John Kelly
Posted on January 22, 2018
This post is about the core abstractions found in the elm-postgrest package and how those abstractions may be relevant to similar packages.
In Elm, the design space of remote data request APIs has seen its fair share of work.
We have APIs like lukewestby/elm-http-builder
which provide a thin convenience layer over elm-lang/http
.
addItem : String -> Cmd Msg
addItem item =
HttpBuilder.post "http://example.com/api/items"
|> withQueryParams [ ("hello", "world") ]
|> withHeader "X-My-Header" "Some Header Value"
|> withJsonBody (itemEncoder item)
|> withTimeout (10 * Time.second)
|> withExpect (Http.expectJson itemsDecoder)
|> withCredentials
|> send handleRequestComplete
We have APIs like krisajenkins/remotedata
which model the various states remote data can take.
type RemoteData e a
= NotAsked
| Loading
| Failure e
| Success a
And, we have APIs like jamesmacaulay/elm-graphql
, jahewson/elm-graphql
, dillonkearns/graphqelm
, mgold/elm-data
, noahzgordon/elm-jsonapi
, and others which abstract over elm-lang/http
to provide an API which is nice in the domain language of their respective specification. We'll refer to this group of APIs as backend specific request builders.
In addition to community efforts, Evan himself wrote up a vision for data interchange in Elm. And although the API for this specific vision likely sits on the same level of abstraction as elm-lang/http
, Json.Decode
, and Json.Encode
rather than backend specific request builders, it legitimized the exploration around "how do you send information between clients and servers?"
Design Space
What is in the design space of remote data request APIs? More specifically, what is in the design space of backend specific request builders?
For the sake of this post, we'll define the design space as:
A means to describe the capabilities of a data model and subsequently build requests against that data model for client-server applications.
With the following design goals:
- Domain Language vs HTTP - We want to interact with our backends in their own terms rather than their raw transfer protocol. For example, in the context of GraphQL, this means queries, mutations, selection sets, fragments, etc.
- Selections vs Decoders - We want to speak in terms of what we wish to select rather than how we wish to decode it.
- Resources vs JSON - We want to speak in terms of the abstract representation of our data model rather than its specific interchange format and/or storage format.
- Typed vs Untyped - We want to compose our requests using the values of our application rather than the concatenation of query strings.
Let's take a second look at these design goals but this time in the form of a diagram:
Request Builder | Schema Description |
---|---|
CRUD requests selections conditions order limit and offset pagination |
resource schema attributes relationships cardinality |
|
|
Transfer Protocol | Interchange Format |
HTTP: headers body methods url: query and fragment status codes |
json edn xml transit protobuf |
The dividing horizontal line in the diagram represents an abstraction barrier. The barrier, in this case, separates backend specific request builders (above) from their implementation (below). Users at one layer should not need to concern themselves with the details below. The remainder of this post will examine an Elm API at the abstraction level of backend specific request builder.
elm-postgrest
I'm the author of john-kelly/elm-postgrest
; a package that abstracts over elm-lang/http
, Json.Decode
, and Json.Encode
to provide a nice API in the context of PostgREST. Like previously stated, this package falls into the category of backend specific request builders.
This post is about the core abstractions found in the elm-postgrest package and how those abstractions may be relevant to similar packages. All examples will be based on the work from john-kelly/elm-postgrest-spa-example
, which is an almost complete port of rtfeldman/elm-spa-example
to PostgREST. For those unfamiliar with PostgREST, here's an excerpt from their official documentation:
PostgREST is a standalone web server that turns your PostgreSQL database directly into a RESTful API. The structural constraints and permissions in the database determine the API endpoints and operations ... The PostgREST philosophy establishes a single declarative source of truth: the data itself.
The mental model for how these 3 pieces fit together:
elm-postgrest (client) ⇄ PostgREST (server) ⇄ PostgreSQL (db)
In case you're wondering, no knowledge of PostgREST is necessary to make it through this post, however, intermediate knowledge of Elm and technologies like REST, GraphQL, JSON API, Firebase, Parse, or other remote data server specifications will be helpful.
Alright. Now that we have some context, let's dig into the code.
Our First Request
Our first request will retrieve all articles from our remote data server.
For this example, we'll assume that we have a collection of article resources at example.com/api/articles
. Each article has a title, a body, and the count of the number of favorites.
I take a top down approach for the code in this example. Keep this in mind! Later sections will help you better understand earlier sections.
Types
We're going to start out by looking at 4 of the core types in elm-postgrest. I provide the internal implementation of each type, however, don't get bogged down in the definition. I show the implementation in an attempt to ground the new PostgRest types to something you're familiar with.
import PostgRest as PG
exposing
( Request
, Selection
, Schema
, Attribute
)
-
Request - A fully constructed request. The only thing left to do is convert this value into an
Http.Request
and send it off to the Elm runtime. As we'll learn, aRequest
can be constructed with aSelection
and aSchema
.
type Request a
= Read
{ parameters : Parameters
, decoder : Decode.Decoder a
}
-
Selection - The
Selection
is one of the primary means to build requests against the data model. Specifically, theSelection
represents which fields to select and which related resources to embed.
type Selection attributes a
= Selection
(attributes
->
{ attributeNames : List String
, embeds : List Parameters
, decoder : Decode.Decoder a
}
)
-
Schema - The
Schema
is the means to describe the capabilities of a data model. Capabilities means what we can select, what we can filter by, and what we can order by. We're only going to cover selection in this post.
type Schema id attributes
= Schema String attributes
-
Attribute - An individual select-able unit of a
Schema
. For example, the article resource has a titleAttribute String
.
type Attribute a
= Attribute
{ name : String
, decoder : Decode.Decoder a
, encoder : a -> Encode.Value
, urlEncoder : a -> String
}
Request
Here we're constructing a Request
which will result in a List String
. The mental model for this type should be the same as that of an Http.Request
: "If we were to send this Request
, we can expect back a List String
."
getArticles : Request (List String)
getArticles =
PG.readAll articleSchema articleSelection
Let's take a look at the function signature of PG.readAll
before moving on to the next section.
readAll : Schema id attributes -> Selection attributes a -> Request (List a)
As we can see by the signature of readAll
, a Request
can be constructed with a Selection
and a Schema
. Let's now take a look at our Selection
.
Selection
The Selection
type has 2 type parameters: attributes
and a
. The mental model for reading this type is "If given a Schema
of attributes
, a value of type a
could be selected."
articleSelection :
Selection
{ attributes
| title : Attribute String
}
String
articleSelection =
PG.field .title
Things will look vaguely familiar if you've worked with Json.Decode.field
. This is intentional. Overall, you'll find that the Selection
API is quite similar to the Decoder
API. Let's examine the signature of PG.field
:
PG.field : (attributes -> Attribute a) -> Selection attributes a
A field Selection
is composed of a dot accessor for an Attribute
. If we remember back to the mental model for a Selection
, we'll recall that we're in need of a Schema
to fulfill the Selection
. Given that the first type parameter of our articleSelection
is { attributes | title : Attribute String }
, our Schema
will likely itself have this record of Attribute
s. Let's take a look!
Schema
In theory, we could pass anything as the second parameter to the PG.schema
function, but in practice this value will always be an Elm record of Attribute
s.
articleSchema :
Schema x
{ title : Attribute String
, body : Attribute String
, favoritesCount : Attribute Int
}
articleSchema =
PG.schema "articles"
{ title = PG.string "title"
, body = PG.string "body"
, favoritesCount = PG.int "favorites_count"
}
PG.schema
takes a String
which corresponds to the path to our resource (ex: example.com/api/articles) and a record of Attribute
s. This record of Attribute
s describes the capabilities of a data model. In our specific case, it describes what we are able to select!
Let's take a look at how Schema
and PG.schema
are defined internally:
type Schema id attributes
= Schema String attributes
schema : String -> attributes -> Schema id attributes
schema name attrs =
Schema name attrs
At first glance, we'll see that a Schema
is nothing more than a wrapper around a record of Attribute
s. And this is true, but it's important to highlight that it's an opaque wrapper around a record of Attribute
s. It may not be immediately obvious, but it is this API that guides users towards a separation of the description of capabilities (Schema
) from the building of requests (Selection
). A user can't just write something like PG.field mySchema.title
because the record is wrapped, and a user can't just unwrap the Schema
because it's opaque! They are forced to use the functions provided by the package to compose things (namely PG.field
). This API guides users towards writing selections in terms of an eventual record of attributes!
Hopefully the previous explanation sheds a bit of light on why PG.field
takes a dot accessor for an Attribute
rather than an Attribute
directly.
Before moving on, let's review a few of these type signatures side by side:
PG.readAll : Schema id attributes -> Selection attributes a -> Request (List a)
articleSelection :
Selection
{ attributes
| title : Attribute String
}
String
articleSchema :
Schema x
{ title : Attribute String
, body : Attribute String
, favoritesCount : Attribute Int
}
Just take a moment to take this all in. It's pretty cool how the pieces fit together, and we can thank Elm's extensible record system for that!
Just to wrap things up for those who are curious, there exists a function of type PG.toHttpRequest : PG.Request -> Http.Request
. From there you can convert to a Task
with Http.toTask
or directly to a Cmd
with Http.send
.
Conclusion
Did we meet our design goals?
Yes! In our example, we built a request to read all the titles (Request Builder) of our article collection resource (Schema Representation) as opposed to making an HTTP GET request to the api/articles?select=title
URL (Transfer Protocol) and decoding the JSON response (Interchange Format). The former is how we expressed our request in the example, and the latter is an implementation detail.
What has this design bought us?
- Type Safety
- Reuse
Type Safety
If the Schema
is valid, our Request
will be valid. Our Selection
is defined in terms of a Schema
, and we can only construct a Request
if the Schema
and Selection
agree statically. Put another way, a subset of request building errors become static errors rather than logic errors.
For example, let's say we mistype .title
when we're constructing our Selection
. If our Schema
correctly describes our remote resource, we'll get a nice compiler message. Let's take a look at that error message!
The definition of `articleSelection` does not match its type annotation.
18| articleSelection :
19| Selection
20| { attributes
21| | title : Attribute String
22| }
23| String
24| articleSelection =
25|> PG.field .titl
The type annotation for `articleSelection` says it is a:
Selection { attributes | title : ... } String
But the definition (shown above) is a:
Selection { b | titl : ... } a
Pretty cool. However...
Close readers will argue that we've just moved the logic error to the Schema
from the Decoder
. This is true, however, the difference is that we only have 1 Schema
for an entire entity as opposed to a Decoder
for each way we wish to decode the entity. A Schema
represents a single source of truth for all Selection
capabilities of a remote resource. This in turn reduces the surface area of decoding logic errors.
So, in summary: If the Schema
is valid, our Request
will be valid.
Reuse
A Selection
can be reused to construct Request
s with any Schema
that has the proper Attribute
s! For example, if our remote data server had both article resources and book resources:
articleSchema :
Schema x
{ title : Attribute String
, body : Attribute String
, favoritesCount : Attribute Int
}
articleSchema =
PG.schema "articles"
{ title = PG.string "title"
, body = PG.string "body"
, favoritesCount = PG.int "favorites_count"
}
bookSchema :
Schema x
{ title : Attribute String
, pages : Attribute Int
, authorName : Attribute String
}
bookSchema =
PG.schema "books"
{ title = PG.string "title"
, pages = PG.int "pages"
, authorName = PG.string "author_name"
}
We could use the same Selection
:
titleSelection :
Selection
{ attributes
| title : Attribute String
}
String
titleSelection =
PG.field .title
To construct our 2 separate requests:
getArticles : Request (List String)
getArticles =
PG.readAll articleSchema titleSelection
getBooks : Request (List String)
getBooks =
PG.readAll bookSchema titleSelection
Pretty cool. However...
To be completely honest, I have not yet had a need for this reuse feature. With that being said, there's still something about it that makes the API feel right.
So, in summary: Extensible records in Selection
API grant us reuse.
Which ideas could find their way into similar projects?
-
Schema
as single source of truth forSelection
capabilities - Separation of
Schema
andSelection
- Extensible records central to design of this separation
-
Selection
API similar to that ofDecoder
API - And more.. we'll discuss those in the future posts
Future
In the interest of space, time and boredom, I have not included all of the API designs of the elm-postgrest
package in this post. In the future, I may write posts to highlight the concepts which were left out here. For example:
- Combining Selections
- Schema Relationships and Embedding Selections
- Conditions and Orders
- Create, Update, and Delete
Thanks for reading.
If you'd like to view some more simple examples, here's a link to the examples on github. Take a look at each individual git commit.
If you'd like to see a more "RealWorld" example application, here's a link to john-kelly/elm-postgrest-spa-example.
If you're interested in taking a look at the development of john-kelly/elm-postgrest
, head over to the dev branch.
Posted on January 22, 2018
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