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maniflow: utilities on top of manifold

Build Status

[spootnik/maniflow "0.1.5"]

Lifecycle management

The manifold.lifecycle namespace provides a lightweight take on a mechanism similar to interceptors or sieppari. A key difference with interceptors is that individual handlers have no access to the step chain and thus cannot interact with it. Guards and early termination are still provided.

A lifecycle is nothing more than a collection of handlers through which a value is passed.

In essence:

@(run 0 [(step inc) (step inc) (step inc)])

Is thus directly equivalent to:

(-> 0 inc inc inc)

Lifecycle steps

As shown above, each step in a lifecycle is a handler to run on a value. Steps can be provided in several forms, all coerced to a map.

{:id    :doubler
 :enter (fn [input] (* input 2))
 :guard (fn [context] ...)}

Function steps

When a step is a plain function, as in (run 0 [inc]), the resulting map will be of the following shape:

{:id    :step12345
 :enter inc}

If the function is provided as a var, the qualified name of the var is used as the id, so for (run 0 [#'inc]) we would have instead:

{:id    :inc
 :enter inc}

Accessing parts of the input

Often times, the payload being threaded between lifecycle steps will be a map. As with interceptors, it might be useful to hold on to information accumulated during the chain processing. To help with this, maniflow provides three parameters for steps:

  • :in: specifies a path that will be extracted from the payload and fed as input to the handler
  • :out: specifies where in the payload to assoc the result of the handler
  • :lens: when present, supersedes the previous two parameters and acts as though both :in and :out where provided
{:id    :determine-deserialize
 :enter (partial = :post)
 :in    [:request :request-method]
 :out   [::need-deserialize?])

Step guards

Based on the current state of processing, it might be useful to guard execution of a step against a predicate, keeping with the last example:

{:id    :deserialize
 :enter deserialize
 :lens  [:request :body]
 :guard ::need-deserialize?}

Discarding results

Sometimes,

{:id       :debug
 :enter    prn
 :discard? true}

Building steps with step

The manifold.lifecycle/step function is provided to build steps easily, the above can thus be rewritten:

(enter-step :determine-deserialize (partial = :post) :in [:request :request-method] :out ::need-deserialize?)
(enter-step :debug prn :discard? true)
(enter-step :deserialize deserialize :guard ::need-deserialize?)
(enter-step :handler run-handler)

Global options

When running a lifecycle, an options map can be passed in to further modify the behavior:

{:augment    (fn [context step] ...)
 :initialize (fn [value] ...)
 :executor   ...}
  • augment: A function of context and current step called for each step in the lifecycle.
  • initialize: A function of init value to prepare the payload.
  • executor: An executor to defer execution on.

Error handling

There are intentionally no facilities to interact with the sequence of steps in this library. Exceptions thrown will break the sequence of steps, users of the library are encouraged to use manifold.deferred/catch to handle errors raised during execution.

All errors contain the underlying thrown exception as a cause and contain the last known context in their ex-data

(-> (d/run 0 [(step inc) (step #(d/future (/ % 0))) (step inc)])
    (d/catch (fn [e]
	            (type (.getCause e))   ;; ArithmeticException
				(:context (ex-data e)) ;; last context)))

Timing wrapper

Assuming a map payload, timing can be recorded for each step with the initialize and augment implementations provided in manifold.lifecycle.timing:


@(run
  {:x 0}
  [(step :inc inc :lens :x) (step :inc inc :lens :x)]
  timing/milliseconds)

{:timing
 {:created-at 1569080525132,
  :updated-at 1569080525133,
  :index 2,
  :output [{:id :inc, :timing 0} {:id :inc, :timing 1}]},
 :x 2}

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