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in-rules-engine

Kotlin rules engine DSL for maintaining rules and business logic in code.

Basic Syntax

The rule DSL syntax uses Kotlin to implement readable rule expressions using given-when-then specifications. Unfortunately, "when" is a keyword in kotlin that would require escaping to use, so in the most basic examples, "and" is used instead.

For example, to write the expression:

Given a string
when it is empty
then print "Empty string"

The rule in Kotlin would look like:

val emptyRule = rule("Empty string") {
  given {
    anyString()
  } and {
    it.isEmpty()
  } thenDo {
    println("Empty string")
  }
}

emptyRule("")            // Prints "Empty string"
emptyRule("not empty")   // Prints nothing

The rule helper creates a rule expression, starting with a description and a body called a rule definition. A rule expression is a Kotlin function that takes Any as a parameter, and attempts to evaluate a single rule.

Inside the rule body (referred to as a "let clause" in the framework), the given helper defines the type of parameter expected by the rule, the and helper (standing in for when) defines the condition, and the thenDo defines the outcome of the rule.

Note: The and helper is an alias for expect, but often reads better as a stand-in for the "when" in given-when-then in Kotlin code.

You can also add an else condition to the rule that does something when the rule does not match:

val emptyRule = rule("Empty string") {
  given {
    anyString()
  } and {
    it.isEmpty()
  } thenDo {
    println("Empty string")
  } otherwiseDo {
    println("Not an empty string")
  }
}

emptyRule("")            // Prints "Empty string"
emptyRule("not empty")   // Prints "Not an empty string"

Rule Matching

In the previous examples, the rule was being used to do something when it was applied. In the case of thenDo as the then expression, the rule expression does not return anything explicitly. In this case, the framework returns true when the rule matches or false when it fails to match the parameter:

println(emptyRule(""))            // Prints "true"
println(emptyRule("not empty"))   // Prints "false"

This allows you to extract the rule expression from some other code (including the outcome of the rule), and simply determine whether it matches or not.

if (emptyRule(str)) {
  // Do something in your application when the rule matches
}

Return Values

In order to always simply return true or false when evaluating a condition, the given-when-then can be exchanged for a given-return specification:

val emptyRule = rule("Empty string") {
  given {
    anyString()
  } alwaysReturn {
    it.isEmpty()
  }
}

println(emptyRule(""))            // Prints "true"
println(emptyRule("not empty"))   // Prints "false"

In this case, it may not be obvious but the framework is always evaluating the condition (when part of given-when-then) as true, and evaluating and returning the result of the outcome (then part). Since the framework doesn't particularly care whether the rule matches or not, the end result is what you expect, and the rule expression simply returns true or false.

In order to return something other than true or false, you can use a given-when-return specification that is similar to the above example but requires an alternate or default return value:

val greetingRule = rule("Hello or Good bye") {
  given {
    anyString()
  } and {
    it == "Hi"
  } thenReturn {
    "Hello"
  } otherwiseReturn {
    "Good bye"
  }
}

println(greetingRule("Hi"))               // Prints "Hello"
println(greetingRule("Do I know you?"))   // Prints "Good bye"

Note: The thenReturn and otherwiseReturn are aliases for then and otherwise and can be used interchangeably.

Since this is just Kotlin code, you can also compact parts of your rule that you prefer to write in code. Here's an example with the same result as above using an if statement as the return value:

val greetingRule = rule("Hello or Good bye") {
  given {
    anyString()
  } alwaysReturn {
    if (it == "Hi") "Hello" else "Good bye"
  }
}

println(greetingRule("Hi"))               // Prints "Hello"
println(greetingRule("Do I know you?"))   // Prints "Good bye"

Type Safety

The rule expressions start with a given that defines the input type. There are numerous ways of defining more interesting and useful input types, and the DSL allows type-safety within the rule expression. For example, to use a Map input type with strings:

val john = mapOf(
  "id" to "123",
  "firstName" to "John",
  "lastName" to "Smith"
)
val jane = mapOf(
  "id" to "456",
  "firstName" to "Jane",
  "lastName" to "Doe"
)

val firstNameRule = rule("Customer first name is John") {
  given {
    usingMap().anyString("firstName")
  } and {
    it == "John"
  } thenReturn {
    "Hello, John"
  } otherwiseReturn {
    "Good bye, $it"
  }
}

println(firstNameRule(john))   // Prints "Hello, John"
println(firstNameRule(jane))   // Prints "Good bye, Jane"

Types can also be coerced into any primitive, such as an Int:

val idRule = rule("Customer is John") {
  given {
    usingMap().anyInt("id")
  } and {
    it == 123
  } thenReturn {
    "Hello, John"
  } otherwiseReturn {
    "Good bye, user $it"
  }
}

println(idRule(john))   // Prints "Hello, John"
println(idRule(jane))   // Prints "Good bye, user 456"

Note: The same accessor methods such as anyString, anyShort, anyInt, anyLong, anyFloat, anyDouble, and anyBoolean work with usingMap and usingJson as well as by themselves with no parameters.

Complex Types

Possibly the most useful given expression is one that gives you access to an existing class you are using in your application. For example, to use a class called Request:

data class Request(val path: String)

val helloRequest = Request("/api/v1/hello")
val userRequest = Request("/api/v1/user")

val helloRule = rule("Path is hello") {
  given {
    any(Request::class)
  } whose {
    path == "/api/v1/hello"
  } thenReturn {
    "Hello"
  } otherwiseReturn {
    "Good bye"
  }
}

println(helloRule(helloRequest))   // Prints "Hello"
println(helloRule(userRequest))    // Prints "Good bye"

The any helper takes a class argument to give the rule expression access to that input parameter. Additionally, the whose helper (standing in for when in given-when-then) is extremely useful and gives you access to the fields of Request directly for more natural expression syntax.

Using Kotlin's extension functions, we can alias any(Request::class) as well:

fun GivenExpression.anyRequest() = any(Request::class)

val helloRule = rule("Path is hello") {
  given {
    anyRequest()
  } whose {
    path == "/api/v1/hello"
  } thenReturn {
    "Hello"
  } otherwiseReturn {
    "Good bye"
  }
}

println(helloRule(helloRequest))   // Prints "Hello"
println(helloRule(userRequest))    // Prints "Good bye"

Rule Sets

You can use the framework to build a list of rules, called a rule set. There's nothing particularly fancy about this, as the framework does not implement complex functionality on top of rule sets. You can use them however you choose.

To implement a set of rules, use the rules helper which is an alias for arrayOf. Here's a more complex example:

fun GivenExpression.anyRequest() = any(Request::class)

fun requestFor(path: String, queryString: String? = null): Request {
  return Request(
    "Cookies: sid=abc123\nSM_USER=johndoe",
    "https://www.ecommerce.biz",
    path,
    queryString
  )
}

val ruleSet = rules(
  rule("request is login") {
    given {
      anyRequest()
    } and { request ->
      request.requestPath.contains("/login")
    } thenDo { request ->
      println("Hello, ${request.requestPath}")
    }
  },
  rule("request is send order") {
    given {
      anyRequest()
    } alwaysReturn { request ->
      request.requestPath.endsWith("/orders")
    }
  },
  rule("request is logout") {
    given {
      anyRequest()
    } alwaysReturn { request ->
      request.requestPath.contains("/logout")
    }
  },
  rule("request is search") {
    given {
      anyRequest()
    } whose {
      requestPath.contains("/search")
    } thenDo {
      println("printing a message in thenDo")
    }
  }
)

val requests = listOf(
  requestFor("/api/v1/login"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/user"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/messages"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/dashboard"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/search", "category=Kitchen&q=Kitchen%20Aid%20Mixer"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/orders"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/orders/123"),
  requestFor("/api/v1/logout")
)


for (i in requests.indices) {
  val request = requests[i]
  println("Processing event ${i + 1} with request path ${request.requestPath}")

  for (rule in ruleSet) {
    if (rule(request)) {
      println("+Rule \"${rule.description}\" matched")
    }
  }
}

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Kotlin rules engine DSL for maintaining rules and business logic in code.

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