I am supposed to design a re-usable component. It will be a Java library with a API interface, hiding all implementation details including internal data dependency. It requires a set of static data that a client application needs to configure in the library before calling any methods
After a lot of debate and discussions we have come up with two design approaches
First design approach: static data is internal to library so, the implementation for quarrying and data look up tables should be implemented internally transparent to the client application of the library
In this approach we'd do the following:
a1. library internally depends on a abstract static data interface and there are various data source implementations: ex: database-query implementation, file query implementation, config query implementation
a2. Client application configures an implementation with source of the static dataDebates against this approach:
d1. a library should not make database connection
d3. a client is bound to the data schema as it can not change the queries. only it can point the libray to the data source
In the second design approach: Static data is viewed as a dependency (even though it is internal to the library). so it should be injected, i.e. client application of the library needs to implement all static data look up
We'd do the following:
a. library implements a service provider interface (SPI)
b. client applications need to implement the interface
c. look up tables are with the client applicationDebates against this approach
d1. Static data is internal to the library, a user of library should not worry about implementation
d2. As data for different clients will be mostly same, there will be redundant code
d3. more redundant code = more errors
I am not sure which approach to follow. If you can recall a elegant approach from your experience it will be really helpful to me.
many thanks in advance!