161 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
161 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
Services and dependencies
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=========================
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You'll want to use external systems within your transformations, including databases, HTTP APIs, other web services,
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filesystems, etc.
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Hardcoding those services is a good first step, but as your codebase grows, this approach will show its limits rather quickly.
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* Hardcoded and tightly linked dependencies make your transformations hard to test, and hard to reuse.
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* Processing data on your laptop is great, but being able to do it on different target systems (or stages), in different
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environments is more realistic. You'll want to configure a different database on a staging environment,
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pre-production environment, or production system. Maybe you have similar systems for different clients and want to select
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the system at runtime, etc.
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Definition of service dependencies
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::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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To solve this problem, we introduce a lightweight dependency injection system. It allows to define **named dependencies** in
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your transformations and provide an implementation at runtime.
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For function-based transformations, you can use the :func:`bonobo.config.use` decorator to mark the dependencies. You'll
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still be able to call it manually, providing the implementation yourself, but in a bonobo execution context, it will
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be resolve and injected automatically, as long as you provided an implementation to the executor (more on that below).
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.. code-block:: python
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from bonobo.config import use
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@use('orders_database')
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def select_all(database):
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yield from database.query('SELECT * FROM foo;')
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For class based transformations, you can use :class:`bonobo.config.Service`, a special descriptor (and subclass of
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:class:`bonobo.config.Option`) that will hold the service names and act as a marker for runtime resolution of service
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instances.
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.. code-block:: python
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from bonobo.config import Configurable, Service
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class JoinDatabaseCategories(Configurable):
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database = Service('orders_database')
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def __call__(self, database, row):
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return {
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**row,
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'category': database.get_category_name_for_sku(row['sku'])
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}
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Both of the above code samples tell bonobo that your transformation expects a service called "orders_database", which will be
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injected to your calls under the parameter name "database".
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Providing implementations at run-time
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-------------------------------------
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Bonobo expects you to provide a dictionary of all service implementations required by your graph.
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.. code-block:: python
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import bonobo
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graph = bonobo.graph(...)
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def get_services():
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return {
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'orders_database': my_database_service,
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}
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if __name__ == '__main__':
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bonobo.run(graph, services=get_services())
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.. note::
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A dictionary, or dictionary-like, "services" named argument can be passed to the :func:`bonobo.run` API method.
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The "dictionary-like" part is the real keyword here. Bonobo is not a DIC library, and won't become one. So the
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implementation provided is pretty basic and feature-less. You can use much more involved libraries instead of
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the provided stub and, as long as it implements a dictionary-like interface, the system will use it.
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The command line interface will look for services in two different places:
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* A `get_services()` function present at the same level of your graph definition.
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* A `get_services()` function in a `_services.py` file in the same directory as your graph's file, allowing to reuse the
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same service implementations for more than one graph.
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Solving concurrency problems
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----------------------------
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If a service cannot be used by more than one thread at a time, either because it's just not threadsafe, or because
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it requires to carefully order the calls made (apis that includes nonces, or work on results returned by previous
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calls are usually good candidates), you can use the :class:`bonobo.config.Exclusive` context processor to lock the
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use of a dependency for the time of the context manager (`with` statement)
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.. code-block:: python
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from bonobo.config import Exclusive
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def t1(api):
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with Exclusive(api):
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api.first_call()
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api.second_call()
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# ... etc
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api.last_call()
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Future and proposals
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::::::::::::::::::::
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This is a first implementation and it will evolve. Base concepts will stay the same though.
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May or may not happen, depending on discussions.
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* Singleton or prototype based injection (to use spring terminology, see
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https://www.tutorialspoint.com/spring/spring_bean_scopes.htm), allowing smart factory usage and efficient sharing of
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resources.
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* Lazily resolved parameters, eventually overriden by command line or environment, so you can for example override the
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database DSN or target filesystem on command line (or with shell environment vars).
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* Pool based locks that ensure that only one (or n) transformations are using a given service at the same time.
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* Simple config implementation, using a python file for config (ex: bonobo run ... --services=services_prod.py).
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* Default configuration for services, using an optional callable (`def get_services(args): ...`). Maybe tie default
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configuration to graph, but not really a fan because this is unrelated to graph logic.
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* Default implementation for a service in a transformation or in the descriptor. Maybe not a good idea, because it
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tends to push forward multiple instances of the same thing, but maybe...
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A few ideas on how it can be implemented, from the user perspective.
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.. code-block:: python
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# using call
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http = Service('http.client')(requests)
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# using more explicit call
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http = Service('http.client').set_default_impl(requests)
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# using a decorator
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@Service('http.client')
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def http(self, services):
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import requests
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return requests
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# as a default in a subclass of Service
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class HttpService(Service):
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def get_default_impl(self, services):
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import requests
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return requests
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# ... then use it as another service
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http = HttpService('http.client')
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This is under development, let us know what you think (slack may be a good place for this).
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The basics already work, and you can try it.
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Read more
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:::::::::
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* See https://github.com/hartym/bonobo-sqlalchemy/blob/work-in-progress/bonobo_sqlalchemy/writers.py#L19 for example usage (work in progress).
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.. include:: _next.rst
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