Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name: injector
Version: 0.5.0
Summary: # Injector - Python dependency injection framework, inspired by Guice
Home-page: http://github.com/alecthomas/injector
Author: Alec Thomas
Author-email: alec@swapoff.org
License: BSD
Download-URL: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/injector
Description: # Injector - Python dependency injection framework, inspired by Guice
        
        ![image](https://secure.travis-ci.org/alecthomas/injector.png?branch=master)
        
        ## Introduction
        
        
        Dependency injection as a formal pattern is less useful in Python than
        in other languages, primarily due to its support for keyword arguments,
        the ease with which objects can be mocked, and its dynamic nature.
        
        That said, a framework for assisting in this process can remove a lot of
        boiler-plate from larger applications. That's where Injector can help.
        It automatically and transitively provides keyword arguments with their
        values. As an added benefit, Injector encourages nicely
        compartmentalised code through the use of `Module` s.
        
        While being inspired by Guice, it does not slavishly replicate its API.
        Providing a Pythonic API trumps faithfulness.
        
        ## A Full Example
        
        Here's a full example to give you a taste of how Injector works:
        
            >>> from injector import Module, Key, provides, Injector, inject, singleton
        
        We'll use an in-memory SQLite database for our example:
        
            >>> import sqlite3
        
        And make up an imaginary RequestHandler class that uses the SQLite
        connection:
        
            >>> class RequestHandler(object):
            ...   @inject(db=sqlite3.Connection)
            ...   def __init__(self, db):
            ...     self._db = db
            ...   def get(self):
            ...     cursor = self._db.cursor()
            ...     cursor.execute('SELECT key, value FROM data ORDER by key')
            ...     return cursor.fetchall()
        
        Next, for the sake of the example, we'll create a "configuration"
        annotated type:
        
            >>> Configuration = Key('configuration')
            >>> class ConfigurationForTestingModule(Module):
            ...   def configure(self, binder):
            ...     binder.bind(Configuration, to={'db_connection_string': ':memory:'},
            ...         scope=singleton)
        
        Next we create our database module that initialises the DB based on the
        configuration provided by the above module, populates it with some dummy
        data, and provides a Connection object:
        
            >>> class DatabaseModule(Module):
            ...   @singleton
            ...   @provides(sqlite3.Connection)
            ...   @inject(configuration=Configuration)
            ...   def provide_sqlite_connection(self, configuration):
            ...     conn = sqlite3.connect(configuration['db_connection_string'])
            ...     cursor = conn.cursor()
            ...     cursor.execute('CREATE TABLE IF NOT EXISTS data (key PRIMARY KEY, value)')
            ...     cursor.execute('INSERT OR REPLACE INTO data VALUES ("hello", "world")')
            ...     return conn
        
        (Note how we have decoupled configuration from our database
        initialisation code.)
        
        Finally, we initialise an Injector and use it to instantiate a
        RequestHandler instance. This first transitively constructs a
        sqlite3.Connection object, and the Configuration dictionary that it in
        turn requires, then instantiates our RequestHandler:
        
            >>> injector = Injector([ConfigurationForTestingModule(), DatabaseModule()])
            >>> handler = injector.get(RequestHandler)
            >>> tuple(map(str, handler.get()[0]))  # py3/py2 compatibility hack
            ('hello', 'world')
        
        We can also veryify that our Configuration and SQLite connections are
        indeed singletons within the Injector:
        
            >>> injector.get(Configuration) is injector.get(Configuration)
            True
            >>> injector.get(sqlite3.Connection) is injector.get(sqlite3.Connection)
            True
        
        You're probably thinking something like: "this is a large amount of work
        just to give me a database connection", and you are correct; dependency
        injection is typically not that useful for smaller projects. It comes
        into its own on large projects where the up-front effort pays for itself
        in two ways:
        
        > 1.  Forces decoupling. In our example, this is illustrated by
        >     decoupling our configuration and database configuration.
        > 2.  After a type is configured, it can be injected anywhere with no
        >     additional effort. Simply @inject and it appears. We don't really
        >     illustrate that here, but you can imagine adding an arbitrary
        >     number of RequestHandler subclasses, all of which will
        >     automatically have a DB connection provided.
        
        ## Terminology
        
        At its heart, Injector is simply a dictionary for mapping types to
        things that create instances of those types. This could be as simple as:
        
            {str: 'an instance of a string'}
        
        For those new to dependency-injection and/or Guice, though, some of the
        terminology used may not be obvious.
        
        ### Provider
        
        A means of providing an instance of a type. Built-in providers include
        `ClassProvider` (creates a new instance from a class),
        `InstanceProvider` (returns an existing instance directly) and
        `CallableProvider` (provides an instance by calling a function).
        
        ### Scope
        
        By default, providers are executed each time an instance is required.
        Scopes allow this behaviour to be customised. For example,
        `SingletonScope` (typically used through the class decorator
        `singleton`), can be used to always provide the same instance of a
        class.
        
        Other examples of where scopes might be a threading scope, where
        instances are provided per-thread, or a request scope, where instances
        are provided per-HTTP-request.
        
        The default scope is `NoScope`.
        
        ### Binding Key
        
        A binding key uniquely identifies a provider of a type. It is
        effectively a tuple of `(type, annotation)` where `type` is the type to
        be provided and `annotation` is additional, optional, uniquely
        identifying information for the type.
        
        For example, the following are all unique binding keys for `str`:
        
            (str, 'name')
            (str, 'description')
        
        For a generic type such as `str`, annotations are very useful for unique
        identification.
        
        As an *alternative* convenience to using annotations, `Key` may be used
        to create unique types as necessary:
        
            >>> from injector import Key
            >>> Name = Key('name')
            >>> Description = Key('description')
        
        Which may then be used as binding keys, without annotations, as they
        already uniquely identify a particular provider:
        
            (Name, None)
            (Description, None)
        
        Though of course, annotations may still be used with these types, like
        any other type.
        
        ### Annotation
        
        An annotation is additional unique information about a type to avoid
        binding key collisions. It creates a new unique binding key for an
        existing type.
        
        ### Binding
        
        A binding is the mapping of a unique binding key to a corresponding
        provider. For example:
        
            >>> from injector import InstanceProvider
            >>> bindings = {
            ...   (Name, None): InstanceProvider('Sherlock'),
            ...   (Description, None): InstanceProvider('A man of astounding insight'),
            ... }
        
        ### Binder
        
        The `Binder` is simply a convenient wrapper around the dictionary that
        maps types to providers. It provides methods that make declaring
        bindings easier.
        
        ### Module
        
        A `Module` configures bindings. It provides methods that simplify the
        process of binding a key to a provider. For example the above bindings
        would be created with:
        
            >>> from injector import Module
            >>> class MyModule(Module):
            ...     def configure(self, binder):
            ...         binder.bind(Name, to='Sherlock')
            ...         binder.bind(Description, to='A man of astounding insight')
        
        For more complex instance construction, methods decorated with
        `@provides` will be called to resolve binding keys:
        
            >>> from injector import provides
            >>> class MyModule(Module):
            ...     def configure(self, binder):
            ...         binder.bind(Name, to='Sherlock')
            ...
            ...     @provides(Description)
            ...     def describe(self):
            ...         return 'A man of astounding insight (at %s)' % time.time()
        
        ### Injection
        
        Injection is the process of providing an instance of a type, to a method
        that uses that instance. It is achieved with the `inject` decorator.
        Keyword arguments to inject define which arguments in its decorated
        method should be injected, and with what.
        
        Here is an example of injection on a module provider method, and on the
        constructor of a normal class:
        
            >>> from injector import inject
            >>> class User(object):
            ...     @inject(name=Name, description=Description)
            ...     def __init__(self, name, description):
            ...         self.name = name
            ...         self.description = description
        
            >>> class UserModule(Module):
            ...     def configure(self, binder):
            ...        binder.bind(User)
        
            >>> class UserAttributeModule(Module):
            ...     def configure(self, binder):
            ...         binder.bind(Name, to='Sherlock')
            ...
            ...     @provides(Description)
            ...     @inject(name=Name)
            ...     def describe(self, name):
            ...         return '%s is a man of astounding insight' % name
        
        ### Injector
        
        The `Injector` brings everything together. It takes a list of `Module`
        s, and configures them with a binder, effectively creating a dependency
        graph:
        
            >>> from injector import Injector
            >>> injector = Injector([UserModule(), UserAttributeModule()])
        
        You can also pass classes instead of instances to `Injector`, it will
        instantiate them for you:
        
            >>> injector = Injector([UserModule, UserAttributeModule])
        
        The injector can then be used to acquire instances of a type, either
        directly:
        
            >>> injector.get(Name)
            'Sherlock'
            >>> injector.get(Description)
            'Sherlock is a man of astounding insight'
        
        Or transitively:
        
            >>> user = injector.get(User)
            >>> isinstance(user, User)
            True
            >>> user.name
            'Sherlock'
            >>> user.description
            'Sherlock is a man of astounding insight'
        
        ## Scopes
        
        ### Singletons
        
        Singletons are declared by binding them in the SingletonScope. This can
        be done in three ways:
        
        > 1.  Decorating the class with `@singleton`.
        > 2.  Decorating a `@provides(X)` decorated Module method with
        >     `@singleton`.
        > 3.  Explicitly calling `binder.bind(X, scope=singleton)`.
        
        A (redunant) example showing all three methods:
        
            >>> @singleton
            ... class Thing(object): pass
            >>> class ThingModule(Module):
            ...   def configure(self, binder):
            ...     binder.bind(Thing, scope=singleton)
            ...   @singleton
            ...   @provides(Thing)
            ...   def provide_thing(self):
            ...     return Thing()
        
        ### Implementing new Scopes
        
        In the above description of scopes, we glossed over a lot of detail. In
        particular, how one would go about implementing our own scopes.
        
        Basically, there are two steps. First, subclass `Scope` and implement
        `Scope.get`:
        
            >>> from injector import Scope
            >>> class CustomScope(Scope):
            ...   def get(self, key, provider):
            ...     return provider
        
        Then create a global instance of `ScopeDecorator` to allow classes to be
        easily annotated with your scope:
        
            >>> from injector import ScopeDecorator
            >>> customscope = ScopeDecorator(CustomScope)
        
        This can be used like so:
        
        > \>\>\> @customscope ... class MyClass(object): ... pass
        
        Scopes are bound in modules with the `Binder.bind_scope` method:
        
            >>> class MyModule(Module):
            ...   def configure(self, binder):
            ...     binder.bind_scope(CustomScope)
        
        Scopes can be retrieved from the injector, as with any other instance.
        They are singletons across the life of the injector:
        
            >>> injector = Injector([MyModule()])
            >>> injector.get(CustomScope) is injector.get(CustomScope)
            True
        
        For scopes with a transient lifetime, such as those tied to HTTP
        requests, the usual solution is to use a thread or greenlet-local cache
        inside the scope. The scope is "entered" in some low-level code by
        calling a method on the scope instance that creates this cache. Once the
        request is complete, the scope is "left" and the cache cleared.
        
        ## Tests
        
        When you use unit test framework such as `unittest2` or `nose` you can
        also profit from `injector`. However, manually creating injectors and
        test classes can be quite annoying. There is, however, `with_injector`
        method decorator which has parameters just as `Injector` construtor and
        installs configured injector into class instance on the time of method
        call:
        
            >>> from injector import Module, with_injector
            >>> class UsernameModule(Module):
            ...   def configure(self, binder):
            ...     binder.bind(str, 'Maria')
            ...
            >>> class TestSomethingClass(object):
            ...   @with_injector(UsernameModule())
            ...   def setup(self):
            ...      pass
            ...
            ...   @inject(username=str)
            ...   def test_username(self, username):
            ...      assert (username == 'Maria')
        
        *Each* method call re-initializes `Injector` - if you want to you can
        also put `@with_injector` decorator on class constructor.
        
        After such call all `inject`-decorated methods will work just as you'd
        expect them to work.
        
        ## Footnote
        
        This framework is similar to snake-guice, but aims for simplification.
        
        *Injector is &copy; 2010 by Alec Thomas available under the Modified BSD License.*
        
        
Platform: any
