An interface binding instructs goose that a concrete type should be used to satisfy a dependency on an interface type. goose could determine this implicitly, but having an explicit directive makes the provider author's intent clear and allows different concrete types to satisfy different smaller interfaces. Reviewed-by: Tuo Shan <shantuo@google.com>
273 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
273 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
# goose: Compile-Time Dependency Injection for Go
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goose is a compile-time [dependency injection][] framework for Go, inspired by
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[Dagger][]. It works by using Go code to specify dependencies, then
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generating code to create those structures, mimicking the code that a user
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might have hand-written.
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[dependency injection]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_injection
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[Dagger]: https://google.github.io/dagger/
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## Usage Guide
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### Defining Providers
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The primary mechanism in goose is the **provider**: a function that can
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produce a value, annotated with the special `goose:provide` directive. These
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functions are otherwise ordinary Go code.
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```go
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package foobarbaz
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type Foo int
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// goose:provide
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// ProvideFoo returns a Foo.
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func ProvideFoo() Foo {
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return 42
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}
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```
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Providers are always part of a **provider set**: if there is no provider set
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named on the `//goose:provide` line, then the provider is added to the provider
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set with the same name as the function (`ProvideFoo`, in this case).
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Providers can specify dependencies with parameters:
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```go
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package foobarbaz
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type Bar int
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// goose:provide SuperSet
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// ProvideBar returns a Bar: a negative Foo.
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func ProvideBar(foo Foo) Bar {
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return Bar(-foo)
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}
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```
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Providers can also return errors:
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```go
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package foobarbaz
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import (
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"context"
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"errors"
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)
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type Baz int
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// goose:provide SuperSet
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// ProvideBaz returns a value if Bar is not zero.
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func ProvideBaz(ctx context.Context, bar Bar) (Baz, error) {
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if bar == 0 {
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return 0, errors.New("cannot provide baz when bar is zero")
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}
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return Baz(bar), nil
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}
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```
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Provider sets can import other provider sets. To add the `ProvideFoo` set to
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`SuperSet`:
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```go
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// goose:import SuperSet ProvideFoo
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```
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You can also import provider sets in another package, provided that you have a
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Go import for the package:
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```go
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// goose:import SuperSet "example.com/some/other/pkg".OtherSet
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```
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A provider set reference is an optional import qualifier (either a package name
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or a quoted import path, as seen above) ending with a dot, followed by the
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provider set name.
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### Injectors
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An application wires up these providers with an **injector**: a function that
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calls providers in dependency order. With goose, you write the injector's
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signature, then goose generates the function's body.
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An injector is declared by writing a function declaration without a body in a
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file guarded by a `gooseinject` build tag. Let's say that the above providers
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were defined in a package called `example.com/foobarbaz`. The following would
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declare an injector to obtain a `Baz`:
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```go
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//+build gooseinject
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package main
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import (
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"context"
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"example.com/foobarbaz"
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)
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// goose:use foobarbaz.SuperSet
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func initializeApp(ctx context.Context) (foobarbaz.Baz, error)
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```
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Like providers, injectors can be parameterized on inputs (which then get sent to
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providers) and can return errors. Each `goose:use` directive specifies a
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provider set to use in the injection. An injector can have one or more
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`goose:use` directives. `goose:use` directives use the same syntax as
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`goose:import` to reference provider sets.
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You can generate the injector by invoking goose in the package directory:
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```
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goose
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```
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Or you can add the line `//go:generate goose` to another file in your package to
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use [`go generate`]:
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```
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go generate
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```
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(Adding the line to the injection declaration file will be silently ignored by
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`go generate`.)
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goose will produce an implementation of the injector in a file called
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`goose_gen.go` that looks something like this:
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```go
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// Code generated by goose. DO NOT EDIT.
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//+build !gooseinject
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package main
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import (
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"example.com/foobarbaz"
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)
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func initializeApp(ctx context.Context) (foobarbaz.Baz, error) {
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foo := foobarbaz.ProvideFoo()
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bar := foobarbaz.ProvideBar(foo)
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baz, err := foobarbaz.ProvideBaz(ctx, bar)
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if err != nil {
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return 0, err
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}
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return baz, nil
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}
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```
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As you can see, the output is very close to what a developer would write
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themselves. Further, there is no dependency on goose at runtime: all of the
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written code is just normal Go code, and can be used without goose.
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[`go generate`]: https://blog.golang.org/generate
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## Best Practices
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goose is still not mature yet, but guidance that applies to Dagger generally
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applies to goose as well. In particular, when thinking about how to group
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providers into sets, follow the same [guidance](https://google.github.io/dagger/testing.html#organize-modules-for-testability)
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as Dagger (provider sets are called modules in Dagger/Guice):
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> Some [...] bindings will have reasonable alternatives, especially for
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> testing, and others will not. For example, there are likely to be
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> alternative bindings for a type like `AuthManager`: one for testing, others
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> for different authentication/authorization protocols.
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>
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> But on the other hand, if the `AuthManager` interface has a method that
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> returns the currently logged-in user, you might want to [export a provider of
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> `User` that simply calls `CurrentUser()`] on the `AuthManager`. That
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> published binding is unlikely to ever need an alternative.
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>
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> Once you’ve classified your bindings into [...] bindings with reasonable
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> alternatives [and] bindings without reasonable alternatives, consider
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> arranging them into provider sets like this:
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>
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> - One [provider set] for each [...] binding with a reasonable alternative.
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> (If you are also writing the alternatives, each one gets its own [provider
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> set].) That [provider set] contains exactly one provider.
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> - All [...] bindings with no reasonable alternatives go into [provider sets]
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> organized along functional lines.
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> - The [provider sets] should each include the no-reasonable-alternative
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> [provider sets] that require the [...] bindings each provides.
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One goose-specific practice though: create one-off types where in Java you
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would use a binding annotation. For example, if you need to pass a string
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through the dependency graph, you would create a wrapping type:
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```go
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type MySQLConnectionString string
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```
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## Advanced Features
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### Binding Interfaces
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Frequently, dependency injection is used to bind concrete implementations for an
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interface. goose matches inputs to outputs via [type identity][], so the
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inclination might be to create a provider that returns an interface type.
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However, this would not be idiomatic, since the Go best practice is to [return
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concrete types][]. Instead, you can declare an interface binding in a
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provider set:
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```go
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type Fooer interface {
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Foo() string
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}
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type Bar string
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func (b *Bar) Foo() string {
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return string(*b)
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}
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//goose:provide BarFooer
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func provideBar() *Bar {
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b := new(Bar)
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*b = "Hello, World!"
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return b
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}
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//goose:bind BarFooer Fooer *Bar
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```
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The syntax is provider set name, interface type, and finally the concrete type.
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An interface binding does not necessarily need to have a provider in the same
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set that provides the concrete type.
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[type identity]: https://golang.org/ref/spec#Type_identity
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[return concrete types]: https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#interfaces
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### Optional Inputs
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A provider input can be marked optional using `goose:optional`:
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```go
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//goose:provide Bar
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//goose:optional foo
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func provideBar(foo Foo) Bar {
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// ...
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}
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```
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If used as part of an injector that does not bring in the `Foo` dependency, then
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the injector will pass the provider the zero value as the `foo` argument.
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## Future Work
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- Support for map bindings.
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- Support for multiple provider outputs.
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- Support for field binding: declare a struct as a provider and have it be
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filled in by the corresponding bindings from the graph.
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- Tighter validation for a provider set (cycles in unused providers goes
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unreported currently)
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- Visualization for provider sets
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