The task at hand is to create a part of my Java web application which will allow me to easily execute small pieces of codes in a compositionnal manner. The task at hand is to allow the user to compose "actions" in any order. What I'm struggling with is passing parameters to my actions.
All starts with the action interface :
public interface Action {
void resolve(Context context);
}
When the action is resolved, it's code is executed. The code can be anything : calling a method in Java, executing some Javascript...
Here, the "context" is the problem for me. Each action executes within a specific context. The idea is that the user that creates the action can specify which object to retrieve from the concept, for example the user that is resolving the current action, or other objects specified in the action's specific interface.
Example, let's look at this action :
public final class ActionScript implements Action {
private final Parameters parameters;
private final String methodName;
private final ScriptsLibrary library;
public ActionScript(ScriptsLibrary library, String methodName, Parameters parameters) {
this.parameters = parameters;
this.library = library;
this.methodName = methodName;
}
@Override
public void resolve(Context context) {
try {
((Invocable) library.getEngine()).invokeFunction(methodName, context);
} catch (ScriptException | NoSuchMethodException ex) {
throw new RuntimeException(ex);
}
}
}
It's a simple wrapper calling an action in Javascript using Nashorn. The parameters can be anything : objects with specific ids in the DB, int/String/boolean values configured by the user...
The code from an action can look like this :
public class DummyAction implements Action {
@Override
public void resolve(Context context) {
User userExecutingTheAction = context.get("ExecutingUser");
System.out.println("User " + userExecutingTheAction);
}
}
So the action can retrieve runtime parameters (ex: user that executes the action...) and static parameters (created when the action is loaded - from a config file for instance), and all that from the concept. Besides, the user can for example specify references to object in the parameters that will be injected at runtime.
Actions can also be nested/decorated in order to achieve full compositionnality. For instance :
public class DummyWrapperAction implements Action {
private final Action wrappedAction;
public DummyWrapperAction(Action wrappedAction) {
this.wrappedAction = wrappedAction;
}
@Override
public void resolve(Context context) {
System.out.println("Before");
wrappedAction.resolve(context);
System.out.println("After");
}
}
This allows actions to be created easily :
// executes specific action 1 or specific action 2 based on a condition
Action myAction = new LoggingAction(new ConditionalAction(new Condition(3), new SpecificAction1(), new SpecificAction2()));
Knowing all this, what is the cleanest well to design the context class ? Should it be splitted into several elements ? The struggle is to inject everything needed to the class at runtime and be sure to not conflict with potential wrapped actions.
The Context basic implementation is responsible for :
- retrieving any object from the DB at runtime
- providing static parameters to the action developpers holding a transaction and giving
- it access to the user merging runtime and static concept, and this even in a wrapper (ex : if a parent action calls a child action, the user that executes the action must still be known so context should merge static child parameters and runtime parameters such as the user)
I feel it is doing too much. The design is affected by the Concept classes owning much responsabilities and their should be fragmented (right now every part of the application is linked to the concept). But how ? Here's what I try to achieve in clean coding :
- the action interface should be kept simple (1 method max, with a reasonnable number of parameters)
- no usage of static mechanisms
- maximum immutability
In a true object-oriented way, and method oriented, how to solve this specific design problem ?
edit : removed public declarator in method in interface
edit 2 : I had a lot of interesting solutions, but the one that made the more sense to me was the one in which each action is parametrized with a specific kind of Context. I reorganized things as such :
- Action interface has still only one method, to resolve the action with the context
- Static parameters of the actions, may they be DB or otherwise, are loaded when the action is created (user session)
- The context is just a facade for diverse operations (transaction ...) + specialized operations, like the user of the action
Context
object that is the problem, perhaps implementing the ChangeListener interface instead of theAction
interface. It has its own similarContext
object and it appears to do the same thing as yourAction
listener?Context
will expose to allAction
. Action-specific configurations and dependencies shall be provided through the constructor. It is ok forContext
to have a wide-range API as long asContext
is just a Facade. Also, you will probably not be able to shield clients from concreteAction
classes.