- the implementation class uses a not supported backend
- only a few attributes should be synthesized that exists on both sides
A Synthesizer is a plain Ruby class which includes the Seatbelt::Synthesizer
module and implements a synthesizable_attributes
method.
class CustomSynthesizer
include Seatbelt::Synthesizer
def synthesizable_attributes
[:l_name, :gidd_lat]
end
end
Which only synthesizes the :l_name
and :gidd_lat
properties.
Tunneling from API class instances to implementation class instances
Any API class that implements Seatbelt::Ghost can have access to its
implementation class instance. This behaviour has to be enabled before using
because its a violation of the Public/Private API approach.
(And yes - in Ruby private methods are not really private methods.)
Accessing the implementation instance is only available after the API Class
was instantiated.
Example:
class Hotel
include Seatbelt::Ghost
enable_tunneling!
end
class ImplementationHotel
include Seatbelt::Document
include Seatbelt::Gate
attribute :ignore_dirty_rooms, Boolean
end
hotel = new Hotel
hotel.tunnel(:ignore_dirty_rooms=,false)
Passing blocks is also available if the accessed method supports blocks
class ImplementationHotel
include Seatbelt::Document
include Seatbelt::Gate
attribute :ignore_dirty_rooms, Boolean
def filter_rooms(sections)
rooms = self.rooms.map{|room| sections.include?(room_type)}
yield(rooms)
end
end
hotel.tunnel(:filter_rooms, ["shower, kitchen"]) do |rooms|
rooms.select do |room|
end
end
Note that this is a dangerous approach and should be avoided. If you change the implementation layer and you are using tunneling from API classes to Implementation classes you have to make sure that the new implementation layer provides the attribute or
method you are tunneling to with your API class instance.
To disable tunneling just call the disable_tunneling!
class method.
Man ... we need a translator here
"The Babel fish," said The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy quietly, "is small, yellow and leech-like, and probably the oddest thing in the Universe. It feeds on brainwave energy received not from its own carrier but from those around it. It absorbs all unconscious mental frequencies from this brainwave energy to nourish itself with. It then excretes into the mind of its carrier a telepathic matrix formed by combining the conscious thought frequencies with nerve signals picked up from the speech centres of the brain which has supplied them. The practical upshot of all this is that if you stick a Babel fish in your ear you can instantly understand anything in any form of language. The speech patterns you actually hear decode the brainwave matrix which has been fed into your mind by your Babel fish.
(The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy)
Let's talk about basics of the TQL (Translation Query Language). TQL is basically a query formed in a natural sentence (language doesn't matter) after a defined syntax.
TQL basic support is implemented in Seatbelt v0.4. Basic support means that you are able to implement your own translations and tapes.
Tapes?
A tape is collection of translate
blocks that will translate a query into some business logic. A tape is added to a tape deck that will play the corrosponding tape section to a given query (or better said - call the translation of this query).
Let's take a closer look at what a tape deck is and what tapes are.
Any class could act as a tape deck by including the Seatbelt::TapeDeck
module. Mostly that classes are also including the Seatbelt::Document
module.
Adding the Seatbelt::TapeDeck
module to a class gives the class the opportunity to
- add tapes to the class
- answer a query with a translation defined within a tape
Before diving into some example code, let's record a tape. As mentioned above, a tape is just a bunch of translation blocks defining the query syntax and an associated logic implementation.
To have translation implemented or defined you should be familiar with regular expressions, the core tool of a tape.
A tape class inherits from Seatbelt::Tape
and is very simple to implement.
class PubTape < Seatbelt::Tape
translate /Gimme (\d+) beers!/ do |sentence, count_of_beer|
#
end
end
A translate
block takes arguments. If your argument list to the translate
block has only one item, this item is the first matched value from your sentence (or if the query didn't expect any matched value then it's the original query sentence).
Anyhow - every match marked with your regular expression is passed do the translate
block if there are enough arguments defined.
translate /Gimme (\d+) beers!/ do |sentence, count_of_beer|
# sentence is original query sentence
# count_of_beer is the value matched by (\d+)
end
Note: Any argument passed to the block is passed as String. So you have to take care
of type casts.
To have access to the tape's translation block, a tape has to be assigned to a tape deck.
class Pub
include Seatbelt::Document
include Seatbelt::Tape
use_tape PubTape
end
Also possible:
Pub.add_tape PubTape
Having more than one tape:
class Pub
include Seatbelt::Document
include Seatbelt::Tape
use_tapes PubTape,
AnotherTape
end
Calling Pub.answer("Gimme 4 beers!")
will call the corrosponding translation block.
Calling other tapes from a tape
To call another tape or a specific translation of a tape use the play_tape
method within the translate
block.
class CreditCardTape < Seatbelt::Tape
translate /Charge the credit card with (\d+) Euro./ do |amount|
end
end
class PubTape < Seatbelt::Tape
translate /Gimme (\d+) beers!/ do |sentence, count_of_beer|
overall_costs = play_tape(:section => "Want the bill for #{count_of_beer} beer")
play_tape(CreditCardTape, :section => "Charge the credit card with #{overall_costs} Euro.")
end
translate /Want the bill for (\d+) beer/ do |beer_amount|
costs_of_beer = 2
sum = 2 * beer_amount.to_i
sum
end
end
Note the difference between the two play_tape
calls.
With the tape_deck
object within your translate block you have access to the associated tape deck class (not instance).
Translator
By knowing what tapes and tape decks are, it's easy to understand what the Translator is doing.
The Translator takes the query and delegates the query to the responsible model.
Translator.tell_me "Hotel: 3 persons want to travel for 10 days beginning at next friday to Finnland."
Delegates the query 3 persons want to travel for 10 days beginning at next friday to Finnland.
to the Hotel
model.
The model declaration can be ommitted, if this is done, the query is delegated to the
model that is defined in the Translator.setup
:
Seatbelt::Translator.setup do |c|
c.namespace = "Seatbelt::Models::"
c.default_model_class = "Offer"
end
That will call Seatbelt::Models::Offer
if no model declaration is given within a query.
Define your tapes in lib/seatbelt/tapes
!
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request