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Tortuga Shipwright

Installation

To register the Source Generator, add the following to your project file.

<!-- Code Generator -->
<ItemGroup>
	<PackageReference Include="Tortuga.Shipwright" Version="0.9.0" >
		<PrivateAssets>all</PrivateAssets>
	</PackageReference>
	<PackageReference Include="Tortuga.Shipwright.Shared" Version="0.9.0" />
</ItemGroup>

<PropertyGroup>
	<EmitCompilerGeneratedFiles>true</EmitCompilerGeneratedFiles>
	<CompilerGeneratedFilesOutputPath>Generated</CompilerGeneratedFilesOutputPath>
</PropertyGroup>

<ItemGroup>
	<!-- Don't include the output from a previous source generator execution into future runs; the */** trick here ensures that there's
at least one subdirectory, which is our key that it's coming from a source generator as opposed to something that is coming from
some other tool. -->
	<Compile Remove="$(CompilerGeneratedFilesOutputPath)/*/**/*.cs" />
</ItemGroup>

The EmitCompilerGeneratedFiles setting is not required, but it does make trouble-shooting easier. Check `Show All Files" in Visual Studio to see the generated files.

Trait Engine

Terminology

Basic Pattern

The trait needs no special decorations. However, it is advisable to mark it as sealed because inheritance is not supported with traits.

Traits should be marked with the Trait attribute. (This is not currently enforced, but may be in future versions.)

Trait classes may be marked as public or, if in the same assembly, internal.

The container class uses the UseTrait attribute and must be marked partial. For example:

[UseTrait(typeof(MyTrait)]
public partial class MyContiner { ... }

Exposing Members

For a method or property, add the Expose attribute to the member.

[Expose] 
public int Add(int a, int b) {...}

[Expose] 
public int CustomerAge {get; set;}

The member being exposed must be visible to the container. This means public or, if in the same assembly, internal.

Non-public Members

To make a exposed member non-public in the container class, set the Accessibility property. For example,

[Expose(Accessibility = Accessibility.Internal)]
public ICacheAdapter Cache { get; set; } = null!;

You may also set an inheritance rule such as override, sealed, or virtual.

[Expose(Inheritance = Inheritance.Override)]
public ConcurrentDictionary<Type, object> ExtensionCache {get => m_ExtensionCache;}

Additional Attributes

The following attributes will be copied from an exposed trait member to the matching container member.

Accessing the Container

To allow the trait to get a reference to it's container, use the Container attribute.

[Container]
internal IDataSource DataSource { get; set; } = null!;

There is no limit to the number of Container properties in a trait. (Presumably each would request a different interface.)

If RegisterInterface = true is used, then the interface being requeted will be added to the container class. That class will still need to implement the interface.

Callbacks into the container

In lieu of using a container property (see above), a trait can request a specific callback be created in the container.

Define the 'partial' property in the trait as a Func or Action delegate.

[Partial("customerKey,startDate,endDate"] 
public Func<int, DateTime, DateTime, OrderCollection> OnGetOrdersByCustomer {get; set;} = null!;

In the container, the following will be generated.

private partial OrderCollection OnGetOrdersByCustomer(int customerKey, DateTime startDate, DateTime endDate);

The container will then be responsible for implementing the partial method.

Automatically Implementing an Interface

If a trait implements an interface, then it's container will automatically implement it as well. All interface methods and properties will call back to the trait.

The container explicitly implements the interface. Use the Expose attribute on each member if you also want the methods to be marked as public.

Warning: Interfaces with init properties are not supported.

Additional Attributes

The following attributes will be copied from an exposed interface member to the matching container member.

XML Docs

If the trait is in the same project as the container, XML Docs will be automatically included in the generated code.

This requires DocumentationFile to be enabled at the project level.

Shipwright does not currently support XML Docs on traits defined in a different project. (This appears to be a limitation of Roslyn.)