--- stage: none group: unassigned info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments --- # Guidelines for reusing abstractions As GitLab has grown, different patterns emerged across the codebase. Service classes, serializers, and presenters are just a few. These patterns made it easy to reuse code, but at the same time make it easy to accidentally reuse the wrong abstraction in a particular place. ## Why these guidelines are necessary Code reuse is good, but sometimes this can lead to shoehorning the wrong abstraction into a particular use case. This in turn can have a negative impact on maintainability, the ability to easily debug problems, or even performance. An example would be to use `ProjectsFinder` in `IssuesFinder` to limit issues to those belonging to a set of projects. While initially this may seem like a good idea, both classes provide a very high level interface with very little control. This means that `IssuesFinder` may not be able to produce a better optimized database query, as a large portion of the query is controlled by the internals of `ProjectsFinder`. To work around this problem, you would use the same code used by `ProjectsFinder`, instead of using `ProjectsFinder` itself directly. This allows you to compose your behavior better, giving you more control over the behavior of the code. To illustrate, consider the following code from `IssuableFinder#projects`: ```ruby return @projects = project if project? projects = if current_user && params[:authorized_only].presence && !current_user_related? current_user.authorized_projects elsif group finder_options = { include_subgroups: params[:include_subgroups], only_owned: true } GroupProjectsFinder.new(group: group, current_user: current_user, options: finder_options).execute else ProjectsFinder.new(current_user: current_user).execute end @projects = projects.with_feature_available_for_user(klass, current_user).reorder(nil) ``` Here we determine what projects to scope our data to, using three different approaches. When a group is specified, we use `GroupProjectsFinder` to retrieve all the projects of that group. On the surface this seems harmless: it is easy to use, and we only need two lines of code. In reality, things can get hairy very quickly. For example, the query produced by `GroupProjectsFinder` may start out simple. Over time more and more functionality is added to this (high level) interface. Instead of _only_ affecting the cases where this is necessary, it may also start affecting `IssuableFinder` in a negative way. For example, the query produced by `GroupProjectsFinder` may include unnecessary conditions. Since we're using a finder here, we can't easily opt-out of that behavior. We could add options to do so, but then we'd need as many options as we have features. Every option adds two code paths, which means that for four features we have to cover 8 different code paths. A much more reliable (and pleasant) way of dealing with this, is to use the underlying bits that make up `GroupProjectsFinder` directly. This means we may need a little bit more code in `IssuableFinder`, but it also gives us much more control and certainty. This means we might end up with something like this: ```ruby return @projects = project if project? projects = if current_user && params[:authorized_only].presence && !current_user_related? current_user.authorized_projects elsif group current_user .owned_groups(subgroups: params[:include_subgroups]) .projects .any_additional_method_calls .that_might_be_necessary else current_user .projects_visible_to_user .any_additional_method_calls .that_might_be_necessary end @projects = projects.with_feature_available_for_user(klass, current_user).reorder(nil) ``` This is just a sketch, but it shows the general idea: we would use whatever the `GroupProjectsFinder` and `ProjectsFinder` finders use under the hoods. ## End goal The guidelines in this document are meant to foster _better_ code reuse, by clearly defining what can be reused where, and what to do when you cannot reuse something. Clearly separating abstractions makes it harder to use the wrong one, makes it easier to debug the code, and (hopefully) results in fewer performance problems. ## Abstractions Now let's take a look at the various abstraction levels available, and what they can (or cannot) reuse. For this we can use the following table, which defines the various abstractions and what they can (not) reuse: | Abstraction | Service classes | Finders | Presenters | Serializers | Model instance method | Model class methods | Active Record | Worker |:-----------------------|:-----------------|:---------|:------------|:--------------|:------------------------|:----------------------|:----------------|:-------- | Controller/API endpoint| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Service class | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Finder | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Presenter | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Serializer | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | Model class method | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Model instance method | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Worker | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | No | Yes ### Controllers Everything in `app/controllers`. Controllers should not do much work on their own, instead they pass input to other classes and present the results. ### API endpoints Everything in `lib/api` (the REST API) and `app/graphql` (the GraphQL API). API endpoints have the same abstraction level as controllers. ### Service classes Everything that resides in `app/services`. Service classes represent operations that coordinates changes between models (such as entities and value objects). Changes impact the state of the application. 1. When an object makes no changes to the state of the application, then it's not a service. It may be a [finder](#finders) or a value object. 1. When there is no operation, there is no need to execute a service. The class would probably be better designed as an entity, a value object, or a policy. When implementing a service class, consider: 1. A service class initializer should contain in its arguments: 1. A [model](#models) instance that is being acted upon. Should be first positional argument of the initializer. The argument name of the argument is left to the developer's discretion, such as: `issue`, `project`, `merge_request`. 1. When service represents an action initiated by a user or executed in the context of a user, the initializer must have the `current_user:` keyword argument. Services with the `current_user:` argument run high-level business logic and must validate user authorization to perform their operations. 1. When service does not have a user context and it's not directly initiated by a user (like background service or side-effects), the `current_user:` argument is not needed. This describes low-level domain logic or instance-wide logic. 1. For all additional data required by a service, the explicit keyword arguments are recommended. When a service requires too long of a list of arguments, consider splitting them into: - `params`: A hash with model properties that will be assigned directly. - `options`: A hash with extra parameters (which need to be processed, and are not model properties). The `options` hash should be stored in an instance variable. ```ruby # merge_request: A model instance that is being acted upon. # assignee: new MR assignee that will be assigned to the MR # after the service is executed. def initialize(merge_request, assignee:) @merge_request = merge_request @assignee = assignee end ``` ```ruby # issue: A model instance that is being acted upon. # current_user: Current user. # params: Model properties. # options: Configuration for this service. Can be any of the following: # - notify: Whether to send a notification to the current user. # - cc: Email address to copy when sending a notification. def initialize(issue:, current_user:, params: {}, options: {}) @issue = issue @current_user = current_user @params = params @options = options end ``` 1. It implements a single public instance method `#execute`, which invokes service class behavior: - The `#execute` method takes no arguments. All required data is passed into initializer. - Optional. If needed, the `#execute` method returns its result via [`ServiceResponse`](#serviceresponse). Several base classes implement the service classes convention. You may consider inheriting from: - `BaseContainerService` for services scoped by container (project or group). - `BaseProjectService` for services scoped to projects. - `BaseGroupService` for services scoped to groups. Classes that are not service objects should be [created elsewhere](software_design.md#use-namespaces-to-define-bounded-contexts), such as in `lib`. #### ServiceResponse Service classes usually have an `execute` method, which can return a `ServiceResponse`. You can use `ServiceResponse.success` and `ServiceResponse.error` to return a response in `execute` method. In a successful case: ```ruby response = ServiceResponse.success(message: 'Branch was deleted') response.success? # => true response.error? # => false response.status # => :success response.message # => 'Branch was deleted' ``` In a failed case: ```ruby response = ServiceResponse.error(message: 'Unsupported operation') response.success? # => false response.error? # => true response.status # => :error response.message # => 'Unsupported operation' ``` An additional payload can also be attached: ```ruby response = ServiceResponse.success(payload: { issue: issue }) response.payload[:issue] # => issue ``` Error responses can also specify the failure `reason` which can be used by the caller to understand the nature of the failure. The caller, if an HTTP endpoint, could translate the reason symbol into an HTTP status code: ```ruby response = ServiceResponse.error( message: 'Job is in a state that cannot be retried', reason: :job_not_retrieable) if response.success? head :ok if response.reason == :job_not_retriable head :unprocessable_entity else head :bad_request end ``` For common failures such as resource `:not_found` or operation `:forbidden`, we could leverage the Rails [HTTP status symbols](http://www.railsstatuscodes.com/) as long as they are sufficiently specific for the domain logic involved. For other failures use domain-specific reasons whenever possible. For example: `:job_not_retriable`, `:duplicate_package`, `:merge_request_not_mergeable`. ### Finders Everything in `app/finders`, typically used for retrieving data from a database. Finders cannot reuse other finders in an attempt to better control the SQL queries they produce. Finders' `execute` method should return `ActiveRecord::Relation`. Exceptions can be added to `spec/support/finder_collection_allowlist.yml`. See [`#298771`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/298771) for more details. ### Presenters Everything in `app/presenters`, used for exposing complex data to a Rails view, without having to create many instance variables. See [the documentation](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/presenters/README.md) for more information. ### Serializers Everything in `app/serializers`, used for presenting the response to a request, typically in JSON. ### Models Classes and modules in `app/models` represent domain concepts that encapsulate both [data and behavior](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_model). These classes can interact directly with a data store (like ActiveRecord models) or can be a thin wrapper (Plain Old Ruby Objects) on top of ActiveRecord models to express a richer domain concept. [Entities and Value Objects](https://martinfowler.com/bliki/EvansClassification.html) that represent domain concepts are considered domain models. Some examples: - [`DesignManagement::DesignAtVersion`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/b62ce98cff8e0530210670f9cb0314221181b77f/app/models/design_management/design_at_version.rb) is a model that leverages validations to combine designs and versions. - [`Ci::Minutes::Usage`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/ec52f19f7325410177c00fef06379f55ab7cab67/ee/app/models/ci/minutes/usage.rb) is a Value Object that provides [CI/CD minutes usage](../ci/pipelines/cicd_minutes.md) for a given namespace. #### Model class methods These are class methods defined by _GitLab itself_, including the following methods provided by Active Record: - `find` - `find_by_id` - `delete_all` - `destroy` - `destroy_all` Any other methods such as `find_by(some_column: X)` are not included, and instead fall under the "Active Record" abstraction. #### Model instance methods Instance methods defined on Active Record models by _GitLab itself_. Methods provided by Active Record are not included, except for the following methods: - `save` - `update` - `destroy` - `delete` #### Active Record The API provided by Active Record itself, such as the `where` method, `save`, `delete_all`, and so on. ### Worker Everything in `app/workers`. Use `SomeWorker.perform_async` or `SomeWorker.perform_in` to schedule Sidekiq jobs. Never directly invoke a worker using `SomeWorker.new.perform`.