import { } from "@effectionx/context-api"Context APIs
Algebraic effects pattern for context-dependent operations with middleware
Often called "Algebraic Effects" or "Contextual Effects", Context APIs let you
access an operation via the context in a way that it can be easily (and
contextually) wrapped with middleware. Middleware is powered by
@effectionx/middleware and supports min/max priority
ordering.
Quick Start
Let's say that you want to define a log operation that behaves differently in different contexts. The basic form will just log values to the console.
import { createApi } from "@effectionx/context-api";
export const logging = createApi("logging", {
*log(...values: unknown[]) {
console.log(...values);
},
});
export const { log } = logging.operations;
Now you can use the logging API wherever you want:
import { log } from "./logging.ts";
export function* op() {
yield* log("I am in an operation");
}
Wrapping with Middleware
Use the around function to wrap middleware around your operations. This lets
you intercept calls, transform arguments, modify return values, or replace
the implementation entirely.
import { logging } from "./logging.ts";
function* initCustomLogging(externalLogger: { log(...values: unknown[]): void }) {
yield* logging.around({
*log([...values], next) {
externalLogger.log(...values);
// since we override the logger entirely, we do not invoke next
},
});
}
Middleware is only in effect inside the scope in which it is installed — when the scope exits, the middleware is removed.
Min/Max Priority
By default, around() registers middleware at "max" priority (outermost,
closest to the caller). You can also register at "min" priority (innermost,
closest to the core handler) by passing an options argument:
import { createApi } from "@effectionx/context-api";
import type { Operation } from "effection";
export const files = createApi("files", {
*readFile(path: string): Operation<string> {
throw new Error(`readFile("${path}") is not implemented`);
},
});
export const { readFile } = files.operations;
In your runtime setup, provide the implementation via min:
import { files } from "./files.ts";
function* initNodeRuntime() {
yield* files.around(
{
*readFile([path], _next) {
return yield* nodeReadFile(path);
},
},
{ at: "min" },
);
}
max middlewares wrap the outside as usual — they don't care which min is
providing the actual implementation:
import { files } from "./files.ts";
function* withLogging() {
yield* files.around({
*readFile([path], next) {
console.log(`reading ${path}`);
return yield* next(path);
},
});
}
In tests, swap the implementation by registering a different min:
function* useTestFixtures(fixtures: Map<string, string>) {
yield* files.around(
{
*readFile([path], _next) {
return fixtures.get(path) ?? "";
},
},
{ at: "min" },
);
}
The execution order with max middlewares [M1, M2] and min middlewares
[m1, m2] is:
M1 → M2 → m1 → m2 → core
Instrumentation
Middleware can be useful for automatic instrumentation:
import { fetching } from "./fetching.ts";
function* instrumentFetch(tracer) {
yield* fetching.around({
*fetch(args, next) {
try {
tracer.begin("fetch", args);
return yield* next(...args);
} finally {
tracer.end("fetch", args);
}
},
});
}
Test Mocking
Mock operations in test cases without changing the call site:
import { fetching } from "./fetching.ts";
function* useMocks() {
yield* fetching.around({
*fetch([url, ...rest], next) {
if (url === "/my-path") {
return new MockResponse("my-path");
} else {
return yield* next(url, ...rest);
}
},
});
}
Scope Isolation
Middleware installed in a child scope does not affect the parent:
import { scoped } from "effection";
import { log, logging } from "./logging.ts";
function* example() {
yield* scoped(function* () {
yield* logging.around({
*log([...values], next) {
// only active inside this scope
return yield* next(...values);
},
});
yield* log("intercepted"); // middleware runs
});
yield* log("not intercepted"); // middleware does not run
}
API
createApi(name, handler)
Create a context API from a name and an object of handler functions or
operations. Returns an object with operations and around.
import { createApi } from "@effectionx/context-api";
import type { Operation } from "effection";
const math = createApi("math", {
*add(left: number, right: number): Operation<number> {
return left + right;
},
});
const { add } = math.operations;
function* example(): Operation<void> {
const result = yield* add(1, 2); // => 3
}
around(middlewares, options?)
Register middleware around one or more operations. The second argument controls priority:
{ at: "max" }(default) — outermost, closest to the caller{ at: "min" }— innermost, closest to the core handler
function* example() {
// Wrapping middleware (max, default)
yield* math.around({
*add(args, next) {
console.log("adding", args);
return yield* next(...args);
},
});
// Implementation middleware (min)
yield* math.around(
{
*add([left, right], _next) {
return left * right; // replace the core implementation
},
},
{ at: "min" },
);
}
Each middleware receives the arguments as a tuple and a next function to
delegate to the next middleware (or the core handler). A middleware can:
- Pass through: call
next(...args)and return its result - Transform arguments: call
next()with different arguments - Transform the return value: modify what
next()returns - Short-circuit: return a value without calling
next()at all
API Reference
Type Parameters
A
Properties
- operations: Operations<A>
No documentation available.
- around: (around: Partial<Around<A>>, optionsoptional: {}) => Operation<void>
No documentation available.