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Boxiang Sun
gitlab-ce
Commits
4d08ea6c
Commit
4d08ea6c
authored
May 04, 2017
by
Grzegorz Bizon
Committed by
Rémy Coutable
May 04, 2017
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Document serializers
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# Serializers
This is a documentation for classes located in
`app/serializers`
directory.
In GitLab, we use
[
grape-entities
][
grape-entity-project
]
, accompanied by a
serializer, to convert a Ruby object to its JSON representation.
Serializers are typically used in controllers to build a JSON response
that is usually consumed by a frontend code.
## Why using a serializer is important?
Using serializers, instead of
`to_json`
method, has several benefits:
*
it helps to prevent exposure of a sensitive data stored in the database
*
it makes it easier to test what should and should not be exposed
*
it makes it easier to reuse serialization entities that are building blocks
*
it makes it easier to move complexity from controllers to easily testable
classes
*
it encourages hiding complexity behind intentions-revealing interfaces
*
it makes it easier to take care about serialization performance concerns
*
it makes it easier to reduce merge conflicts between CE -> EE
*
it makes it easier to benefit from domain driven development techniques
## What is a serializer?
A serializer is a class that encapsulates all business rules for building a
JSON response using serialization entities.
It is designed to be testable and to support passing additional context from
the controller.
## What is a serialization entity?
Entities are lightweight structures that allow to represent domain models
in a consistent and abstracted way, and reuse them as building blocks to
create a payload.
Entities located in
`app/serializers`
are usually derived from a
[
`Grape::Entity`
][
grape-entity-class
]
class.
Serialization entities that do require to have a knowledge about specific
elements of the request, need to mix
`RequestAwareEntity`
in.
A serialization entity usually maps a domain model class into its JSON
representation. It rarely happens that a serialization entity exists without
a corresponding domain model class. As an example, we have an
`Issue`
class and
a corresponding
`IssueSerializer`
.
Serialization entites are designed to reuse other serialization entities, which
is a convenient way to create a multi-level JSON representation of a piece of
a domain model you want to serialize.
See
[
documentation for Grape Entites
][
grape-entity-readme
]
for more details.
## How to implement a serializer?
### Base implementation
In order to effectively implement a serializer it is necessary to create a new
class in
`app/serializers`
. See existing serializers as an example.
A new serializer should inherit from a
`BaseSerializer`
class. It is necessary
to specify which serialization entity will be used to serialize a resource.
```
ruby
class
MyResourceSerializer
<
BaseSerialize
entity
MyResourceEntity
end
```
The example above shows how a most simple serializer can look like.
Given that the entity
`MyResourceEntity`
exists, you can now use
`MyResourceSerializer`
in the controller by creating an instance of it, and
calling
`MyResourceSerializer#represent(resource)`
method.
Note that a
`resource`
can be either a single object, an array of objects or an
`ActiveRecord::Relation`
object. A serialization entity should be smart enough
to accurately represent each of these.
It should not be necessary to use
`Enumerable#map`
, and it should be avoided
from the performance reasons.
### Choosing what gets serialized
It often happens that you might want to use the same serializer in many places,
but sometimes the intention is to only expose a small subset of object's
attributes in one place, and a different subset in another.
`BaseSerializer#represent(resource, opts = {})`
method can take an additional
hash argument,
`opts`
, that defines what is going to be serialized.
`BaseSerializer`
will pass these options to a serialization entity. See
how it is
[
documented in the upstream project
][
grape-entity-only
]
.
With this approach you can extend the serializer to respond to methods that will
create a JSON response according to your needs.
```
ruby
class
PipelineSerializer
<
BaseSerializer
entity
PipelineEntity
def
represent_details
(
resource
)
represent
(
resource
,
only:
[
:details
])
end
def
represent_status
(
resource
)
represent
(
resource
,
only:
[
:status
])
end
end
```
It is possible to use
`only`
and
`except`
keywords. Both keywords do support
nested attributes, like
`except: [:id, { user: [:id] }]`
.
Passing
`only`
and
`except`
to the
`represent`
method from a controller is
possible, but it defies principles of encapsulation and testability, and it is
better to avoid it, and to add a specific method to the serializer instead.
### Reusing serialization entities from the API
Public API in GitLab is implemented using
[
Grape
][
grape-project
]
.
Under the hood it also uses
[
`Grape::Entity`
][
grape-entity-class
]
classes.
This means that it is possible to reuse these classes to implement internal
serializers.
You can either use such entity directly:
```
ruby
class
MyResourceSerializer
<
BaseSerializer
entity
API
::
Entities
::
SomeEntity
end
```
Or derive a new serialization entity class from it:
```
ruby
class
MyEntity
<
API
::
Entities
::
SomeEntity
include
RequestAwareEntity
unexpose
:something
end
```
It might be a good idea to write specs for entities that do inherit from
the API, because when API payloads are changed / extended, it is easy to forget
about the impact on the internal API through a serializer that reuses API
entities.
It is usually safe to do that, because API entities rarely break backward
compatibility, but additional exposure may have a performance impact when API
gets extended significantly. Write tests that check if only necessary data is
exposed.
## How to write tests for a serializer?
Like every other class in the project, creating a serializer warrants writing
tests for it.
It is usually a good idea to test each public method in the serializer against
a valid payload.
`BaseSerializer#represent`
returns a hash, so it is possible
to use usual RSpec matchers like
`include`
.
Sometimes, when the payload is large, it makes sense to validate it entirely
using
`match_response_schema`
matcher along with a new fixture that can be
stored in
`spec/fixtures/api/schemas/`
. This matcher is using a
`json-schema`
gem, which is quite flexible, see a
[
documentation
][
json-schema-gem
]
for it.
## How to use a serializer in a controller?
Once a new serializer is implemented, it is possible to use it in a controller.
Create an instance of the serializer and render the response.
```
ruby
def
index
format
.
json
do
render
json:
MyResourceSerializer
.
new
(
current_user:
@current_user
)
.
represent_details
(
@project
.
resources
)
nd
end
```
If it is necessary to include additional information in the payload, it is
possible to extend what is going to be rendered, the usual way:
```
ruby
def
index
format
.
json
do
render
json:
{
resources:
MyResourceSerializer
.
new
(
current_user:
@current_user
)
.
represent_details
(
@project
.
resources
),
count:
@project
.
resources
.
count
}
nd
end
```
Note that in these examples an additional context is being passed to the
serializer (
`current_user: @current_user`
).
## How to pass an additional context from the controller?
It is possible to pass an additional context from a controller to a
serializer and each serialization entity that is used in the process.
Serialization entities that do require an additional context have
`RequestAwareEntity`
concern mixed in. This piece of the code exposes a method
called
`request`
in every serialization entity that is instantiated during
serialization.
An object returned by this method is an instance of
`EntityRequest`
, which
behaves like an
`OpenStruct`
object, with the difference that it will raise
an error if an unknown method is called.
In other words, in the previous example,
`request`
method will return an
instance of
`EntityRequest`
that responds to
`current_user`
method. It will be
available in every serialization entity instantiated by
`MyResourceSerializer`
.
`EntityRequest`
is a workaround for
[
#20045
][
issue-20045
]
and is meant to be
refactored soon. Please avoid passing an additional context that is not
required by a serialization entity.
At the moment, the context that is passed to entities most often is
`current_user`
and
`project`
.
## How is this related to using presenters?
Payload created by a serializer is usually a representation of the backed code,
combined with the current request data. Therefore, technically, serializers
are presenters that create payload consumed by a frontend code, usually Vue
components.
In GitLab, it is possible to use
[
presenters
][
presenters-readme
]
, but
`BaseSerializer`
still needs to learn how to use it, see
[
#30898
][
issue-30898
]
.
It is possible to use presenters when serializer is used to represent only
a single object. It is not supported when
`ActiveRecord::Relation`
is being
serialized.
```
ruby
MyObjectSerializer
.
new
.
represent
(
object
.
present
)
```
## Best practices
1.
Do not invoke a serializer from within a serialization entity.
If you need to use a serializer from within a serialization entity, it is
possible that you are missing a class for an important domain concept.
Consider creating a new domain class and a corresponding serialization
entity for it.
1.
Use only one approach to switch behavior of the serializer.
It is possible to use a few approaches to switch a behavior of the
serializer. Most common are using a [Fluent Interface][fluent-interface]
and creating a separate `represent_something` methods.
Whatever you choose, it might be better to use only one approach at a time.
1.
Do not forget about creating specs for serialization entities.
Writing tests for the serializer indeed does cover testing a behavior of
serialization entities that the serializer instantiates. However it might
be a good idea to write separate tests for entities as well, because these
are meant to be reused in different serializers, and a serializer can
change a behavior of a serialization entity.
1.
Use
`ActiveRecord::Relation`
where possible
Using an `ActiveRecord::Relation` might help from the performance perspective.
1.
Be diligent about passing an additional context from the controller.
Using `EntityRequest` and `RequestAwareEntity` is a workaround for the lack
of high-level mechanism. It is meant to be refactored, and current
implementation is error prone. Imagine the situation that one serialization
entity requires `request.user` attribute, but the second one wants
`request.current_user`. When it happens that these two entities are used in
the same serialization request, you might need to pass both parameters to
the serializer, which is obviously not a perfect situation.
When in doubt, pass only `current_user` and `project` if these are required.
1.
Keep performance concerns in mind
Using a serializer incorrectly can have significant impact on the
performance.
Because serializers are technically presenters, it is often necessary
to calculate, for example, paths to various controller-actions.
Since using URL helpers usually involve passing `project` and `namespace`
adding `includes(project: :namespace)` in the serializer, can help to avoid
N+1 queries.
Also, try to avoid using `Enumerable#map` or other methods that will
execute a database query eagerly.
1.
Avoid passing
`only`
and
`except`
from the controller.
1.
Write tests checking for N+1 queries.
1.
Write controller tests for actions / formats using serializers.
1.
Write tests that check if only necessary data is exposed.
1.
Write tests that check if no sensitive data is exposed.
## Future
*
[
Next iteration of serializers
][
issue-27569
]
[
grape-project
]:
http://www.ruby-grape.org
[
grape-entity-project
]:
https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape-entity
[
grape-entity-readme
]:
https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape-entity/blob/master/README.md
[
grape-entity-class
]:
https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape-entity/blob/master/lib/grape_entity/entity.rb
[
grape-entity-only
]:
https://github.com/ruby-grape/grape-entity/blob/master/README.md#returning-only-the-fields-you-want
[
presenters-readme
]:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/app/presenters/README.md
[
fluent-interface
]:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluent_interface
[
json-schema-gem
]:
https://github.com/ruby-json-schema/json-schema
[
issue-20045
]:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/20045
[
issue-30898
]:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/30898
[
issue-27569
]:
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/27569
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