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Dependency injection and resolution at compile time or runtime

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Resolve

Dependency injection and resolution at compile time or runtime.

Resolve is designed for swapping out dependencies in multi-target systems, like embedded / IoT devices, where different hardware may be available depending on which target the firmware is running on, or where physical hardware may be missing all together when running the firmware on the host for development and testing. That being said, Resolve also works for the traditional case of unit testing, as the test environment is essentially just another type of target.

Resolve can be used in conjunction with mocks for testing, as they each have their own advantages. Resolve has the benefit of not being linked to a process, which means Resolve can be helpful for testing GenServers or other code that runs in a process your test doesn't have direct access to. Resolve also allows you to create throw-away anonymous modules for unit tests, rather than creating named mock modules or factories.

Installation

The package can be installed by adding resolve to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:resolve, "~> 0.2.1"}
  ]
end

Usage

Include resolve in the module that requires dependency injection with use Resolve. Any place in that module that might need a dependency injected can then use resolve(Module) to allow another module to be injected. The module passed to resolve/1 will be used if another module isn't injected.

defmodule MyInterface do
  use Resolve

  def some_command, do: resolve(__MODULE__).some_command
end 

Configuration

Resolve can be configured in the project's config.exs.

Opts

  • compile - false - Sets the mappings at compile time and doesn't start the process that allows them to be modified at runtime. This method is more secure and more performant. Compiling is intended for production and runtime is intended for unit tests.
  • mappings - [] - A two element tuple of the modules to map from and to: {from, to}

Example

config :resolve,
  compile: true,
  mappings: [
    {OriginalModule, InjectedModule},
  ]

Runtime

Dependencies can be injected at runtime with inject/2. This is intended for unit testing, but not necessarily limited to it. Runtime mappings will be less performant compared to compiled mappings, as each lookup goes through a read-optimized ETS table.

Resolve.inject(OriginalModule, InjectedModule)

Modules can also be defined directly in a block, which can be helpful if they are only needed for certain tests.

Resolve.inject(Port, quote do
  def open(_name, _opts), do: self()

  def close(_port), do: :ok

  def command(_port, _data), do: :ok
end)

Reverting a mapping

If dependencies are resolved at runtime, any injected dependencies for a module can be removed by calling revert/1. This removes any mappings for the module from the lookup table.

Resolve.revert(Module)

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