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Hacking Scala

#scala #hacking

May 26, 2013 at 8:21pm

Easy Dependency Injection in Play Framework with Scaldi

In this post I would like to make small introduction to Scaldi and show you how easy it is to use it together with Play. Scaldi is dependency injection library for Scala. It’s very lightweight (without any dependencies) and provides nice Scala DSL for binding dependencies and injecting them. It’s more dynamic approach to do dependency injection in comparison to the cake pattern, because not everything is checked at the compile time. This can be seen as an disadvantage, but I personally believe, that there is place for this approach. It can be vary useful in many circumstances and many people can find it more natural (and easy), especially if they are coming from Java background.

There are only 3 most important traits that you need to know, in order to make dependency injection with Scaldi:

  • Injector - it’s a container for the bindings, that you have defined in the module.
  • Module - gives you nice syntax to create bindings with bind and binding. Module also extends Injector trait and implicit Injector instance always available when you are defining your bindings
  • Injectable - the only responsibility of this trait is to provide you with inject function (so it just provides nice syntax for injecting dependencies). It’s important to understand, that it’s the only the purpose of it. So it completely stateless and knows nothing about actual bindings you have defined in the module. In order to actually find and inject dependencies, inject function always takes an implicit parameter of type Injector

Defining Managed Classes

Let’s take a small example. Suppose you have have MessageService trait like this:

trait MessageService {
  def getGreetMessage(name: String): String
}

Now let’s define one implementation of it, where we will inject greeting string:

class OfficialMessageService(implicit inj: Injector) extends MessageService with Injectable {
  val officialGreeting = inject [String] (identified by "greeting.official")

  def getGreetMessage(name: String) = s"$officialGreeting, $name!"
}

You have probably noticed 2 things, that are required for injection to work:

  • We extended Injectable in order to make inject function available
  • We declared implicit parameter of type Injector in order to provide bindings to the inject function.

You are not required to always extend Injectable in order to use inject - you can just import it. This will work as good as in previous example:

import scaldi.Injectable._

class SomeService(implicit inj: Injector) extends MessageService {
  val dep = inject [SomeOtherService]
}
Creating a Module

Now that we’ve created a managed class, we need to add it to the Module:

class UserModule extends Module {
  bind [MessageService] to new OfficialMessageService

  binding identifiedBy "greeting.official" to "Welcome"
}

In the module context you are able to instantiate OfficialMessageService because it always have implicit Injector available in a scope, as I mentioned earlier. I also defined another binding with identifier greeting.official because OfficialMessageService needs it and will try to inject it at some point.

Integration with Play App

Now we will try to integrate our new module in the Play app. The first thing you need to do is to add dependency on scaldi-play in the project file (build.sbt). Something like this:

name := "scaldi-play-example"

version := "1.0-SNAPSHOT"

libraryDependencies ++= Seq(
  "com.github.scaldi" %% "scaldi-play" % "0.2.2"
)

play.Project.playScalaSettings

Now you are able to use Scaldi in the project. Play application normally has it’s initialization logic in the Global object, so we need to add ScaldiSupport in it:

object Global extends GlobalSettings with ScaldiSupport {
  def applicationModule = new UserModule
}

Nice! Your Play application is now uses Scaldi for the dependency injection, but unfortunately it doesn’t do anything, so let’s fix it. Let’s create a simple index page (app/views/index.scala.html) that will show greeting message to the user:

@(message: String)

@main("Test Page") {
    <h1>@message</h1>
}

Now we need to create a controller for it. But instead of creating a singleton object, let’s make a managed class (simmilat to the OfficialMessageService class):

class Application(implicit inj: Injector) extends Controller with Injectable {
  val messageService = inject [MessageService]

  def index = Action {
    Ok(views.html.index(messageService.getGreetMessage("Test User")))
  }
}

As you can see, MessageService is injected and its used to produce nice greet message.

As you probably already aware, Play only works with singleton controllers, which means, that it requires Application controller to be an object instead of class. Thankfully Play 2.1 introduced new feature, which makes integration with dependency injection framework like Scaldi possible. In order to use this feature, you need to prefix managed controllers with @ in the conf/routes file. So let’s make it:

GET  /                 @controllers.Application.index

The one last thing that remains is to add controller to the new module:

class WebModule extends Module {
  binding to new Application
}

and to compose WebModule with UserModule in the Global object:

object Global extends GlobalSettings with ScaldiSupport {
  def applicationModule = new WebModule :: new UserModule
}

At this point you should be able to run Play app and view the index page, that will show you: Welcome, Test User!.

Injecting Play Configuration

scaldi-play provides integration with Play configuration (conf/application.conf) out of the box. So you can, for example, define greeting.official property there:

greeting.official = Welcome

and then just remove one extra binding for it from the UserModule:

class UserModule extends Module {
  bind [MessageService] to new OfficialMessageService
}

It will continue to work as before. You can also inject other primitive types like Int or Boolean and not only String. If you would like to use configuration object directly, then you need inject it like this:

val config = inject [play.api.Configuration]
Distinguishing Between Modes

Suppose we have another implementation of MessageService that we want to use when Play app is in the dev or test mode:

class SimpleMessageService extends MessageService {
  def getGreetMessage(name: String) = s"Hi, $name"
}

With Scaldi it’s pretty easy to make. You just need to define UserModule like this:

class UserModule extends Module {
  bind [MessageService] when (inDevMode or inTestMode) to new SimpleMessageService
  bind [MessageService] when inProdMode to new OfficialMessageService
}

inDevMode, inTestMode and inProdMode are just functions that produce Condition objects. Conditions are used by Scaldi to decide, whether binding is available for injection.

I hope you liked this small introduction to scaldi and scaldi-play. You can find example application, that I described here, in this github repo:

https://github.com/scaldi/scaldi-play-example

Please feel free to fork and hack it :)