discourse/lib/service/runner.rb
Loïc Guitaut a589b48f9a DEV: Display better output when inspecting service steps
This patch aims to improve the steps inspector output:
- The service class name is displayed at the top.
- Next to each step is displayed the time it took to run said step.
- Steps that didn’t run are hidden.
- `#inspect` automatically outputs the error when it is present.
2024-12-12 15:21:10 +01:00

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# frozen_string_literal: true
#
# = Service::Runner
#
# This class is automatically used when passing a block to the `.call` method
# of a service. Its main purpose is to ease how actions can be run upon a
# service completion. Since a service will likely return the same kind of
# things over and over, this allows us to not have to repeat the same
# boilerplate code in every object.
#
# There are several available actions and we can add new ones very easily:
#
# * +on_success+: will execute the provided block if the service succeeds
# * +on_failure+: will execute the provided block if the service fails
# * +on_failed_step(name)+: will execute the provided block if the step named
# `name` fails
# * +on_failed_policy(name)+: will execute the provided block if the policy
# named `name` fails
# * +on_failed_contract(name)+: will execute the provided block if the contract
# named `name` fails
# * +on_model_not_found(name)+: will execute the provided block if the model
# named `name` is not present
# * +on_model_errors(name)+: will execute the provided block if the model named
# `name` contains validation errors
# * +on_exceptions(*exceptions)+: will execute the provided block if any
# exceptions were caught by the `try` block. One or more exception classes
# can be provided to specifically handle those exceptions.
#
# All the specialized steps receive the failing step result object as an
# argument to their block. `on_model_errors` receives the actual model so its
# easier to inspect it, and `on_exceptions` receives the actual exception.
#
# @example In a controller
# def create
# MyService.call do
# on_success do
# flash[:notice] = "Success!"
# redirect_to a_path
# end
# on_failed_policy(:a_named_policy) { |policy| redirect_to root_path, alert: policy.reason }
# on_failure { render :new }
# end
# end
#
# @example In a job
# def execute(*)
# MyService.call(*) do
# on_success { Rails.logger.info "SUCCESS" }
# on_failure { Rails.logger.error "FAILURE" }
# end
# end
#
# The actions will be evaluated in the order they appear. So even if the
# service ultimately fails with a failed policy, in this example only the
# +on_failed_policy+ action will be executed and not the +on_failure+ one. The
# only exception to this being +on_failure+ as it will always be executed last.
#
class Service::Runner
# @!visibility private
AVAILABLE_ACTIONS = {
on_success: {
condition: -> { result.success? },
key: [],
},
on_failure: {
condition: -> { result.failure? },
key: [],
},
on_failed_step: {
condition: ->(name) { failure_for?("result.step.#{name}") },
key: %w[result step],
},
on_failed_policy: {
condition: ->(name = "default") { failure_for?("result.policy.#{name}") },
key: %w[result policy],
default_name: "default",
},
on_failed_contract: {
condition: ->(name = "default") { failure_for?("result.contract.#{name}") },
key: %w[result contract],
default_name: "default",
},
on_model_not_found: {
condition: ->(name = "model") do
failure_for?("result.model.#{name}") && result["result.model.#{name}"].not_found
end,
key: %w[result model],
default_name: "model",
},
on_model_errors: {
condition: ->(name = "model") do
failure_for?("result.model.#{name}") && result["result.model.#{name}"].invalid
end,
key: [],
default_name: "model",
},
on_exceptions: {
condition: ->(*exceptions) do
next unless result["result.try.default"]&.exception
next true if exceptions.empty?
exceptions.any? { result["result.try.default"].exception.is_a?(_1) }
end,
key: %w[result try],
name: "default",
property: :exception,
},
}.with_indifferent_access.freeze
# @!visibility private
attr_reader :service, :object, :dependencies
# @!visibility private
def initialize(service, object, dependencies)
@service = service
@object = object
@dependencies = dependencies
@actions = {}
end
# @param service [Class] a class including {Service::Base}
# @param dependencies [Hash] dependencies to be provided to the service
# @param block [Proc] a block containing the steps to match on
# @return [void]
def self.call(service, dependencies = {}, &block)
new(service, block.binding.eval("self"), dependencies).call(&block)
end
# @!visibility private
def call(&block)
instance_exec(result, &block)
# Always have `on_failure` as the last action
(
actions
.except(:on_failure)
.merge(actions.slice(:on_failure))
.detect { |name, (condition, _)| condition.call } || [-> {}]
).flatten.last.call
end
private
attr_reader :actions
def result
@result ||= service.call(dependencies)
end
def failure_for?(key)
result[key]&.failure?
end
def add_action(name, *args, &block)
action = AVAILABLE_ACTIONS[name]
actions[[name, *args].join("_").to_sym] = [
-> { instance_exec(*args, &action[:condition]) },
-> do
object.instance_exec(
result[
[*action[:key], action[:name] || args.first || action[:default_name]].join(".")
].public_send(action[:property] || :itself),
**result.slice(*block.parameters.filter_map { _1.last if _1.first == :keyreq }),
&block
)
end,
]
end
def method_missing(method_name, *args, &block)
return super unless AVAILABLE_ACTIONS[method_name]
add_action(method_name, *args, &block)
end
def respond_to_missing?(method_name, include_private = false)
AVAILABLE_ACTIONS[method_name] || super
end
end