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Python package for eventsourcing with Django.

Project description

Event Sourcing with Django

This package supports using the Python eventsourcing library with Django ORM.

To use Django with your Python eventsourcing applications:

  • install the Python package eventsourcing_django
  • add 'eventsourcing_django' to your Django project's INSTALLED_APPS setting
  • migrate your database for this Django app
  • set the environment variable PERSISTENCE_MODULE to 'eventsourcing_django'

See below for more information.

Installation

Use pip to install the stable distribution from the Python Package Index. Please note, it is recommended to install Python packages into a Python virtual environment.

$ pip install eventsourcing_django

Django

If you are using Django 3.2 or later, add 'eventsourcing_django' to your Django project's INSTALLED_APPS setting.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'eventsourcing_django',
]

If you are using Django 2.2, 3.0 or 3.1, please add 'eventsourcing_django.apps.EventsourcingConfig' to your Django project's INSTALLED_APPS setting.

INSTALLED_APPS = [
    ...
    'eventsourcing_django.apps.EventsourcingConfig',
]

To migrate your database, please run Django's manage.py migrate command.

$ python manage.py migrate eventsourcing_django

Event sourcing

Define aggregates and applications in the usual way.

from eventsourcing.application import Application
from eventsourcing.domain import Aggregate, event
from uuid import uuid5, NAMESPACE_URL


class TrainingSchool(Application):
    def register(self, name):
        dog = Dog(name)
        self.save(dog)

    def add_trick(self, name, trick):
        dog = self.repository.get(Dog.create_id(name))
        dog.add_trick(trick)
        self.save(dog)

    def get_tricks(self, name):
        dog = self.repository.get(Dog.create_id(name))
        return dog.tricks


class Dog(Aggregate):
    @event('Registered')
    def __init__(self, name):
        self.name = name
        self.tricks = []

    @staticmethod
    def create_id(name):
        return uuid5(NAMESPACE_URL, f'/dogs/{name}')

    @event('TrickAdded')
    def add_trick(self, trick):
        self.tricks.append(trick)

Construct and use the application in the usual way. Set PERSISTENCE_MODULE to 'eventsourcing_django' in the application's environment. You may wish to construct the application object on a signal when the Django project is "ready". You can use the ready() method of the AppConfig class in the apps.py module of a Django app.

school = TrainingSchool(env={
    "PERSISTENCE_MODULE": "eventsourcing_django",
})

The application's methods may be called from Django views and forms.

school.register('Fido')
school.add_trick('Fido', 'roll over')
school.add_trick('Fido', 'play dead')
tricks = school.get_tricks('Fido')
assert tricks == ['roll over', 'play dead']

For more information, please refer to the Python eventsourcing library and the Django project.

Management Commands

The Django app eventsourcing_django ships with the following management commands.

Synchronise Followers

Manually synchronise followers (i.e. ProcessApplication instances) with all of their leaders, as defined in the eventsourcing.system.System's pipes.

Usage

$ python manage.py sync_followers [-n] [-v {0,1,2,3}] [follower [follower ...]]

Where follower denotes the name of a follower to synchronize. Not specifying any means synchronising all followers found in the system.

Relevant options:

  • -n, --dry-run: Load and process all unseen events for the selected followers, but roll back all changes at the end.
  • -v {0,1,2,3}, --verbosity {0,1,2,3}: Verbosity level; 0=minimal output, 1=normal output, 2=verbose output, 3=very verbose output.

For a full list of options, pass the --help flag to the command.

Examples

  • To synchronise all followers found in the runner:

    $ python manage.py sync_followers
    
  • To synchronise a single follower:

    $ python manage.py sync_followers TrainingSchool
    

The command supports the regular -v/--verbosity optional argument, as well as a -n/--dry-run flag.

Note that running the command in dry-run mode will pull and process every new event, though the changes will eventually be rolled back.

Error handling

Each selected follower should have its own chance at synchronisation. Therefore, the command will catch some exceptions on a per-follower basis and continue with the remaining followers.

The base Django exceptions that are caught are EmptyResultSet, FieldDoesNotExist, FieldError, MultipleObjectsReturned, and ObjectDoesNotExist. The base exception EventSourcingError from the eventsourcing library is also caught per follower.

Configuration

This command needs to access a eventsourcing.system.Runner instance to query and act on its followers. The runner's system is additionally the one defining the pipes between leaders and followers.

The default behaviour, without additional configuration, is to inspect all installed Django apps and look for an instance of eventsourcing.system.Runner. The attribute name does not matter as long as it is public (i.e. not start with an underscore).

# djangoproject/apps/my_es_app/apps.py
import eventsourcing.system
from django.apps import AppConfig


class MyEventSourcedAppConfig(AppConfig):
   name = "my_event_sourced_app"
   runner: eventsourcing.system.Runner

   def ready(self) -> None:
       self.runner = eventsourcing.system.SingleThreadedRunner(
           eventsourcing.system.System(...)
       )

This is usually enough unless you i) have multiple runners defined in one or more apps, or ii) do not hold the runner(s) in Django apps. In which case, you should configure the Django setting EVENTSOURCING_RUNNER in one of two ways:

  1. Set EVENTSOURCING_RUNNER to an app name's attribute. This attribute must be a eventsourcing.system.Runner instance.

    # djangoproject/settings.py
    ...
    EVENTSOURCING_RUNNER = "my_event_sourced_app.runner"
    
  2. Set EVENTSOURCING_RUNNER to a fully qualified function name. This function will be called without arguments and should return a eventsourcing.system.Runner instance.

    # djangoproject/settings.py
    ...
    EVENTSOURCING_RUNNER = "djangoproject.runner_utils.get_runner"
    
    # djangoproject/runner_utils.py
    import eventsourcing.system
    
    
    def get_runner() -> eventsourcing.system.Runner:
       return ...
    

All runner classes shipped with the eventsourcing library are compatible.

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