As a software system grows in complexity and usage, it can become burdensome if every change to the logic/behavior of the system also requires you to write and deploy new code. The goal of this business rules engine is to provide a simple interface allowing anyone to capture new rules and logic defining the behavior of a system, and a way to then process those rules on the backend.
You might, for example, find this is a useful way for analysts to define marketing logic around when certain customers or items are eligible for a discount or to automate emails after users enter a certain state or go through a particular sequence of events.
Variables represent values in your system, usually the value of some particular object. You create rules by setting threshold conditions such that when a variable is computed that triggers the condition some action is taken.
params = {
'products_in_stock': 10
}
def order_more(items_to_order):
print("you ordered {} new items".format(items_to_order))
return items_to_order
rules = """
rule "order new items"
when
products_in_stock < 20
then
order_more(50)
end
"""
from business_rule_engine import RuleParser
parser = RuleParser()
parser.register_function(order_more)
parser.parsestr(rules)
parser.execute(params)
Business rule engine uses Excel like functions (thanks to formulas. So it is possible to use most of them in rules.
You can make multiple checks on the same params, and call multiple actions as needed:
rules = """
rule "order new items"
when
AND(products_in_stock < 20,
products_in_stock >= 5)
then
order_more(50)
end
rule "order new items urgent"
when
products_in_stock < 5,
then
AND(order_more(10, true),
order_more(50))
end
"""
You can also write your own functions to validate conditions and use other libraries functions as actions:
from business_rule_engine import RuleParser
def is_even(num):
if (num % 2) == 0:
return True
return False
params = {
'number': 10
}
rules = """
rule "check even number"
when
is_even(number) = True
then
print("is even")
end
"""
parser = RuleParser()
parser.register_function(is_even)
parser.register_function(print)
parser.parsestr(rules)
parser.execute(params)
If some argruments are missing, the rule engine will raise a ValueError.
There are some use cases, when you have to work with incomplete data. In such cases, you can define default arguments.
You enable default rule arguments with the parameter set_defaule_arg
. The default argument will have the Value None
. To provide another value you can use default_arg
.
params = {}
rules = """
rule "order new items"
when
products_in_stock < 20
then
order_more(50)
end
"""
parser = RuleParser()
parser.register_function(order_more)
parser.parsestr(rules)
parser.execute(params, set_default_arg=True, default_arg=0)
if you need more control, how the rule parser handles rules, you can iterate over the parser and execute each rule in your script.
This gives you more control on how to handle missing arguments, rules with errors and you have access to the return values of the conditions and the actions.
from business_rule_engine import RuleParser
from business_rule_engine.exceptions import MissingArgumentError
def order_more(items_to_order):
return "you ordered {} new items".format(items_to_order)
rules = """
rule "order new items"
when
products_in_stock < 20
then
order_more(50)
end
"""
params = {
'products_in_stock': 10
}
parser = RuleParser()
parser.register_function(order_more)
parser.parsestr(rules)
for rule in parser:
try:
rvalue_condition, rvalue_action = rule.execute(params)
if rule.status:
print(rvalue_action)
break
except MissingArgumentError:
pass
Most of the errors are caused by missing parameters, you can handle the errors and interpret the results handling ValueError:
from business_rule_engine import RuleParser
# proposital typo
params = {
'produtcs_in_stock': 30
}
rules = """
rule "order new items"
when
products_in_stock < 20
then
order_more(50)
end
"""
parser = RuleParser()
parser.register_function(order_more)
parser.parsestr(rules)
try:
ret = parser.execute(params)
if ret is False:
print("No conditions matched")
except ValueError as e:
print(e)
To debug the rules processing, use the logging lib.
You can insert in your Python script to log to stdout:
import logging
logging.basicConfig(stream=sys.stdout, level=logging.DEBUG)