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0.9.1 May 1, 2023
0.9.0 Apr 30, 2023

#855 in Database interfaces

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246 downloads per month
Used in 29 crates (27 directly)

MIT license

18KB
267 lines

Dependency injection for Rust

How to use:

Cargo.toml:

waiter_di = "1.6.5"

lib.rs or any other file, that uses library:

use waiter_di::*;

See examples/1_get_started.rs for minimal example of usage.

See examples/2_modules.rs for example with modules and constructors.

See examples/3_inject_options_list.rs for the demo of all available injection options.

How to use

Annotate structure with #[component]

#[component]
struct Comp {}

Annotate impl blocks with #[provides]

#[provides]
impl Interface for Comp {}

Create a container:

fn main() {
    let mut container = Container::<profiles::Default>::new();
}

Get dependency ref:

fn main() {
    let comp = Provider::<dyn Interface>::get(&mut container);
}

Inject references

For Rc:

#[component]
struct Dependency;

#[component]
struct Comp {
    dependency_rc: Rc<Dependency>
}

fn main() {
    let mut container = Container::<profiles::Default>::new();
    Provider::<Comp>::get(&mut container);
}

to use Arc instead of Rc you need to add async feature in cargo:

waiter_di = { version = "...", features = [ "async" ] }

Also, you can use waiter_di::Wrc type that will be compiled to Rc or Arc depending on async feature.

To create new struct instead of getting reference:

#[component]
struct Comp {
    dependency: Dependency,
    dependency_box: Box<Dependency>
}

fn main() {
    let mut container = Container::<profiles::Default>::new();
    Provider::<Comp>::create(&mut container);
    Provider::<Comp>::create_boxed(&mut container);
}

Properties

It uses config crate under the hood, for example it tries to find float_prop in args as --float_prop <value>, if not found it tries to find it in environment variables, after that tries config/{profile}.toml, after that config/default.toml

#[derive(Debug, Deserialize)]
struct ConfigObject {
    i32_prop: i32
}

#[component]
struct Comp {
    config: Config,
    #[prop("int")] int_prop: usize,
    #[prop("int")] int_prop_opt: Option<usize>,
    #[prop("int" = 42)] int_prop_with_default_value: usize,
    float_prop: f32,
    #[prop] config_object: ConfigObject
}

Dependency cycle

Use Deferred type:

#[component]
struct Comp {
    dependency_def: Deferred<Dependency>,
    dependency_def_rc: Deferred<Rc<Dependency>>,
    dependency_def_box: Deferred<Box<Dependency>>
}

Profiles

You can use predefined profiles from `waiter_di::profile" or create custom:

struct CustomProfile;

#[provides(profiles::Dev, CustomProfile)]
impl Interface for Comp {}

fn main() {
    let mut container = Container::<profiles::Default>::new();
    let mut container = Container::<profiles::Dev>::new();
    let mut container = Container::<CustomProfile>::new();
}

Get profile from args, environment or config/default.toml

Just define property named profile as --profile <profile> arg, profile env variable or profile property in config/default.toml and use inject! macro:

fn main() {
    let comp = inject!(Comp: profiles::Default, profiles::Dev);
}

inject! macro can't be used for several components, so it's recommended to use it with modules:

#[module]
struct SomeModule {
    component: Component
}
#[module]
struct RootModule {
    some_module: SomeModule
}
fn main() {
    let root_module = inject!(RootModule: profiles::Default, profiles::Dev);
}

In this case #[module] is just a synonym for #[component]

Factory functions:

If you can't use #[component] annotation, use factory function instead:

#[provides]
fn create_dependency(bool_prop: bool) -> Dependency {
    Dependency { prop: bool_prop }
}

To use it like a constructor, use it with #[component] on impl block:

struct Comp();

#[component]
impl Comp {
    #[provides]
    fn new() -> Self {
        Self()
    }
}

Deferred args in factory functions is unsupported. In the rest it can accept the same arg types as #[component].

External types isn't supported for factory functions:

#[provides] // won't compile
fn create_external_type_dependency() -> HashMap<i32, i32> {
    HashMap::new()
}

So you need to create crate-local wrapper:

struct Wrapper(HashMap<i32, i32>);

#[provides]
fn create_external_type_dependency() -> Wrapper {
    Wrapper(HashMap::new())
}

For convenience, you can use #[wrapper] attribute to implement Deref automatically:

#[wrapper]
struct HashMap(std::collections::HashMap<i32, i32>);

#[provides]
fn create_external_type_dependency() -> HashMap {
    return HashMap(std::collections::HashMap::<i32, i32>::new());
}

Dependencies

~4–6MB
~116K SLoC