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wire/README.md
2018-11-13 13:16:46 -08:00

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# Wire: Automated Initialization in Go
Wire is a code generation tool that automates connecting components using
[dependency injection][]. Dependencies between components are represented in
Wire as function parameters, encouraging explicit initialization instead of
global variables. Because Wire operates without runtime state or reflection,
code written to be used with Wire is useful even for hand-written
initialization.
For an overview, see the [introductory blog post][].
[dependency injection]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dependency_injection
[introductory blog post]: https://blog.golang.org/wire
## Installing
Install Wire by running:
```shell
go get github.com/google/wire/cmd/wire
```
and ensuring that `$GOPATH/bin` is added to your `$PATH`.
## Basics
Wire has two core concepts: providers and injectors.
### Defining Providers
The primary mechanism in Wire is the **provider**: a function that can produce a
value. These functions are ordinary Go code.
```go
package foobarbaz
type Foo struct {
X int
}
// ProvideFoo returns a Foo.
func ProvideFoo() Foo {
return Foo{X: 42}
}
```
Provider functions must be exported in order to be used from other packages,
just like ordinary functions.
Providers can specify dependencies with parameters:
```go
package foobarbaz
// ...
type Bar struct {
X int
}
// ProvideBar returns a Bar: a negative Foo.
func ProvideBar(foo Foo) Bar {
return Bar{X: -foo.X}
}
```
Providers can also return errors:
```go
package foobarbaz
import (
"context"
"errors"
)
// ...
type Baz struct {
X int
}
// ProvideBaz returns a value if Bar is not zero.
func ProvideBaz(ctx context.Context, bar Bar) (Baz, error) {
if bar.X == 0 {
return Baz{}, errors.New("cannot provide baz when bar is zero")
}
return Baz{X: bar.X}, nil
}
```
Providers can be grouped into **provider sets**. This is useful if several
providers will frequently be used together. To add these providers to a new set
called `SuperSet`, use the `wire.NewSet` function:
```go
package foobarbaz
import (
// ...
"github.com/google/wire"
)
// ...
var SuperSet = wire.NewSet(ProvideFoo, ProvideBar, ProvideBaz)
```
You can also add other provider sets into a provider set.
```go
package foobarbaz
import (
// ...
"example.com/some/other/pkg"
)
// ...
var MegaSet = wire.NewSet(SuperSet, pkg.OtherSet)
```
### Injectors
An application wires up these providers with an **injector**: a function that
calls providers in dependency order. With Wire, you write the injector's
signature, then Wire generates the function's body.
An injector is declared by writing a function declaration whose body is a call
to `wire.Build`. The return values don't matter as long as they are of the
correct type. The values themselves will be ignored in the generated code. Let's
say that the above providers were defined in a package called
`example.com/foobarbaz`. The following would declare an injector to obtain a
`Baz`:
```go
// +build wireinject
// The build tag makes sure the stub is not built in the final build.
package main
import (
"context"
"github.com/google/wire"
"example.com/foobarbaz"
)
func initializeBaz(ctx context.Context) (foobarbaz.Baz, error) {
wire.Build(foobarbaz.MegaSet)
return foobarbaz.Baz{}, nil
}
```
Like providers, injectors can be parameterized on inputs (which then get sent to
providers) and can return errors. Arguments to `wire.Build` are the same as
`wire.NewSet`: they form a provider set. This is the provider set that gets used
during code generation for that injector.
Any non-injector declarations found in a file with injectors will be copied into
the generated file.
You can generate the injector by invoking Wire in the package directory:
```shell
wire
```
Wire will produce an implementation of the injector in a file called
`wire_gen.go` that looks something like this:
```go
// Code generated by Wire. DO NOT EDIT.
//go:generate wire
//+build !wireinject
package main
import (
"example.com/foobarbaz"
)
func initializeBaz(ctx context.Context) (foobarbaz.Baz, error) {
foo := foobarbaz.ProvideFoo()
bar := foobarbaz.ProvideBar(foo)
baz, err := foobarbaz.ProvideBaz(ctx, bar)
if err != nil {
return 0, err
}
return baz, nil
}
```
As you can see, the output is very close to what a developer would write
themselves. Further, there is little dependency on Wire at runtime: all of the
written code is just normal Go code, and can be used without Wire.
Once `wire_gen.go` is created, you can regenerate it by running [`go generate`].
[`go generate`]: https://blog.golang.org/generate
## Advanced Features
The following features all build on top of the concepts of providers and
injectors.
### Binding Interfaces
Frequently, dependency injection is used to bind a concrete implementation for
an interface. Wire matches inputs to outputs via [type identity][], so the
inclination might be to create a provider that returns an interface type.
However, this would not be idiomatic, since the Go best practice is to
[return concrete types][]. Instead, you can declare an interface binding in a
provider set:
```go
type Fooer interface {
Foo() string
}
type Bar string
func (b *Bar) Foo() string {
return string(*b)
}
func ProvideBar() *Bar {
b := new(Bar)
*b = "Hello, World!"
return b
}
var BarFooer = wire.NewSet(
ProvideBar,
wire.Bind(new(Fooer), new(Bar)))
```
The first argument to `wire.Bind` is a pointer to a value of the desired
interface type and the second argument is a zero value of the concrete type. Any
set that includes an interface binding must also have a provider in the same set
that provides the concrete type.
If necessary, you can also bind one interface to another:
```go
type FooerPlus interface {
Fooer
Bar() String
}
func ProvideFooerPlus() FooerPlus {
...
}
var FooerPlusAsFooer = wire.NewSet(
ProvideFooerPlus,
wire.Bind(new(Fooer), *new(FooerPlus)))
```
[type identity]: https://golang.org/ref/spec#Type_identity
[return concrete types]: https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#interfaces
### Struct Providers
Structs can also be marked as providers. Instead of calling a function, an
injector will fill in each field using the corresponding provider. For a given
struct type `S`, this would provide both `S` and `*S`. For example, given the
following providers:
```go
type Foo int
type Bar int
func ProvideFoo() Foo {
// ...
}
func ProvideBar() Bar {
// ...
}
type FooBar struct {
Foo Foo
Bar Bar
}
var Set = wire.NewSet(
ProvideFoo,
ProvideBar,
FooBar{})
```
A generated injector for `FooBar` would look like this:
```go
func injectFooBar() FooBar {
foo := ProvideFoo()
bar := ProvideBar()
fooBar := FooBar{
Foo: foo,
Bar: bar,
}
return fooBar
}
```
And similarly if the injector needed a `*FooBar`.
### Binding Values
Occasionally, it is useful to bind a basic value (usually `nil`) to a type.
Instead of having injectors depend on a throwaway provider function, you can add
a value expression to a provider set.
```go
type Foo struct {
X int
}
func injectFoo() Foo {
wire.Build(wire.Value(Foo{X: 42}))
return Foo{}
}
```
The generated injector would look like this:
```go
func injectFoo() Foo {
foo := _wireFooValue
return foo
}
var (
_wireFooValue = Foo{X: 42}
)
```
It's important to note that the expression will be copied to the injector's
package; references to variables will be evaluated during the injector package's
initialization. Wire will emit an error if the expression calls any functions or
receives from any channels.
For interface values, use `InterfaceValue`:
```go
func injectReader() io.Reader {
wire.Build(wire.InterfaceValue(new(io.Reader), os.Stdin))
return nil
}
```
### Cleanup functions
If a provider creates a value that needs to be cleaned up (e.g. closing a file),
then it can return a closure to clean up the resource. The injector will use
this to either return an aggregated cleanup function to the caller or to clean
up the resource if a provider called later in the injector's implementation
returns an error.
```go
func provideFile(log Logger, path Path) (*os.File, func(), error) {
f, err := os.Open(string(path))
if err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
cleanup := func() {
if err := f.Close(); err != nil {
log.Log(err)
}
}
return f, cleanup, nil
}
```
A cleanup function is guaranteed to be called before the cleanup function of any
of the provider's inputs and must have the signature `func()`.
### Alternate Injector Syntax
If you grow weary of writing `return foobarbaz.Foo{}, nil` at the end of your
injector function declaration, you can instead write it more concisely with a
`panic`:
```go
func injectFoo() Foo {
panic(wire.Build(/* ... */))
}
```
## Best Practices
The following are practices we recommend for using Wire. This list will grow
over time.
### Distinguishing Types
If you need to inject a common type like `string`, create a new string type to
avoid conflicts with other providers. For example:
```go
type MySQLConnectionString string
```
### Options Structs
A provider function that includes many dependencies can pair the function with
an options struct.
```go
type Options struct {
// Messages is the set of recommended greetings.
Messages []Message
// Writer is the location to send greetings. nil goes to stdout.
Writer io.Writer
}
func NewGreeter(ctx context.Context, opts *Options) (*Greeter, error) {
// ...
}
var GreeterSet = wire.NewSet(Options{}, NewGreeter)
```
### Evolving Provider Sets
When creating a provider set for use in a library, the only changes you can make
without breaking compatibility are:
- Change which provider a provider set uses to provide a specific output, as
long as it does not introduce a new input to the provider set. It may remove
inputs. However, note that existing injectors will use the old provider
until they are regenerated.
- Introduce a new output type into the provider set, but only if the type
itself is newly added. If the type is not new, it is possible that some
injector already has the output type included, which would cause a conflict.
All other changes are not safe. This includes:
- Requiring a new input in the provider set.
- Removing an output type from a provider set.
- Adding an existing output type into the provider set.
Instead of making one of these breaking changes, consider adding a new provider
set.
As an example, if you have a provider set like this:
```go
var GreeterSet = wire.NewSet(NewStdoutGreeter)
func DefaultGreeter(ctx context.Context) *Greeter {
// ...
}
func NewStdoutGreeter(ctx context.Context, msgs []Message) *Greeter {
// ...
}
func NewGreeter(ctx context.Context, w io.Writer, msgs []Message) (*Greeter, error) {
// ...
}
```
You may:
- Use `DefaultGreeter` instead of `NewStdoutGreeter` in `GreeterSet`.
- Create a new type `T` and add a provider for `T` to `GreeterSet`, as long as
`T` is introduced in the same commit/release as the provider is added.
You may not:
- Use `NewGreeter` instead of `NewStdoutGreeter` in `GreeterSet`. This both
adds an input type (`io.Writer`) and requires injectors to return an `error`
where the provider of `*Greeter` did not require this before.
- Remove `NewStdoutGreeter` from `GreeterSet`. Injectors depending on
`*Greeter` will be broken.
- Add a provider for `io.Writer` to `GreeterSet`. Injectors might already have
a provider for `io.Writer` which might conflict with this one.
### Mocking
There are two approaches for creating an injected app with mocked dependencies.
Examples of both approaches are shown
[here](https://github.com/google/wire/tree/master/internal/wire/testdata/ExampleWithMocks/foo).
#### Approach A: Pass mocks to the injector
Create a test-only injector that takes all of the mocks as arguments; the
argument types must be the interface types the mocks are mocking. `wire.Build`
can't include providers for the mocked dependencies without creating conflicts,
so if you're using provider set(s) you will need to define one that doesn't
include the mocked types.
#### Approach B: Return the mocks from the injector
Create a new struct that includes the app plus all of the dependencies you want
to mock. Create a test-only injector that returns this struct, give it providers
for the concrete mock types, and use `wire.Bind` to tell Wire that the
concrete mock types should be used to fulfill the appropriate interface.
## Frequently Asked Questions
### How does Wire relate to other Go dependency injection tools?
Other dependency injection tools for Go like [dig][] or [facebookgo/inject][]
are based on reflection. Wire runs as a code generator, which means that the
injector works without making calls to a runtime library. This enables easier
introspection of initialization and correct cross-references for tooling like
[guru][].
[dig]: https://github.com/uber-go/dig
[facebookgo/inject]: https://github.com/facebookgo/inject
[guru]: https://golang.org/s/using-guru
### How does Wire relate to other non-Go dependency injection tools (like Dagger 2)?
Wire's approach was inspired by [Dagger 2][]. However, it is not the aim of Wire
to emulate dependency injection tools from other languages: the design space and
requirements are quite different. For example, the Go compiler does not support
anything like Java's annotation processing mechanisms. The difference in
languages and their idioms necessarily requires different approaches in
primitives and API.
[Dagger 2]: https://google.github.io/dagger/
### Why is Wire part of Go Cloud?
Wire was designed to reduce the toil in setting up the multitude of dependencies
often found when interacting with common cloud providers. However, Wire is not
coupled to Go Cloud or cloud servers: Wire is a standalone tool.
The Go Cloud team is investigating splitting out Wire as its own repository.
Follow [#513][] for updates.
[#513]: https://github.com/google/go-cloud/issues/513
### Why use pseudo-functions to create provider sets or injectors?
In the early prototypes, Wire directives were specially formatted comments. This
seemed appealing at first glance as this meant no compile-time or runtime
impact. However, this unstructured approach becomes opaque to other tooling not
written for Wire. Tools like [`gorename`][] or [guru][] would not be able to
recognize references to the identifiers existing in comments without being
specially modified to understand Wire's comment format. By moving the references
into no-op function calls, Wire interoperates seamlessly with other Go tooling.
[`gorename`]: https://godoc.org/golang.org/x/tools/cmd/gorename
### What if my dependency graph has two dependencies of the same type?
This most frequently appears with common types like `string`. An example of this
problem would be:
```go
type Foo struct { /* ... */ }
type Bar struct { /* ... */ }
func newFoo1() *Foo { /* ... */ }
func newFoo2() *Foo { /* ... */ }
func newBar(foo1 *Foo, foo2 *Foo) *Bar { /* ... */ }
func inject() *Bar {
// ERROR! Multiple providers for *Foo.
wire.Build(newFoo1, newFoo2, newBar)
return nil
}
```
Wire does not allow multiple providers for one type to exist in the transitive
closure of the providers presented to `wire.Build`, as this is usually a
mistake. For legitimate cases where you need multiple dependencies of the same
type, you need to invent a new type to call this other dependency. For example,
you can name OAuth credentials after the service they connect to. Once you have
a suitable different type, you can wrap and unwrap the type when plumbing it
through Wire. Continuing our above example:
```go
type OtherFoo Foo
func newOtherFoo() *OtherFoo {
// Call the original provider...
foo := newFoo2()
// ...then convert it to the new type.
return (*OtherFoo)(foo)
}
func provideBar(foo1 *Foo, otherFoo *OtherFoo) *Bar {
// Convert the new type into the unwrapped type...
foo2 := (*Foo)(otherFoo)
// ...then use it to call the original provider.
return newBar(foo1, foo2)
}
func inject() *Bar {
wire.Build(newFoo1, newOtherFoo, provideBar)
return nil
}
```
### Should I use Wire for small applications?
Probably not. Wire is designed to automate more intricate setup code found in
larger applications. For small applications, hand-wiring dependencies is
simpler.
### Who is using Wire?
Wire is still fairly new and doesn't have a large user base yet. However, we
have heard a lot of interest from Go users wanting to simplify their
applications. If your project or company uses Wire, please let us know by either
emailing us or sending a pull request amending this section.