Coach

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Coach improves your controller code by encouraging:

  • Modularity - No more tangled before_filter's and interdependent concerns. Build Middleware that does a single job, and does it well.
  • Guarantees - Work with a simple provide/require interface to guarantee that your middlewares load data in the right order when you first boot your app.
  • Testability - Test each middleware in isolation, with effortless mocking of test data and natural RSpec matchers.

For our policy on compatibility with Ruby and Rails versions, see COMPATIBILITY.md.

Installation

To get started, just add Coach to your Gemfile, and then run bundle:

gem 'coach'

Coach works with Ruby versions 2.6 and onwards.

Coach by example

The best way to see the benefits of Coach is with a demonstration.

Mounting an endpoint

class HelloWorld < Coach::Middleware
  def call
    # Middleware return a Rack response
    [ 200, {}, ['hello world'] ]
  end
end

So we've created ourselves a piece of middleware, HelloWorld. As you'd expect, HelloWorld simply outputs the string 'hello world'.

In an example Rails app, called Example, we can mount this route like so...

Example::Application.routes.draw do
  match "/hello_world",
        to: Coach::Handler.new(HelloWorld),
        via: :get
end

Once you've booted Rails locally, the following should return 'hello world':

$ curl -XGET http://localhost:3000/hello_world

Zeitwerk

The new default autoloader in Rails 6+ is Zeitwerk, which removes support for autoloading constants during app boot, which that example would do - either you have to require "hello_world" in your routes file, or avoid referencing the HelloWorld constant until the app has booted. To avoid that, you can instead pass the module or middleware name to Handler.new, for example:

Example::Application.routes.draw do
  match "/hello_world",
        to: Coach::Handler.new("HelloWorld"),
        via: :get

Building chains

Suppose we didn't want just anybody to see our HelloWorld endpoint. In fact, we'd like to lock it down behind some authentication.

Our request will now have two stages, one where we check authentication details and another where we respond with our secret greeting to the world. Let's split into two pieces, one for each of the two subtasks, allowing us to reuse this authentication flow in other middlewares.

class Authentication < Coach::Middleware
  def call
    unless User.exists?(login: params[:login])
      return [ 401, {}, ['Access denied'] ]
    end

    next_middleware.call
  end
end

class HelloWorld < Coach::Middleware
  uses Authentication

  def call
    [ 200, {}, ['hello world'] ]
  end
end

Here we detach the authentication logic into its own middleware. HelloWorld now uses Authentication, and will only run if it has been called via next_middleware.call from authentication.

Notice we also use params just like you would in a normal Rails controller. Every middleware class will have access to a request object, which is an instance of ActionDispatch::Request.

Passing data through middleware

So far we've demonstrated how Coach can help you break your controller code into modular pieces. The big innovation with Coach, however, is the ability to explicitly pass your data through the middleware chain.

An example usage here is to create a HelloUser endpoint. We want to protect the route by authentication, as we did before, but this time greet the user that is logged in. Making a small modification to the Authentication middleware we showed above...

class Authentication < Coach::Middleware
  provides :user  # declare that Authentication provides :user

  def call
    return [ 401, {}, ['Access denied'] ] unless user.present?

    provide(user: user)
    next_middleware.call
  end

  def user
    @user ||= User.find_by(login: params[:login])
  end
end

class HelloUser < Coach::Middleware
  uses Authentication
  requires :user  # state that HelloUser requires this data

  def call
    # Can now access `user`, as it's been provided by Authentication
    [ 200, {}, [ "hello #{user.name}" ] ]
  end
end

# Inside config/routes.rb
Example::Application.routes.draw do
  match "/hello_user",
        to: Coach::Handler.new("HelloUser"),
        via: :get
end

Coach analyses your middleware chains whenever a new Handler is created, or when the handler is first used if the route is being lazy-loaded (i.e., if you're passing a string name, instead of the route itself). If any middleware requires :x when its chain does not provide :x, we'll error out before the app even starts with the error:

Coach::Errors::MiddlewareDependencyNotMet: HelloUser requires keys [user] that are not provided by the middleware chain

This static verification eradicates an entire category of errors that stem from implicitly running code before hitting controller methods. It allows you to be confident that the data you require has been loaded, and makes tracing the origin of that data as simple as looking up the chain.

Configuring middlewares

By making use of middleware config hashes, you can build generalised middlewares that can be configured specifically for the chain that they are used in.

class Logger < Coach::Middleware
  def call
    # Logs the incoming request path, with a configured prefix
    Rails.logger.info("[#{config[:prefix]}] - #{request.path}")
    next_middleware.call
  end
end

class HelloUser < Coach::Middleware
  uses Logger, prefix: 'HelloUser'
  uses Authentication

  def call
    ...
  end
end

The above configures a Logger middleware to prefix it's log entries with 'HelloUser'. This is a contrived example, but at GoCardless we've created middlewares that can act as generalised resource endpoints (show, index, etc) when given the model class and some extra configuration.

Testing

The basic strategy is to test each middleware in isolation, covering all the edge cases, and then create request specs that cover a happy code path, testing each of the middlewares while they work in sequence.

Each middleware is encouraged to rely on data passed through the provide/require syntax exclusively, except in stateful operations (such as database queries). By sticking to this rule, testing becomes as simple as mocking a context hash.

Coach comes with some RSpec matchers to help simplify your testing, however they aren't required by default. You'll need to run require 'coach/rspec', we recommend putting this in your spec/spec_helper.rb or spec/rails_helper.rb file.

require 'spec_helper'

describe "/whoami" do
  let(:user) { FactoryGirl.create(:user, name: 'Clark Kent', token: 'Kryptonite') }

  context "with correct auth details" do
    it "responds with user name" do
      get "/whoami", {}, { 'Authorization' => 'Kryptonite' }
      expect(response.body).to match(/Clark Kent/)
    end
  end
end

describe Routes::Whoami do
  subject(:instance) { described_class.new(context) }
  let(:context) { { authenticated_user: double(name: "Clark Kent") } }

  it { is_expected.to respond_with_body_that_matches(/Clark Kent/) }
end

describe Middleware::AuthenticatedUser do
  subject(:instance) { described_class.new(context) }
  let(:context) do
    { request: instance_double(ActionDispatch::Request, headers: headers) }
  end

  let(:user) { FactoryGirl.create(:user, name: 'Clark Kent', token: 'Kryptonite') }

  context "with valid token" do
    it { is_expected.to call_next_middleware }
    it { is_expected.to provide(authenticated_user: user) }
  end

  context "with invalid token" do
    it { is_expected.to respond_with_status(401) }
    it { is_expected.to respond_with_body_that_matches(/access denied/i) }
  end
end

Routing

For routes that represent resource actions, Coach provides some syntactic sugar to allow concise mapping of endpoint to handler in Rails apps.

# config/routes.rb
Example::Application.routes.draw do
  router = Coach::Router.new(self)
  router.draw(Routes::Users,
              base: "/users",
              actions: [
                :index,
                :show,
                :create,
                :update,
                disable: { method: :post, url: "/:id/actions/disable" }
              ])
end

Default actions that conform to standard REST principles can be easily loaded, with the users resource being mapped to:

Method URL Description
GET /users Index all users
GET /users/:id Get user by ID
POST /users Create new user
PUT /users/:id Update user details
POST /users/:id/actions/disable Custom action routed to the given path suffix

If you're using Zeitwerk, you can pass the name of the module to #draw, instead of the module itself.

# config/routes.rb
Example::Application.routes.draw do
  router = Coach::Router.new(self)
  router.draw("Routes::Users",
              base: "/users",
              actions: [
                :index,
                :show,
                :create,
                :update,
                disable: { method: :post, url: "/:id/actions/disable" }
              ])
end

Rendering

By now you'll probably agree that the rack response format isn't the nicest way to render responses. Coach comes sans renderer, and for a good reason.

We initially built a Coach::Renderer module, but soon realised that doing so would prevent us from open sourcing. Our Renderer was 90% logic specific to the way our APIs function, including handling/formatting of validation errors, logging of unusual events etc.

What worked well for us is a standalone Renderer class that we could require in all our middleware that needed to format responses. This pattern also led to clearer code - consistent with our preference for explicit code, stating Renderer.new_resource(...) is instantly more debuggable than an inherited method on all middlewares.

Instrumentation

Coach uses ActiveSupport::Notifications to issue events that can be used to profile middleware.

Information for how to use ActiveSupports notifications can be found here.

Event Arguments
start_handler.coach event(:middleware, :request)
start_middleware.coach event(:middleware, :request)
finish_middleware.coach start, finish, id, event(:middleware, :request)
finish_handler.coach start, finish, id, event(:middleware, :request)
request.coach event containing request data and benchmarking

Of special interest is request.coach, which publishes statistics on an entire middleware chain and request. This data is particularly useful for logging, and is our solution to Rails process_action.action_controller event emitted on controller requests.

The benchmarking data includes information on how long each middleware took to process, along with the total duration of the chain.

For coach to emit request.coach events, it first needs to be subscribed to handler/middleware events:

Coach::Notifications.subscribe!

# Now you can subscribe to and use request.coach events, e.g.
ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe("request.coach") do |_, event|
  Rails.logger.info(event)
end

You can add additional metadata to the notifications published by Coach by calling the log_metadata method from inside your Coach middlewares.

class Tracking < Coach::Middleware
  requires :user

  def call
    (user_id: user.id)
    next_middleware.call
  end
end

Coach CLI

As well as the library, the Coach gem comes with a command line tool - coach.

When working in a large codebase that uses Coach, one of the challenges you may run into is understanding the provide/require graph made up of all the middleware chains you've built. While the library enforces the correctness of those chains at boot time, it doesn't help you understand those dependencies. That's where the coach CLI comes in!

Currently, the coach CLI supports two commands.

find-provider

find-provider is the simpler of the two commands. Given the name of a Coach middleware and a value that it requires, it outputs the name of the middleware that provides it.

$ bundle exec coach find-provider HelloUser user
Value `user` is provided to `HelloUser` by:

Authentication

If there are multiple middlewares in the chain that provide the same value, all of them will be listed.

find-chain

find-chain is the more advanced of the two commands, and is most useful in larger codebases. Given the name of a Coach middleware and a value it requires, it outputs the chains of middleware between the specified middleware and the one that provides the required value.

# Note that we've assumed an intermediate middleware - `UserDecorator` exists in this
# example to make the functionality of the command clearer.
$ bundle exec coach find-chain HelloUser user
Value `user` is provided to `HelloUser` by:

HelloUser -> UserDecorator -> Authentication

If there are multiple paths to a middleware that provides that value, all of them will be listed. Similarly, if multiple middlewares provide the same value, all of them will be listed.

Spring integration

Given that the Coach CLI is mostly aimed at large Rails apps using Coach, it would be an oversight for us not to integrate it with Spring.

To enable the use of Spring with the Coach CLI, add the following to config/spring.rb or an equivalent Rails config file.

require "spring/commands/coach"

On GoCardless' main Rails app, using Spring reduces the time to run coach commands from around 15s to 1s.

Future work

While we think the commands we've already built are useful, we do have some ideas to go further, including:

  • Better formatting of provider chains
  • Outputting DOT format files to visualise with Graphviz
  • Editor integrations (e.g. showing the provider chains when hovering a requires statement)

License & Contributing

GoCardless ♥ open source. If you do too, come join us.