Imperator extensions

This gem includes some extensions and integrations for the imperator gem.

The current integrations are for:

The gem is designed to simplify designing commands for REST actions and includes some useful macros to facilitate common patterns.

Gothas!

If you get an error that Imperator:Mongoid isn't defined, it is because you need to include the mongoid gem before this gem so that Mongoid is defined and 'imperator/mongoid' will only then be loaded (required) ;)

Mongoid imperator

The Mongoid integration provides the class method #attributes_for, which can be used to define Command attributes that match the fields of the Mongoid object that the command is designed to operate on.

attributes_for Post

Will create Command attributes for all fields defined by the Post class (model). You can finetune the Command attributes to be created by using the :except and :only options.

class UpdatePostCommand < Imperator::Mongoid::Command
  attributes_for Post, only: [:subject, :body]

  # OR
  attributes_for Post, except: [:state]
end

In addition this gem extends the Imperator::Command class with the attributes object and initiator. The initiator is meant to be set to the object that initiates the command, typically a Controller instance. The initiator can then be used to define delegation methods to the controller etc.

Rest Commands

If you inherit from the Imperator::Command::Rest class, you gain access to the REST convenience methods: update, delete and create_new which creates action methods with some default appropriate REST logic for the particular action. See the code for more info on how to use this for your own needs.

class UpdatePostCommand < Imperator::Command::Rest
  attribute :some_object_id
  attribute :some_value

  validates_presence_of :some_object_id

  update_action do
    puts "updated OK"
  end
end

Mongoid integration

Imperator also comes with a little Mongodi adaptor class, which provides the attributes_for method in order to easily redefine Mongoid model fields as Command attributes. Similar adaptors could be created for other ORMs such as Active Record etc.

class UpdatePostCommand < Imperator::Mongoid::Command::Rest

  attributes_for Post, except: [:status, :rating]

  validates :name, presence: true

  update_action do    
    puts "#{object} was updated"
  end

  on_error do
    puts "The Post could not be updated: #{object}"
  end
end

Class Factory

The Imperator::Command::ClassFactory can be used to easily create Command wrappers for your model classes.

Imperator::Command::ClassFactory.create :publish, Post do
  action do
    find_object.publish!
  end
end

It is especially handy for creating Rest Command wrappers. Here we include the macros to simplify the code.

require 'imperator/command/macros'

imperator_command_factory.use do |factory|
  # put common/shared logic in this REST base class
  factory.set_default_rest_class Imperator::Mongoid::Command::Rest, :mongoid

  factory.create_rest :all, Post do
    on_error do
      puts "Oops! There was an error!"
    end
  end

  factory.create_rest :update, Article do
    attributes_for Article, only: [:title, :body] 

    on_error do
      puts "Oops! There was an error!"
    end
  end

  # Same using :auto_attributes option
  factory.create_rest :update, Article, auto_attributes: true, except: [:status] do
    on_error do
      puts "Oops! There was an error!"
    end
  end
end

ClassFactory macros

If you include the macros, the following macros are exposed:

  • #create_command
  • #create_rest_command
  • `#imperator_class_factory

The CommandFactory can be used standalone, by subclassing or even by instance as the example below illustrates! (see specs for details)

Usage example:

class AutoCommandFactory < Imperator::Command::ClassFactory
  def initialize
    # if Model adaptor makes it possible
    # - ensure all attributes of model are reflected in Command
    @default_options = {auto_attributes: true}
  end
end

module PostController
  class Update < Action

    command do
      @command ||= command_factory.create_rest_command(:update, Post).new object_hash
    end

    protected

    def command_factory
      AutoCommandFactory.instance
    end
  end
end

Command Method Factory

By including the Imperator::Command::MethodFactory you get access to the #command_methodand #command_methods macros, which let you easily define Imperator Command methods. These macros are typically used in a Controller like in the example below. Note: The options passed in will be used to initialize the command

class ServicesController
  include Imperator::Command::MethodFactory

  command_method  :pay, service: 'paypal'

  command_method (:ship_product, service: 'fedex') do
    {id: get_id } # late evaled option args (Hash) for command constructor!
  end

  command_methods :sign_in, :sign_out

  protected

  def get_id
    params[:id]
  end
end

Focused Controller usage example:

module ServicesController

  class SignIn < Action
    include Imperator::Command::MethodFactory

    def run
      .perform
    end

    command_method :sign_in
  end
end

Often you will want commands namespace scoped however. This is supported via the :ns option.

module ServicesController

  class SignIn < Action
    include Imperator::Command::MethodFactory

    def run
      .perform
    end

    command_method :sign_in, ns: self.parent
  end
end

Creates a #sign_in_command with namespaced scoping:

module ServicesController
  class SignIn < Action
    def 
      @sign_in_command ||= Services::SignInCommand.new initiator: self
    end
  end
end

This is the recommended pattern for linking Focused Controller actions to Imperator commands.

Rest Commands

The class Imperator::Command::Rest can be used as a base class for REST CUD commands (Create, Update, Delete). This class includes the module Imperator::Command::RestHelper which includes a number of useful methods for defining typical REST action behavior for an Imperator Command. You can also use the #rest_action name macro, as demonstrated here.

Usage example:

class UpdatePostCommand < Imperator::Command::Rest
  rest_action :update do
    notify :updated
  end
end

Mongoid example:

class UpdatePostCommand < Imperator::Mongoid::Command::Rest
  update_action do
    notify :updated
  end
end

Controllers, Actions and Commands

An analysis of the current MVC design pattern in Rails, in particular how the Controllers are designed and can be improved by employing different Design Patterns to ensure better decoupling, single responsibility and how to aovid the typical Rails anti-pattern of flat classes, bloated with methods.

Using Imperator Commands in the current Controller pattern

Demonstrates just how ugly the current Controller convention is!!!

class PostController < ApplicationController
  def update    
    update_command.valid? ? update_valid : update_invalid
  end

  protected

  def update_valid
    update_command.perform and redirect_to(root_url)
  end

  def update_invalid
    render edit_post_path(command.object)
  end

  def update_command
    @update_command ||= UpdatePostCommand.new(params[:post])
  end
end

Using Imperator Commands with Focused Controllers

Much nicer encapsulated logic using FocusedController :)

module PostController
  class Update < Action
    invalid_path do
      root_url
    end

    # generated by naming convention
    # command { @command ||= UpdatePostCommand.new post_hash }
  end
end

Demonstrating some customization of Controller logic

module PostController
  class Update < Action
    valid do
      command.perform
      redirect_to root_url
    end

    def invalid
      flash_msg "#{command.object} was invalid!", :error
      super
    end

    command { @command ||= command_class.new object_hash.merge(:status => :complete) }
  end
end

And more...

module PostController
  class Update < Action
    valid do
      flash_msg "#{command.object} was valid!"
      command.perform
      puts "#{command} was performed!"
      valid_redirect
    end

    valid_redirect_path do
      root_url
    end

    def invalid
      flash_msg "#{command.object} was invalid!", :error
      super
    end

    command do
      @command ||= begin
        c = UpdatePostCommand.new post_hash
        c.complete_it!
      end
    end
  end
end

Namespacing convenience

You can also place your commands directly under the Commands namespace. In this case you can do the following:

``ruby module Commands class SignInCommand < Command # or MongoidCommand # ... end end


## Rails generators

A simple `imperator:command` generator is included:

`$ rails g imperator:command sign_in`

* Will create an `app/commands` folder with your commands (if not present)
* Will create a `SignInCommand` class inheriting from `::Imperator::Command
* class will be put in `app/commands/sign_in_command.rb`

`$ rails g imperator:command sign_in --orm mongoid`

Namespacing:

`$ rails g imperator:command tenant::session::sign_in`

* Will create a `Tenant::Session::SignInCommand` class in `app/commands/tenant/session/sign_in_command.rb`

In this case you have to define/open the Tenant::Session namespace structure elsewhere.
Fx: `app/commands/tenant/session.rb`

```ruby
class Tenant < User
  module Session
  end
end

Contributing to imperator-ext

  • Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet.
  • Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it.
  • Fork the project.
  • Start a feature/bugfix branch.
  • Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution.
  • Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
  • Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.

Copyright (c) 2012 Kristian Mandrup. See LICENSE.txt for further details.