# Stenotype This gem is a tool providing extensions to several rails components in order to track events along with the execution context. Currently ActionController and ActionJob are supported to name a few. ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: ```ruby gem 'Stenotype' ``` And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install Stenotype ## Usage ### Configuration Configuring the library is as simple as: ```ruby Stenotype.configure do |config| config.targets = [ # Supported targets Stenotype::Adapters::StdoutAdapter.new, Stenotype::Adapters::GoogleCloud.new ] config.uuid_generator = SecureRandom config.dispatcher = Stenotype::Dispatcher.new config.gc_project_id = 'google_cloud_project_id' config.gc_credentials = 'path_to_key_json' config.gc_topic = 'google_cloud_topic' config.gc_mode = :async # either :sync or :async end ``` #### config.targets Contain an array of targets for the events to be published to. Targets must implement method `#publish(event_data, **additional_arguments)`. #### config.uuid_generator An object that must implement method `#uuid`. Used when an event is emitted to generate a unique id for each event. #### config.dispatcher Dispatcher used to dispatch the event. A dispatcher must implement method `#publish(even, serializer: Stenotype::EventSerializer)`. By default `Stenotype::EventSerializer` is used, which is responsible for collecting the data from the event and evaluation context. #### config.gc_project_id Google cloud project ID. Please refer to Google Cloud management console to get one. #### config.gc_credentials Google cloud credentials. Might be obtained from Google Cloud management console. #### config.gc_topic Google Cloud topic used for publishing the events. #### config.gc_mode Google Cloud publish mode. Two options are available: `:sync, :async`. When in `sync` mode the event will be published in the same thread (which might influence performance). For `async` mode the event will be put into a pull which is going to be flushed after a threshold is met. #### Configuring context handlers Each event is emitted in a context which might be an ActionController instance or an ActiveJob instance or potentially any other place. Context handlers are implemented as plain ruby classes, so before using them you must register them. By default a plain `Class` handler is registered when not used with any framework. In case Ruby on Rails is used, then there are two additional context handlers for `ActionController` and `ActiveJob` instances. ### Emitting Events Emitting an event is as simple as: ```ruby Stenotype::Event.emit!( data, options: additional_options, eval_context: { name_of_registered_context_handler: context_object } ) ``` The event is then going to be passed to a dispatcher responsible for sending the evens to targets. Note that a context handler must be registered before using it. See [Custom context handlers](#custom-context-handlers) for more details. #### ActionController Upon loading the library `ActionController` is going to be extended with a class method `track_view(*actions)`, where `actions` is a list of trackable controller actions. Here is an example usage: ```ruby class MyController < ActionController::Base track_view :index, :show def index # do_something end def show # do something end end ``` #### ActiveJob Upon loading the library `ActiveJob` is going to be extended with a class method `trackable_job!`. Example: ```ruby class MyJob < ActiveJob::Base trackable_job! def perform(data) # do_something end end ``` #### Plain Ruby classes To track methods from arbitrary ruby classes `Object` is extended. Any instance method of a Ruby class might be prepended with sending an event: ```ruby class PlainRubyClass emit_event_before :some_method, :another_method emit_klass_event_before :class_method def some_method(data) # do something end def another_method(args) # do something end def self.class_method # do something end end ``` You could also use a generic method `emit_event` from anywhere. The method is mixed into `Object` class. It takes several optional kw arguments. `data` is a hash which is going to be serialized and sent as event data, `method` is by default the method you trigger `emit_event` from. `eval_context` is a hash containing the name of context handler and a context object itself. An example usage is as follows (see [Custom context handlers](#custom-context-handlers) for more details.): ```ruby # BaseClass sets some state class BaseClass attr_reader :local_state def initialize @local_state = 'some state' end end # A custom handler is introduced class CustomHandler < Stenotype::ContextHandlers::Base self.handler_name = :overriden_handler def as_json(*_args) { state: context.local_state } end end Stenotype::ContextHandlers.register CustomHandler # Event is being emitted twice. First time with default options. # Second time with overriden method name and eval_context. class PlainRubyClass < BaseClass def some_method(data) event_data = collect_some_data_as_a_hash emit_event(event_data) # method name will be `some_method`, eval_context: { klass: self } other_event_data = do_something_else emit_event(other_event_data, method: :custom_method_name, eval_context: { overriden_handler: self }) end end ``` ### Adding customizations #### Custom adapters By default two adapters are implemented: Google Cloud and simple Stdout adapter. Adding a new one might be performed by defining a class inheriting from `Stenotype::Adapters::Base`: ```ruby class CustomAdapter < Stenotype::Adapters::Base # A client might be optionally passed to # the constructor. # # def initialize(client: nil) # @client = client # end def publish(event_data, **additional_arguments) # custom publishing logic end end ``` After defining a custom adapter it must be added to the list of adapters: ```ruby Stenotype.config.targets.push(CustomAdapter.new) ``` #### Custom context handlers A list of context handlers might be extended by defining a class inheriting from `Stenotype::ContextHandlers::Base` and registering a new context handler. Event handler must have a `self.handler_name` in order to use it during context serialization. Also custom handler must implement method `#as_json`: ```ruby class CustomHandler < Stenotype::ContextHandlers::Base self.handler_name = :custom_handler_name def as_json(*_args) { something: something, another: another } end private def something_from_context context.something end def another_from_context context.another end end ``` After defining a new context handler you must register it as follows: ```ruby Stenotype::ContextHandlers.register CustomHandler ``` ## Development After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies. Then, run `rake spec` to run the tests. You can also run `bin/console` for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment. To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`. To release a new version, update the version number in `version.rb`, and then run `bundle exec rake release`, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the `.gem` file to [rubygems.org](https://rubygems.org). ## Contributing Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/Freshly/Stenotype. ## License The gem is available as open source under the terms of the [MIT License](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).