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A wrapper around the Laravel Pipeline class with a few additional niceties

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Zaengle Pipeline

After using Laravel Pipelines to handle complex data flows in our projects we saw a few patterns emerge:

  • Database transactions
  • Pipe interface
  • Responses and exception handling

This package adds niceties on top of the Laravel Pipeline and consolidates them into a single reusable location.

FYI - See the "Example" directory for a more thorough example.

Installation

composer require zaengle/pipeline

Testing

phpunit

Basic Class Example

A pipeline is a common pattern for breaking data, logic, and response/exceptions into three distinct elements. Zaengle Pipeline abstracts these parts into helpful classes and gives some structure to the underlying pattern. For example, let's explore at what a pipeline might look like for a ficticious user registration:

<?php

use App\RegisterTraveler;
use App\Pipes\CreateUser;
use App\Pipes\HandleMailingList;
use Zaengle\Pipeline\Pipeline;

class FicticiousRegisterController {
    public function __invoke() 
    {
        $traveler = (new RegisterTraveler())->setRequest(request()->all());
        
        $pipes = [
            CreateUser::class,
            HandleMailingList::class,
            // any other items that need to happen during registration...
        ];
    
        $response = app(Pipeline::class)->pipe($traveler, $pipes, $useTransactions = true);
    
        if ($response->passed()) {
            return response()->json('Welcome!');
        } else {
            return response()->json('Your registration failed with the following error: ' . $response->getMessage());
        }
    }
}

Breaking it Down

Create a Traveler

The first step in using the Zaengle Pipeline is to create a Data Traveler class. Note: The setRequest() method is contrived for this example.

$traveler = (new RegisterTraveler())->setRequest(request()->all());

Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\AbstractTraveler provides additional methods utilized in the Zaengle\Pipeline\Pipeline class.

<?php
use Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\AbstractTraveler;

class RegisterTraveler extends AbstractTraveler {
}

Within the $traveler you may set any data required and it will be available within any of the pipes.

<?php
use Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\AbstractTraveler;

class RegisterTraveler extends AbstractTraveler {

  private $request;

  private $user;
    // custom methods
    public function setRequest($request)
    {
        $this->request = $request;
        return $this;
    }

    public function getRequest()
    {
        return $this->request;
    }

    public function setUser($user)
    {
        $this->user = $user;
        return $this;
    }

    public function getUser()
    {
        return $this->user;
    }
}

Pipes

Separate your business logic into appropriate "pipes," each of which should implement the Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\PipeInterface.

<?php

use App\User;
use Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\PipeInterface;

class CreateUser implements PipeInterface {
    public function handle(RegisterTraveler|AbstractTraveler $traveler, \Closure $next): RegisterTraveler
    {
        $traveler->setUser(
            User::create([
                'email' => $traveler->getRequest()->email,
                'password' => $traveler()->getRequest()->password,
            ])
        );
        
        return $next($traveler);
    }
}
<?php

use App\MailingService;
use Zaengle\Pipeline\Contracts\PipeInterface;

class HandleMailingList implements PipeInterface
{
    public function handle(RegisterTraveler|AbstractTraveler $traveler, \Closure $next): RegisterTraveler
    {
        if ($traveler->getRequest()->subscribe) {
            MailingService::subscribe($traveler->getUser()->email);
            
            $traveler->getUser()->update([
                'subscriber' => true,
            ]);
        }
        
        return $next($traveler);
    }
}

Primary Pipeline

Once you have your data and pipes established, send them through the Zaengle\Pipeline\Pipeline ->pipe() method.

pipe() accepts three parameters, two of which are required. The first parameter should be your $traveler, the second is your array of pipes, and the third, optional parameter tells Pipeline whether to use transactions or not.

// use Zaengle\Pipeline\Pipeline;

$response = app(Pipeline::class)->pipe($traveler, $pipes, $useTransactions = true);

Results

After sending the $traveler through the data pipes you will have access to a ->passed() method which indicates whether the pipeline completed successfully or not.

$response = app(Pipeline::class)->pipe($traveler, $pipes, $useTransactions = true);

if ($response->passed()) {
    // Handle pass
    dump($response->getMessage());
} else {
    // Handle fail
    // $response->getException();
    // $response->getMessage();
    // $response->getStatus();
}

AbstractTraveler grants you access to the following convenience methods:

$response->passed()

A boolean to indicate whether the traveler made it all the way through the pipes without any exceptions.

$response->getStatus()

A string you can set with ->setStatus() or will automatically be either 'ok' or 'fail'.

$response->getException()

To abort the process you may throw an exception which Pipeline will capture on the response. It will also set the status and message giving you access to $response->getMessage().

$response->setMessage()

A $message property will automatically be set in the case of an exception. Otherwise, you can set it at any point during the pipeline execution.

$response->getMessage()

A string that is available upon the completion of the pipeline.

Testing Strategy

When testing a pipeline you should test the overall pipeline to make sure the given input matches the expected output.

<?php
use TestCase;

class FicticiousRegistrationTest extends TestCase 
{
    /** @test */
    public function it_registers_a_user()
    {
        $userStub = factory(User::class)->make();

        $response = $this->postJson('ficticious-endpoint', [
            'email' => $userStub->email,
            'password' => 'password',
            'subscribe' => true,
        ]);
        
        $response->assertJsonFragment('Welcome!');
    
        $this->assertDatabaseHas('users', [
            'email' => $userStub->email,
            'subscribed' => true,
        ]);  
    }
}

You may also want to test individual pipes like this:

<?php

use TestCase;
use App\User;
use App\RegisterTraveler;
use App\Pipes\CreateUser;

class CreateUserTest extends TestCase {
    /** @test */
    public function it_creates_a_user()
    {
        $traveler = (new RegisterTraveler)->setRequest(['email' => 'test', 'password' => 'password']);
        
        (new CreateUser)->handle($traveler, function () {});
        
        $this->assertInstanceOf(User::class, $traveler->getUser());
    }
}

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.

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A wrapper around the Laravel Pipeline class with a few additional niceties

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