Awesome
KInit
Installation
go get github.com/go-kata/kinit
Status
This is a beta version. API is not stabilized for now.
Versioning
Till the first major release minor version (v0.x.0
) must be treated as a major version
and patch version (v0.0.x
) must be treated as a minor version.
For example, changing of version from v0.1.0
to v0.1.1
indicates compatible changes,
but when version changes v0.1.1
to v0.2.0
this means that the last version breaks the API.
How to use
This library provides the global IoC container which does the automatic Dependency Injection:
kinit.Global()
If you need a local one (e.g. for tests), you can create it as following:
ctr := kinit.NewContainer()
A local container must be filled up with constructors and processors manually whereas the global one can be filled up when initializing packages.
Constructors
Constructors are entities that create objects (dependencies for injection in context of the DI). They have the following interface:
type Constructor interface {
Type() reflect.Type
Parameters() []reflect.Type
Create(a ...reflect.Value) (reflect.Value, kdone.Destructor, error)
}
Here Type
returns a type of object to create, Parameters
returns types of other objects required to create
this object and finally Create
creates and returns a new object and its destructor (usekdone.Noop
, not nil,
if object has no destructor).
To register a constructor in the container use the Provide
method.
The container allows to have only one constructor for each type. However, the reflect.Type
is the interface, and
you can implement it as you want, e.g. as following:
type NamedType stuct {
reflect.Type
Name string
}
Just keep in mind that the container uses a simple comparison of reflect.Type
instances when looks up for
necessary constructors (as well as processors and already created objects).
Processors
Processors are entities that process already created objects. The container applies processors immediately after the object creation and before an object will be injected as a dependency at the first time. Processors have the following interface:
type Processor interface {
Type() reflect.Type
Parameters() []reflect.Type
Process(obj reflect.Value, a ...reflect.Value) error
}
Here Type
returns a type of object to process, Parameters
returns types of other objects required to process
this object and finally Process
processes an object.
To register a processor in the container use the Attach
method.
The container allows to have an unlimited number of processors for each type but doesn't guarantee the order of their calling.
Functors
Functors represent functions to be run in the container and have the following interface:
type Functor interface {
Parameters() []reflect.Type
Call(a ...reflect.Value) ([]Functor, error)
}
Here Parameters
returns types of objects required to call a function and Call
calls a function and may return
further functors.
To run functors in the container use the Run
method.
At the start of run the container creates so-called arena that holds all created objects (only one object for each type). If some object required as a dependency is already on the arena it will be used, otherwise it will be firstly created and processed. All objects that are on the arena at the end of run will be automatically destroyed.
The container runs given functors sequentially. Their dependencies are resolved recursively using registered constructors and processors. If functor (let's call it branched) returns further functors, the container runs all of them before continue running functors following the branched one. This is called the Depth-First Run.
KInitX
This subpackage provides the expansion set includes default handy implementations of main library interfaces along with other handy tools. In most cases the KInitX is all you need to use the entire KInit functionality.
There are following implementations:
Constructor represents a constructor based on a function. It accepts func(...) T
, func(...) (T, error)
and
func(...) (T, kdone.Destructor, error)
signatures where T
is an arbitrary Go type.
kinitx.MustProvide(func(config *Config) (*Object, kdone.Destructor, error) { ... })
Opener represents a constructor based on a function that creates an implementation of the io.Closer
interface.
It accepts func(...) C
and func(...) (C, error)
signatures where C
is an arbitrary implementation of the
io.Closer
interface.
kinitx.MustProvide(func(logger *log.Logger) (*sql.DB, error) { ... })
Initializer represents a memberwise initializer of a struct. It accepts a template struct like a YourType{}
and a template struct pointer like a (*YourType)(nil)
or new(YourType)
.
kinitx.MustProvide((*Config)(nil))
Binder represents a pseudo-constructor that casts an object to an interface. It accepts an interface pointer
like a (*YourInterface)(nil)
.
kinitx.MustBind((*StorageInterface)(nil), (*PostgresStrorage)(nil))
Processor represents a processor based on a function. It accepts func(T, ...)
and func(T, ...) error
signatures where T
is an arbitrary Go type.
kinitx.MustAttach((*Object).SetOptionalProperty)
Functor represents a functor based on a function. It accepts func(...)
, func(...) error
,
func(...) (kinit.Functor, error)
and func(...) ([]kinit.Functor, error)
signatures.
kinitx.MustRun(func(app *Application) error { ... })
KInitQ
The DI mechanism provided by the main library is reflection-based and works in the runtime. However, this subpackage makes it possible to validate the dependency graph semi-statically thanks to build tags.
Just add two main functions as following:
main.go
// +build !inspect
package main
import "github.com/go-kata/kinit/kinitx"
func main() { kinitx.MustRun(EntryPoint) }
main_inspect.go
// +build inspect
package main
import "github.com/go-kata/kinit/kinitx"
func main() { kinitx.MustInspect(nil) }
Now to validate the dependency graph of your program just run:
go run -tags inspect
Example output:
2 errors occurred:
#1 🠖 cyclic dependency: *config.Config 🠖 config.Loader 🠖 *config.FileLoader 🠖 *config.Config
#2 🠖 unsatisfied dependency: *sql.DB 🠖 *log.Logger
For more details learn the documentation and explore examples.
Putting all together
In the github.com/go-kata/examples repository you can find examples of how may the code uses this library looks like.
References
KDone is the library that provides tools for destroying objects.
KError is the library that provides tools for handling errors.