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payload

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Dependency configuration and injection for Ruby and Rails.
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Payload

DEPRECATED

This was a useful experiment for [Upcase Exercises], but no real interest ever developed within the company, so there is no reason to publish this as an independent library. This library is unlikely to be maintained or expanded beyond the needs of Upcase, so it's recommended that you avoid using it unless you would like to maintain it yourself.

Payload is a lightweight framework for specifying, injecting, and using dependencies in Ruby on Rails applications. It facilitates run-time assembly of dependencies and makes it plausible to use inversion of control beyond the controller level. It also attempts to remove boilerplate code for common patterns such as defining factories and applying decorators.

Overview

The framework makes it easy to define dependencies from application code without resorting to singletons, constants, or globals. It also won't cause any class-reloading issues during development.

The central object in the framework is a "container." Dependencies are specified using Ruby configuration files. Configured dependencies are then available anywhere a reference to the container is available.

Define simple dependencies in config/dependencies.rb using services:

service :payment_client do |container|
  PaymentClient.new(ENV['PAYMENT_HOST'])
end

The configuration block receives a reference to the container, which will contain all configured dependencies. This makes it possible to define dependencies without knowing how or when their sub-dependencies will be defined.

Controllers receive a reference named dependencies, so you can easily inject dependencies into controllers.

For example, in app/controllers/payments_controller.rb:

class PaymentsController < ApplicationController
  def create
    payment = Payment.new(params[:payment], dependencies[:payment_client])
    receipt = payment.process
    redirect_to receipt
  end
end

You can easily test this dependency in a controller spec:

describe PaymentsController do
  describe '#create' do
    it 'processes a payment' do
      payment_params = { product_id: '123', amount: '25' }
      client = stub_service(:payment_client)
      payment = double('payment', process: true)
      Payment.stub(:new).with(payment_params, client).and_return(payment)

      post :create, payment_params

      expect(payment).to have_received(:process)
    end
  end
end

You can further invert control and use factories to hide low-level dependencies from controllers entirely.

In config/dependencies.rb:

factory :payment do |container, attributes|
  Payment.new(attributes, container[:payment_client])
end

In app/controllers/payments_controller.rb:

class PaymentsController < ApplicationController
  def create
    payment = dependencies[:payment].new(params[:payment])
    payment.process
    redirect_to payment
  end
end

You can also stub factories in tests:

describe PaymentsController do
  describe '#create' do
    it 'processes a payment' do
      payment_params = { product_id: '123', amount: '25' }
      payment = stub_factory_instance(:payment, payment_params)

      post :create, payment_params

      expect(payment).to have_received(:process)
    end
  end
end

The controller and its tests are now completely ignorant of payment_client, and deal only with the collaborator they need: payment.

Setup

Add payload to your Gemfile:

gem 'payload'

To access dependencies from controllers, include the Controller module:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  include Payload::Controller
end

Specifying Dependencies

Edit config/dependencies.rb to specify dependencies.

Use the service method to define dependencies which can be fully instantiated when the application boots:

service :payment_client do |container|
  PaymentClient.new(ENV['PAYMENT_HOST'])
end

Other dependencies are accessible from the container:

service :payment_notifier do |container|
  PaymentNotifier.new(container[:mailer])
end

Use the factory method to define dependencies which require dependencies from the container as well as runtime state which varies per-request:

factory :payment do |container, attributes|
  Payment.new(attributes, container[:payment_client])
end

Any additional arguments passed to new when instantiating the factory will also be passed to the factory definition block.

Use the decorate method to extend or replace a previously defined dependency:

decorate :payment do |payment, container|
  NotifyingPayment.new(payment, container[:payment_notifier])
end

Decorated dependencies have access to other dependencies through the container, as well as the current definition for that dependency.

Using Dependencies

The Railtie inserts middleware into the stack which will inject a container into the Rack environment for each request. This is available as dependencies in controllers and env[:dependencies] in the Rack stack.

Use [] to access services:

class PaymentsController < ApplicationController
  def create
    dependencies[:payment_client].charge(params[:amount])
    redirect_to payments_path
  end
end

Use new to instantiate dependencies from factories:

class PaymentsController < ApplicationController
  def create
    payment = dependencies[:payment].new(params[:payment])
    payment.process
    redirect_to payment
  end
end

All arguments to the new method will be passed to the factory definition block.

Grouping Dependencies

You can enforce simplicity in your dependency graph by grouping dependencies and explicitly exporting only the dependencies you need to expose to the application layer.

For example, you can specify payment dependencies in config/dependencies/payments.rb:

service :payment_client do |container|
  PaymentClient.new(ENV['PAYMENT_HOST'])
end

service :payment_notifier do |container|
  PaymentNotifier.new(container[:mailer])
end

factory :payment do |container, attributes|
  Payment.new(attributes, container[:payment_client])
end

decorate :payment do |payment, container|
  NotifyingPayment.new(payment, container[:payment_notifier])
end

export :payment

In this example, the final, decorated :payment dependency will be available in controllers, but :payment_client and :payment_notifier will not.

You can use this approach to hide low-level dependencies behind a facade and only expose the facade to the application layer.

Testing

To activate testing support, require and mix in the Testing module:

require 'payload/testing'

RSpec.configure do |config|
  config.include Payload::Testing
end

During integration tests, the fully configured container will be used. During controller tests, an empty container will be initialized for each test. Tests can inject the dependencies they need for each interaction.

This module provides two useful methods:

  • stub_service: Injects a stubbed service into the test container and returns it.
  • stub_factory_instance: Finds or injects a stubbed factory into the test container and expects an instance to be created with the given attributes.

Contributing

Please see the contribution guidelines.

License

thoughtbot

Payload is Copyright © 2014 Joe Ferris and thoughtbot. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the LICENSE file.

Payload is maintained and funded by thoughtbot, inc.

The names and logos for thoughtbot are trademarks of thoughtbot, inc.