Neighborhoods Prefab builds Protean machinery.

8.8.3 2021-08-03 21:16 UTC

README

A code generation tool. Takes the busywork out of building strongly-typed, patterned HTTP applications.

Table of Contents

Getting Started

Installation

Prefab can be installed using Composer:

composer require neighborhoods/prefab

Running Prefab

  • In your composer file, ensure you have your project name defined. Use the composer-example.json file, found in the root of Prefab, as a template
  • Create your Actor.prefab.definition.yml file as outlined below.
  • From the root of your project run ./vendor/bin/prefab
    • This will add all of the supporting files needed to create a working API endpoint

Prefab Fitness

To see working examples on how you can use Prefab, check out the Prefab Fitness repository for examples with fully self-contained environments that you can run locally.

Prerequisites

PSR-4 Namespace Definition

Prefab assumes users have defined a psr-4 namespace under the autoload key in their composer.json file. Namespaces MUST be defined as {VENDOR}\{PRODUCT_NAME}. See the composer docs for more information. Prefab will write generated files under the fab/ directory in your project root. You should configure your autoloader to first look in src/, then in fab/. This will allow you to override generated files by placing updated copies of classes in the equivalent src/ location.

Example:

"autoload": {
    "psr-4": {
      "Neighborhoods\\MyPrefabbedProject\\": [
        "src",
        "fab"
      ]
    }
}

Environment Variables

Prefab expects the following environment variables to be defined.

Project Structure

Prefab requires that all Prefab definition files be in a versioned directory under src/. For example, src/V1/Actor.prefab.definition.yml is valid while src/Actor.prefab.definition.yml is not.

Materialized Views

Prefab puts an extremely high focus on performance. One of the ways Prefab achieves fast response times is by ensuring that all HTTP requests result in a single database query on an index, made possible through the use of materialized views. Prefab uses search criteria to interact with its database, which doesn't support table joins. That means all data for a given request MUST live in the same table.

Note: Since search criteria allows you to select which data you would like to return, a single materialized view with a superset of all data returned by your HTTP endpoints can be used.

Prefab Definition File Specification

The purpose of this document is to define the components needed to generate an HTTP endpoint for an actor from a .prefab.definition.yml file

The file MUST be named {ACTORNAME}.prefab.definition.yml and saved under src/. They should be stored in the same nested directory structure as you would like the machinery to be generated under fab/.

  • table_name
    • Name of the database table containing the data that populates the actor
  • supporting_actor_group
    • The collection of supporting actors you need generated for the actor
    • Can be one of complete, collection, minimal, handler or repository
    • This field is optional and defaults to complete
    • See below for more information
  • tag_filter_fields_on_tracer
    • This field is optional and default to false
    • Set to true if you want to tag on the default global tracer all the filter fields sent to Map\Repository\Handler.
    • Note: to access the global tracer, the code uses the neighborhoods/datadog-component package. The Symfony container for your endpoint will not build unless you include the package source path in the list of appended_paths inside the http-buildable-directories.yml file, under the top_level_key of your endpoint. The source path is usually vendor/neighborhoods/datadog-component/src.
  • json_serialize_map_as_array
    • This field is optional and default to false
    • Set to true when HTTP response containing actor map should be a JSON array rather than an object with numerical property names.
  • http_route
    • The HTTP route to access the actor
    • This field is optional and unnecessary if you don't want to expose the actor to HTTP traffic
  • http_verbs
    • HTTP methods allowed for an actor. Can include GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, and DELETE.
    • Note: Since mutative and destructive actions are not yet patterned for repositories, you will need to override the generated handler to call the proper repository method.
  • constants
    • Additional user-defined constants to add to the actor interface.
    • This field is optional
  • identity_field
    • Name of the database column that uniquely identifies a record for the actor
  • properties
    • The class properties of the actor. Each property should have:
      • data_type
        • The type of object the property represents. This can be a primitive or a fully qualified namespaced object
        • Note: This used to be called php_type which is maintained for backwards compatibility
      • record_key
        • Name of the key containing the data that populates the class property
        • If not set, defaults to property name
        • Note: This used to be called database_column_name which is still maintained for backwards compatibility
      • nullable
        • Whether or not this property can be null. If true, the builder method will surround this property with isset() before attempting to set the value on the actor
        • If not set, defaults to false
      • created_on_insert
        • This denotes properties that are not expected to be present before inserting the record into the database.
        • If true, the buildForInsert() method will surround this property with isset() before attempting to set the value on the actor. However, the build() method will still require this property when building a record from the database.
        • If not set, defaults to false

Example Prefab Definition File:

Filename: User.prefab.definition.yml

table_name: mv1_user
identity_field: id
supporting_actor_group: complete
http_route: /mv1/users/{searchCriteria:}
http_verbs:
- get
- post
- put
- patch
- delete
constants:
  SOME_CONSTANT: some value
  NUMERIC_CONSTANT: 2.123
  ARRAY_CONSTANT_WITH_KEYS:
    some_key: some_value
    some_nested_array:
    - 123
    - test
  ARRAY_CONSTANT_WITHOUT_KEYS:
  - 1
  - 3
  - TEST
properties:
  id:
    data_type: int
    nullable: false
    created_on_insert: true
  email:
    data_type: string
    nullable: true
  first_name:
    data_type: string
    nullable: false
  last_name:
    data_type: string
    nullable: false
  created_at:
    data_type: string
    nullable: false
    created_on_insert: true

Search Criteria

Search Criteria is a data mining query language (DMQL) utilized by Prefab applications to provide a flexible API that enables HTTP clients to define how they want to ask for data rather than services explicitly implementing each use case. Search Criteria consists of filters along with optional sort order and pagination instructions.

Filters

Search Criteria filters are used to define the WHERE clause of a database query. Filters should be included as an array under the searchCriteria[filters] key. Each filter consists of the following:

Query Parameter Key: searchCriteria[filters]

Conditions

Sort Order

A sort order is used to define the order in which data should be returned. It consists of an array with field and a direction.

Query Parameter Key: searchCriteria[sortOrder]

Pagination

A page size can be defined in order to limit the number of results returned by a query. Set a page size by providing an integer under the key searchCriteria[pageSize]. You can retrieve additional pages of data by supplying a current page. Set the current page by providing an integer under the key searchCriteria[currentPage].

Supporting Actor Groups

Prefab supports generating different subsets of supporting actors to support various use cases. For information on how to specify a supporting actor group, see the Prefab definition file specification. The following supporting actor groups are available:

  • complete - Generates all supporting actors. This should be used when you need to be able to build an actor from storage and return it via HTTP.
    • Included supporting actors
      • Factory
      • Builder
      • Aware Traits
      • Repository
      • Map
      • Map Builder
      • Handler
  • collection - Generates supporting actors for building and handling groups of typed objects. This is often used to represent a collection of actors in a JSON database column.
    • Included supporting actors
      • Factory
      • Builder
      • Aware Traits
      • Map
      • Map Builder
  • minimal - Generates the minimum number of supporting actors to build an actor. This can be used to represent a single, typed object.
    • Included supporting actors
      • Factory
      • Builder
      • Aware Traits
  • handler - Generates only Handler instance. This can be used in addition to Buphalo generated Actors to provide HTTP functionality. See Repository Handler docs
    • Included supporting actors
      • Handler
  • repository - Generates the minimum number of supporting actors to have a map repository. This should be used when you need to retrieve actors from an external source (for example, from a HTTP API) but don’t need to expose an endpoint on the service itself.
    • Included supporting actors
      • Factory
      • Builder
      • Aware Traits
      • Repository
      • Map
      • Map Builder

Subset Container Buildable Directories

As Symfony containers get bigger, the response times for HTTP requests increase. To prevent slow response times, Prefab supports user-defined subset container building. Prefab users can define what should be included in the Symfony container for each route, so only the necessary actors are initialized. This buildable directory file is optional and Prefab will build the entirety of src/ and fab/ by default if the file is not found. If the file is present, then all routes MUST have a corresponding key with directories to be built.

  • Note: On the first request, Prefab will write this file to disk as a PHP array in the directory data/cache/Opcache/HTTPBuildableDirectoryMap. When making changes to the Buildable Directory File, the cached file MUST be deleted in order for changes to be reflected in the code. It is also highly recommended to ensure Opcache is enabled in production to prevent a read from disk on every HTTP request.

top_level_key - should be the URI. If a key with the first two parts of the URI is not found, Prefab will then check for a key with only the first part.

  • Examples
    • neighborhoods.com/mv1/property/{searchCriteria} would build all directories under the mv1/property key in the example file below
    • neighborhoods.com/mv2/property/{searchCriteria} would build all directories under the mv2 key in the example file below

buildable_directories - Represents the directories of HTTP actors you would like to include for a given request. Each buildable directory will include the corresponding path under both src/ and fab/. Since the buildable_directories represents paths, forward slashes (/) should be used as a separator.

  • Example:
    • A buildable directory of MV1/property will include fab/MV1/property (if it exists) and src/MV1/property (if it exists) in the container.

welcome_baskets - These are the namespaces of the HTTP machinery that Prefab generates that should be included in a request. Since welcome_baskets represent namespaces, backslashes (\) should be used as a separator.

  • Example:
    • Doctrine\DBAL will include all files under the Doctrine\DBAL namespace that are in fab/Prefab5/Doctrine/DBAL.

appended_paths - These are any additional paths that you want included in your container that are not under fab/ or src/. Paths are relative to the root of your project. Since appended_path represents paths, forward slashes (/) should be used as a separator.

  • Example:
    • vendor/neighborhoods/throwable-diagnostic-component/src will include all files under the vendor/neighborhoods/throwable-diagnostic-component/src folder in the container.

Example

# Place this file at the root of your application.
mv1/property: # The URI to the component Handler.
  buildable_directories:
    - MV1/Property # The relative path to the directory of the component.
  welcome_baskets:
    - Doctrine\DBAL
    - PDO
    - Opcache
    - NewRelic
    - Zend\Expressive
    - SearchCriteria
  appended_paths:
    - vendor/neighborhoods/throwable-diagnostic-component/src
mv2: # The URI to the component Handler.
  buildable_directories:
    - MV2 # The relative path to the directory of the component.
  welcome_baskets:
    - Doctrine\DBAL
    - PDO
    - Opcache
    - NewRelic
    - Zend\Expressive
    - SearchCriteria
  appended_paths:
    - some/other/dir

By default, Symfony containers are built on the first HTTP request. Since this can add a significant amount of time to the first request, it is recommended that you prebuild your containers before serving production traffic. This can be accomplished by adding the following script to your bin/ directory and including it as a post-update-cmd and/or post-install-cmd script in your composer.json file after vendor/bin/prefab.

#!/usr/bin/env php
<?php
declare(strict_types=1);
error_reporting(E_ALL);

require_once __DIR__ . '/../vendor/autoload.php';
use ReplaceThisWithYourVendorName\ReplaceThisWithTheNameOfYourProduct\Prefab5\HTTPBuildableDirectoryMap\ContainerBuilder;

$primer = new ContainerBuilder\Primer();
$primer->primeContainers();

return;

Semantic Versioning

Since Prefab is a code generation tool that allows users to override specific files and behaviors as needed, Prefab can't make a guarantee a minor version upgrade will work with your overriden files. Prefab does guarantee that all minor version upgrades of a purely Prefabbed project (no overriden files) will not have any breaking changes. If you do override any files, it's important that you test your project to verify those files still work as expected with the new version of Prefab.

Debug Mode

Debug mode can be enabled by setting the environment variable DEBUG_MODE=true. Enabling debug mode will output additional details about exceptions and errors thrown during HTTP requests. If there is an error during container building (eg. A missing Symfony service file), you will have the additional visibility provided by debug mode. Debug mode will try to send the error to STDERR and also it will try to log the error in /Logs/HTTP.log