Read model projections for Commanded CQRS/ES applications using Ecto for persistence.
MIT License
You should already have Ecto installed and configured before proceeding. Please follow the Ecto Getting Started guide to get going first.
-
Add
commanded_ecto_projections
to your list of dependencies inmix.exs
:def deps do [ {:commanded_ecto_projections, "~> 0.7"}, ] end
-
Configure
commanded_ecto_projections
with the Ecto repo used by your application:config :commanded_ecto_projections, repo: MyApp.Projections.Repo
Or alternatively in case of umbrella application define it later per projection:
defmodule MyApp.ExampleProjector do use Commanded.Projections.Ecto, name: "example_projection", repo: MyApp.Projections.Repo ... end
-
Generate an Ecto migration in your app:
$ mix ecto.gen.migration create_projection_versions
-
Modify the generated migration, in
priv/repo/migrations
, to create theprojection_versions
table:defmodule CreateProjectionVersions do use Ecto.Migration def change do create table(:projection_versions, primary_key: false) do add :projection_name, :text, primary_key: true add :last_seen_event_number, :bigint timestamps() end end end
-
Run the Ecto migration:
$ mix ecto.migrate
When using a prefix for your schemas you might also want to change the prefix
for the ProjectionVersion
schema. There are two options to do this:
- provide a global prefix via the config
config :commanded_ecto_projections,
schema_prefix: "example_schema_prefix"
- provide the prefix on a projection by projection basis
defmodule MyApp.ExampleProjector do
use Commanded.Projections.Ecto,
name: "example_projection",
schema_prefix: "example_schema_prefix"
end
Use Ecto schemas to define your read model:
defmodule ExampleProjection do
use Ecto.Schema
schema "example_projections" do
field :name, :string
end
end
For each read model you will need to define a module that uses the Commanded.Projections.Ecto
macro and configures the domain events to be projected. The :name
option passed to the use
invocation specifies the name of the subscription to be used. It can be any string that is unique among subscriptions.
The project/3
macro expects the domain event, metadata and function that takes and returns an Ecto.Multi data structure for grouping multiple Repo operations. These will all be executed within a single transaction. You can use Ecto.Multi
to insert, update, and delete data.
You can also use project/2
if you do not need to use the event metadata.
defmodule MyApp.ExampleProjector do
use Commanded.Projections.Ecto, name: "example_projection"
project %AnEvent{name: name}, _metadata, fn multi ->
Ecto.Multi.insert(multi, :example_projection, %ExampleProjection{name: name})
end
project %AnotherEvent{name: name}, fn multi ->
Ecto.Multi.insert(multi, :example_projection, %ExampleProjection{name: name})
end
end
If you want to skip a projection event, you can return the multi
transaction without further modifying it:
project %ItemUpdated{uuid: uuid} = event, _metadata, fn multi ->
case Repo.get(ItemProjection, uuid) do
nil -> multi
item -> Ecto.Multi.update(multi, :item, update_changeset(event, item))
end
end
Your projector module must be included in your application supervision tree:
defmodule MyApp.Projections.Supervisor do
use Supervisor
def start_link do
Supervisor.start_link(__MODULE__, nil)
end
def init(_) do
children = [
# projections
worker(MyApp.ExampleProjector, [], id: :example_projector),
]
supervise(children, strategy: :one_for_one)
end
end
The Commanded.Projections.Ecto
macro defines a Commanded event handler which means you can take advantage of the error/3
callback function to handle any errors returned from a project
function. The function is passed the error returned by the event handler (e.g. {:error, error}
), the event causing the error, and a context map containing state passed between retries. Use the context map to track any transient state you need to access between retried failures, such as the number of failed attempts.
You can return one of the following responses depending upon the error severity:
-
{:retry, context}
- retry the failed event, provide a context map containing any state passed to subsequent failures. This could be used to count the number of failures, stopping after too many. -
{:retry, delay, context}
- retry the failed event, after sleeping for the requested delay (in milliseconds). Context is a map as described in{:retry, context}
above. -
:skip
- skip the failed event by acknowledging receipt. -
{:stop, reason}
- stop the projector with the given reason.
Here's an example projector module where an error tagged tuple is explicitly returned from a project
function, but you can also handle exceptions caused by faulty Ecto.Multi
database operations in a similar manner since the errors are caught and returned as tagged tuples (e.g. {:error, %Ecto.ConstraintError{}}
).
defmodule MyApp.ExampleProjector do
use Commanded.Projections.Ecto, name: "MyApp.ExampleProjector"
require Logger
alias Commanded.Event.FailureContext
project %AnEvent{}, fn _multi ->
{:error, :failed}
end
def error({:error, :failed} = error, %AnEvent{}, %FailureContext{}) do
:skip
end
def error({:error, %Ecto.ConstraintError{} = error}, _event, _failure_context) do
Logger.error(fn -> "Failed due to constraint error: " <> inspect(error) end)
:skip
end
def error({:error, _error} = error, _event, _failure_context) do
:skip
end
end
You can define an after_update/3
function in a projector to be called after each projected event. It receives the event, its associated metadata, and all changes from Ecto.Multi
executed in the database transaction.
defmodule MyApp.ExampleProjector do
use Commanded.Projections.Ecto, name: "MyApp.ExampleProjector"
project %AnEvent{name: name}, fn multi ->
Ecto.Multi.insert(multi, :example_projection, %ExampleProjection{name: name})
end
def after_update(event, metadata, changes) do
# ... use event, metadata, or `Ecto.Multi` changes
:ok
end
end
You could use this function to notify subscribers that the read model has been updated (e.g. pub/sub to Phoenix channels).
The projection_versions
table is used to ensure that events are only projected once.
To rebuild a projection you will need to:
-
Delete the row containing the last seen event for the projection name:
delete from projection_versions where projection_name = 'example_projection';
-
Truncate the tables that are being populated by the projection, and restart their identity:
truncate table example_projections, other_projections restart identity;
You will also need to reset the event store subscription for the commanded event handler. This is specific to whichever event store you are using.
Pull requests to contribute new or improved features, and extend documentation are most welcome. Please follow the existing coding conventions.
You should include unit tests to cover any changes. Run mix test
to execute the test suite:
mix deps.get
MIX_ENV=test mix do ecto.create, ecto.migrate
mix test
Please open an issue if you encounter a problem, or need assistance. You can also seek help in the Gitter chat room for Commanded.
For commercial support, and consultancy, please contact Ben Smith.