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slick-eventsourcing is a library/framework which implements a specific approach to event sourcing, using a relational database. See this blog for an introduction.

Using slick-eventsourcing you can write applications which take advantage of transactional database features such as consistency and SQL query capabilities and in addition contain (or, in fact, are driven by) a full audit log of all actions in the system.

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Example

If you'd like to see a simple application written using the framework, see the example directory in the sources. You can run it with ./example-start.sh and then pointing you web browser to localhost:8080. Observe the console output for events that are created and handled.

Model

Events are the main source of truth in the system and contain information on what happened (past tense!) in the system. Events are usually created in response to user actions, but can also be created in response to other events, or external triggers in the system.

Basing on events, a read model is created. The read model is used to validate user actions before creating new events and to provide data to user queries. The model consists of ordinary SQL tables. The main difference to a traditional "CRUD" application is that updates occur only basing on events, not directly as a result to user actions.

There are three main types of functions involved:

Model update functions can be used to re-create the read model if needed (or create an updated read model), hence they shouldn't have any side-effects other than updating the model.

Event listeners are supposed to be run only when the event is first handled, hence that's where side-effects should occur.

Commands

The main way events are created is through commands. A command is a plain Scala function which accepts some input data and returns a result consisting of: a success or failure value (represented as a Either[F, S]) and a list of emitted events (List[PartialEvent[_, _]; partial, as not all event metadata is provided upfront; e.g. event and transaction ids are filled in automatically later). As commands can use the read model to validate the input, everything is wrapped in a DBIOAction. Hence a CommandResult is a:

type CommandResult[F, S] = DBIOAction[(Either[F, S], List[PartialEvent[_, _]]), NoStream, Read]

Note that when creating a command result, we are returning a description (DBIOAction) of how the database should be queried; the real queries will be invoked only when the action is run. Such descriptions are ordinary immutable Scala values, can be re-used and shared multiple times.

Model update & event listener functions

The model update and event listener functions have similar signatures:

type EventListener[T] = Event[T] => DBIOAction[List[PartialEvent[_, _]], NoStream, Read]
type ModelUpdate[T] = Event[T] => DBIOAction[Unit, NoStream, Read with Write]

Model update doesn't return any values, and can read & write the model. Event listeners can only read, but return a list of partial events. Both results are wrapped, as with CommandResult, in a DBIOAction, so they return a description of what should be done, and that is only run later.

If you would like to run some side-effects in an event listener, e.g. communicating over the network with an external service, you can wrap a Future[T] into a DBIOAction[T] with the DBIO.from method.

Registry

You need to specify what kind of model update and event listeners you would like to be run in response to events. This is done through a Registry, which is an immutable class and contains three builder methods:

The difference between regular (synchronous) and asynchronous event listeners will be discussed later.

You can also specify the default org.json4s.Formats to use to serialize/deserialize event data, and define event-specific formats using the registerFormats[T](formats) method (where T is the type of the event).

Event machine

Given a registry, it is possible to create an EventMachine. The event machine is responsible for running appropriate actions when events are created. The main method in the event machine is:

def run[F, S](cr: CommandResult[F, S]): Future[Either[F, S]]

This method takes a command result, runs the actions that are described by it using the database and returns the result to the user. Any events that are created are first persisted in the database, and then handled by first running all appropriate model update functions, and then event listeners. If the event listeners create more events (e.g. by returning the result of running other commands), they are handled recursively (by first persisting them, running model update, then event listeners, etc.)

Transactions

What's very important for data consistency is that the database actions needed to compute the command result, persist the events, run the model update functions and event listeners are all done in a single transaction. So if at any point there is a failure, either due to an exception in the business logic, or if a constraint in the database fails, nothing will be persisted.

The exception here are asynchronous event listeners (registered with registerAsyncEventListener), which are run after the transaction completes, in the background. Such event listeners are useful if some logic needs to be run when an event is created, but without blocking the user from receiving a reply or the transaction from committing. If an asynchronous event listener creates more events, they are handled in a single transaction with the original event (so there's one additional transaction for each event and asynchronous event listener)

How to create events

An event consist of arbitrary event data and some meta-data. The event data is usually a case class, and is serialised to JSON when written to the database. Each event is associated with an aggregate (a "root entity") through an id. To define what's the aggregate for an event, an implicit AggregateForEvent[T, U] must be available (typically defined in the companion object for the event's data), where T is the type of the event data and U is type of the aggregate.

To create an event you should use the Event(eventData) method, which takes an implicit AggregateForEvent. Then, you need to specify what's the id of the aggregate, either by using forAggregate, or forNewAggregate, if the id is not yet available.

That way you will obtain a PartialEvent which can be returned from a command or an event listener.

Before persisting, other meta-data will be generated for the event:

Ids

Aggregate and event ids are created by an IdGenerator, which is needed when creating the EventMachine. The id generator generates time-based unique Long ids. If there are multiple nodes, each IdGenerator should be created with a different workerId.

The ids are type-tagged, so that at runtime they are simple Longs, however at compile-time they are type-safe and bound to a specific aggregate/entity. For example Long @@ User is a long value tagged with the User type; it cannot be used e.g. where a Long @@ Product is expected. To tag a value, you can use the .taggedWith[T] method.

To properly type-tag methods which return or expect a user id (e.g. to invoke Event.userId), an implicit instance of UserType[T] should be in scope. There should be only one instance of that type in the whole system, and it should be parametrised by the type of the user entity.

Handle context

When invoking EventMachine.run, an implicit HandleContext is needed. The handle context contains the id of the currently logged in user, so that it can be associated with events that are created. If no user is logged in, HandleContext.System should be used. Otherwise, before invoking run, declare an implicit handle context using the one-arg constructor.

As each system will have its own notion of a user, the user type needs to be provided by an implicit UserType[T] value. There should only be a single, implicit instance of UserType, parametrised by the actual type of the user aggregate. That implicit is needed when obtaining the id of the user who created the event (to provide the appropriate type tag), and when creating a handle context.

If an event causes a user to be logged in (e.g. a user registered or user logged in event), it should implement the HandleContextTransform method, which should add the user id to the context.

Using from SBT

libraryDependencies += "com.softwaremill.events" %% "core" % "0.1.5"

How to recover model state

In case you lost your database model but got event log, you can rebuild state from it. In example project, there is a manual tool called RecoverDbState which shows how to call eventMachine's recover methods:

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