Skip to content

fatum/business-operation

Repository files navigation

CircleCI

Business operation framework

The main purpose of building this library is creating simple and composable business-logic framework

The framework is a relatively small and simple (~450 LOC) and mimics Tralblazer Operation API

Main features

  • Simple and concise API using conventions to define handlers
  • We use only keywords for State's keys (it's more convinient). String keys are raising exception
  • You can specify required state's keys for an operation
  • Great traceability: you can trace all your nested execution and see a whole execution tree with options and state
  • Simple integration with dry-container gem
  • Handler is a simple class inherited from Business::Operation::Base or any callable. No more Wrap, Nested(Operation, input: Input) from Trailblazer

Differences between Tralblazer's Operation

  • Your handler can be a simple callable object (block, Proc or custom class implementing a .call method). It lets you easily define small steps like in this example
  class CreateNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
    step do |state|
      state[:model] = ModelFinder.factory(state[:params])
    end
  end
  • Calling an operation registered as a container entry
  Container = Dry::Container.new
  Container.register("users.persister", Users::Persist)

  class CreateNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
    container Container

    step "users.persister"
  end
  • More concise DSL for wrappers (usable to implement transaction wrapper, exception handlers etc)
  class CreateNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
    wrap Operation::Transaction, isolation: :serializable do
      step Users::Persist
      step Users::AssignAccountManager
    end
  end
  • Ability to trace an execution tree (debug: true option)
  class CreateNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
    debug true
    wrap Operation::Transaction, isolation: :serializable do
      step Users::Persist
      step Users::AssignAccountManager
    end
  end
  • Simple and consistent API
  class CreateNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
    step Operation::Model, class: User
    step Operation::Pundit, class: TenantPolicy, action: :create_user?
    step Operation::Contract, class: UserForm, key: :resource
    wrap Operation::Transaction, isolation: :serializable do
      step Users::Persist
      step Users::AssignAccountManager
    end
  end

  CreateNewUser.(resource: params, tenant: current_tenant)
  • Ability to define requirements for an operation (depends_on :state, %i[model notifier])
  class SendNotification < Business::Operation::Base
    depends_on :state, %i[model notifier]

    def call
      notifier = state[:notifier].factory(state[:model])
      notifier.emit(state[:params])
    end
  end
  • Clean and understandable source code :). No more magic
  module Business
    module Operation
      class Pundit < Base
        depends_on :state, %i[model params]
        depends_on :options, %i[class action]
        depends_on :params, :current_user

        def call(options)
          current_user = state[:params][:current_user]
          action = options[:action]
          policy = options[:class]

          policy.new(current_user, state[:model]).public_send(action)
        end
      end
    end
  end

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'business-operation'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install business-operation

Usage example

Operation creates a new user

require "business/operation"
require "business/operation/active_record_transaction"
require "dry-container"

module Operation
  Model = Business::Operation::Model
  Contract = Business::Operation::Contract
  Pundit = Business::Operation::Pundit
  Transaction = Business::Operation::ActiveRecordTransaction
end


class PublishNewUser < Business::Operation::Base
  depends_on :state, :model

  def call
  end

  def self.factory(state)
    # choose operation
  end
end

class ScheduleEmail < Business::Operation::Base
  depends_on :state, :model

  def call
    EmailNotification.create(user: state[:model], type: :signup)
  end
end


Container = Dry::Container.new

# Register operation as a container entry
Container.register("bus.publish_new_user", PublishNewUser)

# Or use factory block to choose operation on demand
Container.register("bus.publish_new_user") { |state| PublishNewUser.factory(state) }

class CreateUser < Business::Operation::Base
  container Container

  # Library has some included operations for daily use-cases
  step Operation::Model, class: User
  step Operation::Pundit, class: UserPolicy, action: :show?
  step Operation::Contract,
       class: UserForm,
       key: :resource

  # Specify required state entries for next pipeline
  depends_on :state, %i[model contract]

  # You can wrap batch of operations by wrapper
  wrap Operation::Transaction do
    step CreateSubscription

    # You can use previously defined operation
    step ScheduleEmail

    # You can run failures pipeline if previous step failed
    # To run only one failure handler specify `fail_fast: true` option
    failure :cant_schedule_email, fail_fast: true

    # Call earlier registered operation
    # You may want to make the step being always passing (`fail: false`)
    step "bus.publish_new_user", fail: false
  end

  failure :failed_notification

  private

  def cant_schedule_email
    # handler error here
  end

  def failed_notification
    # handler error here
  end
end

What handlers you can define

Defining step you can choose between 3 types of handlers

  • Another operation class (inherited from Business::Operation::Base)
  • Current operation's method (using symbol – step :call_method)
  • Operation class registered in dry-container (using string argument – step "users.create")
  • Any Proc – step { |state| state[:key] = "value" }

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/fatum/business-operation. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the Business::Operation project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

About

Business logic framework for Ruby/Rails

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published