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Add a description of priority-ordering rules (implemented for WTD-590) to framework documentation.
192 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
192 lines
9.6 KiB
Markdown
Framework-level components for Open MCT Web. This is Angular and Require,
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with an extra layer to mediate between them and act as an extension
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mechanism to allow plug-ins to be introduced declaratively.
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# Usage
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This section needs to be written. For now, refer to implementation notes and
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examples in `example/builtins`, `example/extensions`, and `example/composite`.
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## Circular dependencies
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The framework layer (like Angular itself) does not support circular
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dependencies among extensions. Generally, circular dependencies can be
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avoided by refactoring; for instance, a dependency-less intermediary can be
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added by two parties which depend upon one another, and both can depend upon
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this intermediary while one abandons its dependency to the other (the
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intermediary must then provide the functionality that was needed in the
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abandoned dependency.)
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In some cases this refactoring is non-obvious or ineffective (for instance,
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when a service component depends upon the whole.) In these cases, Angular's
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`$injector` may be used to break the declaration-time dependency, by allowing
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retrieval of the dependency at use-time instead. (This is essentially the
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same solution as above, where `$injector` acts as an application-global
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generalized intermediary.)
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# Implementation Notes
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The framework layer is responsible for performing a four-stage initialization
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process. These stages are:
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1. __Loading definitions.__ JSON declarations are loaded for all bundles which
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will constitute the application, and wrapped in a useful API for subsequent
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stages. _Sources in `src/load`_
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2. __Resolving extensions.__ Any scripts which provide implementations for
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extensions exposed by bundles are loaded, using Require.
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_Sources in `src/resolve`_
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3. __Registering extensions.__ Resolved extensions are registered with Angular,
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such that they can be used by the application at run-time. This stage
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includes both registration of Angular built-ins (directives, controllers,
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routes, constants, and services) as well as registration of non-Angular
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extensions. _Sources in `src/register`_
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4. __Bootstrapping.__ JSON declarations are loaded for all bundles which
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will constitute the application, and wrapped in a useful API for subsequent
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stages. _Sources in `src/bootstrap`_
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Additionally, the framework layer takes responsibility for initializing
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other application state. Currently this simply means adding Promise to the
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global namespace if it is not defined.
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## Load stage
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Using Angular's `$http`, the list of installed bundles is loaded from
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`bundles.json`; then, each bundle's declaration (its path + `bundle.json`)
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is loaded. These are wrapped by `Bundle` objects, and the extensions they
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expose are wrapped by `Extension` objects; this is only to provide a
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useful API for subsequent stages.
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A bundle is a set of related extensions; an extension is an individual
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unit of the application that is meant to be used by other pieces of the
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application.
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## Resolution stage
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Some, but not all, individual extensions have corresponding scripts.
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These are referred to by the `implementation` field in their extension
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definition. The implementation name should not include the bundle path,
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or the name of the source folder; these will be pre-pended by the framework
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during this stage. The implementation name should include a `.js` extension.
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Bundles may utilize third-party libraries, and may wish to expose these such
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that other bundles may use them. Require JS may need special configuration
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to recognize and utilize third-party libraries, and when exposing a
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third-party library it may be desirable to do so under a short name
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(to avoid long relative paths.) Such configuration is performed during the
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resolution stage, immediately before implementations are loaded. Any
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`configuration` properties from a bundle's definition (`bundle.json`) will
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be used to perform this configuration; these `configuration` should take
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the same form as needed to populate a
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[`require.config`](http://requirejs.org/docs/api.html#config) call.
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At present, only `shim` and `paths` options are supported; any `paths` will
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be prepended with the bundle's library path (the bundle's `lib` folder, by
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default; this directory name can be overridden by specifying a `libraries`
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property in `bundles.json`.)
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An extension is resolved by loading its implementing script, if one has been
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declared. If none is declared, the extension's raw definition is used
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instead. To ensure that extensions look similar regardless of whether or
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not an implementation is present, all key-value pairs from the definition
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are copied to the loaded implementation (if one has been loaded.)
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## Registration stage
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Following implementation resolution, extensions are registered by Angular.
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How this registration occurs depends on whether or not there is built in
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support for the category of extension being registered.
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* For _built-in_ extension types (recognized by Angular), these are
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registered with the application module. These categories are `directives`,
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`controllers`, `services`, `constants`, and `routes`.
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* For _composite services_, extensions of category `components` are passed
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to the service compositor, which builds up a dependency graph among
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the components such that their fully-wired whole is exposed as a single
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service.
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* For _general extensions_, the resolved extensions are assembled into a
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list, with Angular-level dependencies are declared, and the full set
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is exposed as a single Angular "service."
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### Priority order
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Within each category, registration occurs in priority order. An extension's
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priority may be specified as a `priority` property in its extension
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definition; this may be a number, or a symbolic string. Extensions are
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registered in reverse numeric order (highest-priority first), and symbolic
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strings are mapped to the numeric values as follows:
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* `fallback`: Negative infinity. Used for extensions that are not intended
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for use (that is, they are meant to be overridden) but are present as an
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option of last resort.
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* `default`: -100. Used for extensions that are expected to be overridden, but
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need a useful default.
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* `none`: 0. Also used if no priority is specified, or if an unknown or
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malformed priority is specified.
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* `optional`: 100. Used for extensions that are meant to be used, but may be
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overridden.
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* `preferred`: 1000. Used for extensions that are specifically intended to
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be used, but still may be overridden in principle.
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* `mandatory`: Positive infinity. Used when an extension should definitely
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not be overridden.
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These symbolic names are chosen to reflect usage where many extensions may
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satisfy a given usage, but only one may be used; in this case, as a
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convention it should be the lowest-ordered (highest-priority) extensions
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available. In other cases, a full set (or multi-element subset) of
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extensions may be desired, with a specific ordering; in these cases, it
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is preferable to specify priority numerically when declaring extensions,
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and to understand that extensions will be sorted according to these
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conventions when using them.
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### Composite services
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Composite services are assumed to follow a provider-aggregator-decorator
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pattern where:
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* _Providers_ have dependencies as usual, and expose the API associated
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with the service they compose. Providers are full service implementations
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in-and-of-themselves.
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* _Aggregators_ have dependencies as usual plus one additional dependency,
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which will be satisfied by the array of all providers registered of
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that type of service. Implementations are assumed to include an extra
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argument (after what they declare in `depends`) to receive this array.
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Aggregators make multiple providers appear as one.
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* _Decorators_ have dependencies as usual plus one additional dependency,
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which will be satisfied by either an aggregator (if one is present),
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the latest provider (if no aggregator is present), or another decorator
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(if multiple decorators are present.) As with aggregators, an additional
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argument should be accepted by the implementation to receive this.
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Decorators modify or augment the behavior of a service, but do not
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provide its core functionality.
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* All of the above must be declared with a `provides` property, which
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indicates which type of service they compose. Providers will only be
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paired with aggregators of matching types, and so on. The value of
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this property is also the name of the service that is ultimately
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registered with Angular to represent the composite service as a whole.
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The service compositor handles this in five steps:
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1. All providers are registered.
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2. Arrays of providers are registered.
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3. All aggregators are registered (with dependencies to the arrays
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registered in the previous step.)
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4. All decorators are registered (with dependencies on the most recent
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components of matching types.)
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5. Full composite services are registered (essentially aliasing back
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to the latest component registered of a given type.)
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Throughout these steps, components are registered with Angular using
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generated names like `typeService[decorator#11]`. It is technically possible
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to reference these dependencies elsewhere but that is not the intent.
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Rather, the resulting composed service should be referred to as
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`typeService` (or, more generally, the value matched from the `provides`
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field of the paired service components.)
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### General extensions
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Similar to composite services, each individual general extension gets
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registered using a generated name, like `types[extension#0]`. These are
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not intended to be referenced directly; instead, they are declared
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dependencies of the full list of general extensions of a given category.
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This list of extensions is registered with a square-brackets suffix,
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like `types[]`; this _is_ intended to be declared as a dependency by
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non-framework code. |