Service Container
Introduction
The Service Container is an extremely powerful feature of Masonite and should be used to the fullest extent possible. It's important to understand the concepts of the Service Container. It's a simple concept but is a bit magical if you don't understand what's going on under the hood.
Getting Started
The Service Container is just a container where classes are loaded into it by key-value pairs, and then can be retrieved by either the key or value. That's it.
The container is contained inside the App
class which is instantiated throughout in the beginning of the framework and passed through various parts of the project such as controllers, middleware and drivers.
We can create easily create service providers using a craft command:
$ craft provider DashboardProvider
This will create a new service provider in app/providers/DashboardServiceProvider.py
. Inside our new service provider we will have a register
method and a boot
method. It's important to know what each one does. We'll discuss both in a little bit.
Configuration
Once you create your service provider, you'll have to add it to your PROVIDERS
list inside your config/application.py
file. This should be a string to the location of the class:
PROVIDERS = [
'app.providers.UserModelProvider.UserModelProvider'
'app.providers.DashboardProvider.DashboardProvider'
]
Register
The register
methods on all service providers are executed first, then all the boot
methods are executed after. Because of this, the register
method should only be used to load things into the container.
Boot
The boot method is executed on all service providers after the register
methods on all service providers have been called. Because of this, the boot method will have access to everything inside the container and is resolved by Masonite's container.
Binding
In order to bind classes into the container, we will just need to use a simple bind
method on our app
container. In a service provider, that will look like:
from masonite.provider import ServiceProvider
from app.User import User
class UserModelProvider(ServiceProvider):
def register(self):
self.app.bind('User', User)
def boot(self, request: Request):
print(request) # returns the Request object
This will load the key value pair in the providers
dictionary in the container. The dictionary after this call will look like:
>>> app.providers
{'User': User}
The service container is injected into the Request
object and can be retrieved by:
def show(self, Request):
Request.app() # will return the service container
Using the container
The container can be used in two ways: making and resolving.
Making
In order to retrieve a class from the service container, we can simply use the make
method.
>>> app.bind('User', User)
>>> app.make('User')
User
That's it! This is useful as an IOC container which you can load a single class into the container and use that class everywhere throughout your project.
Resolving
This is the most useful part of the container. It is possible to retrieve objects from the container by simply passing them into the parameters. Certain aspects of Masonite are resolved such as controller methods, middleware and drivers.
For example, we can hint that we want to get the Request
class and put it into our controller. All controller methods are resolved by the container.
def show(self, Request)
Request.user()
In this example, Masonite will look inside the container for a key called Request
and return that value from the container. Request
is already loaded into the container for you out of the box.
Another way to resolve classes is by using Python 3 annotations:
from masonite.request import Request
def show(self, request: Request)
request.user()
Masonite will know that you are trying to get the Request
class and will actually retrieve that class from the container. Masonite will search the container for a Request
class, retrieve it, and pass it into the controller method.
Pretty powerful stuff, eh?
Resolving your own code
The service container can also be used outside of the flow of Masonite. Masonite takes in a function or class method, and resolves it's dependencies by finding them in the service container and injecting them.
Because of this, you can resolve any of your own classes or functions.
from masonite.request import Request
def randomFunction(User):
print(User)
def show(self, Request):
Request.app().resolve(randomFunction) # Will print the User object
Remember not to call it and only reference the function.
This will fetch all of the parameters of randomFunction
and retrieve them from the service container. There probably won't be many times you'll have to resolve your own code but the option is there.