Need to register an Observer which observes ActiveRecord models in different applications? Untied Observer for the rescue.
The publisher application registers which models are able to be observed. The consumers just need to define callbacks that will be fired for certain events. The consumer part uses an API similar to the one provided by ActiveRecord::Observer.
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Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'untied'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install untied
The untied Gem relies on RabbitMQ, so it need to be installed in order to work properly. Here are the instructions.
You need to do some configurations on the publisher side:
Untied::Publisher.configure do |config|
config.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
config.deliver_messages = true # Silent mode when falsy
config.service_name = "social-network"
config.doorkeeper = MyDoorkeeper
end
The service_name
configuration is very important here. It must be unique across all the services and will be used to uniquely identify the models. The deliver_messages
option enable and disable events sending. Disabling it may be useful on test and development environment.
The doorkeeper
configuration let you specify which class is responsible for telling which ActiveRecord models are capable of be observed.
You should also define when the ActiveRecord models will be propagated to other services. We can take advantage on the usefulness of ActiveRecord::Callbacks
. To keep the things DRY, this job may be done inside what we call the Watcher:
class MyDoorkeeper
include Untied::Doorkeeper
def initialize
watch User, :after_create, :after_update
end
end
The watcher defined above will propagate Users instances when they are created or updated. The to_json
will be called whenever the model is propagated.
You can use gems such as ROAR or representable to define how your models will be mapped into JSONs:
require 'roar/representer/json'
module UserRepresenter
include Roar::Representer::JSON
property :complete_name
def complete_name
"#{self.frist_name} #{self.last_name}"
end
end
class DoorkeeperWithRepresenter
include Untied::Doorkeeper
def initialize
watch User, :after_create, :represent_with => UserRepresenter
end
end
Untied will extend the user instance with UserRepresenter
just before sending it into the wire.
If you want to publish messages from DelayedJob you should be aware that is necessary to initialize AMQP and Eventmachine again after forking. It's a known issue that Eventmachine's reactor doesn't survives process forking, so we need to setup again:
Delayed::Worker.lifecycle.before(:invoke_job) do
if !defined?(@@em_thread) && Delayed::Worker.delay_jobs
Delayed::Worker.logger.info "Initializing EM and AMQP"
EM.stop if EM.reactor_running?
@@em_thread = Thread.new do
EventMachine.run { AMQP.start }
end
sleep(0.25)
end
end
Untied::Publisher has native support to two adapters: AMQP and Bunny (default). In order to change them use the adapter
configuration:
Untied::Publisher.configure do |config|
config.adapter = :AMQP # the default is :Bunny
end
Remember that, due to the async nature of AMQP, the :AMQP
adapter assumes that you are inside a EventMachine loop.
On the consumer side, you just need to define the observer as you would with ActiveRecord::Observer. Remember to subclass Untied::Observer instead.
class UserObserver < Untied::Consumer::Observer
observe :user, :from => "social-network"
def after_create(user)
puts "A the following user was created on social-network service: #{user}"
end
def after_update(user)
puts "A the following user was updated on social-network service: #{user}"
end
end
One important step is identify which service models the observer is listening to. That's why we user the :from
option on the observe
method.
Activating observers:
Untied::Consumer.configure do |config|
config.observers = [UserObserver]
config.abort_on_exception = false # default: false
end
You should start the consumer running the untied:consumer:worker
Raketask.
The abort_on_exception
configuration tells if the worker should ignore Exception thrown. If set to true the exception and the stacktrace will be logged but the worker will not stop. This is recomended for production environments.
TODO
- Make it ActiveRecord independent.
- Use something like serverengine instead of the old deamons gem
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
This project is maintained and funded by Redu Educational Techologies.
Copyright (c) 2012 Redu Educational Technologies
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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