Services & Controllers

Until now, we have seen how to define objects, view, actions using xml syntax. However, the business code has to be implemented by writing some real code.

Besides Java, the most natural candidates to write business code are pure JVM languages like Groovy, Scala or Kotlin. The Groovy support is built-in, just make sure to add apply plugin: groovy to your modules build.gradle script. For other languages, check gradle integration for them.

Services

The actual business implementation is done at service layer. Services are Java classes whose lifecycle is managed by Guice framework.

The pattern is something like this:

  • Define a business service interface

  • Provide a default implementation of the service

  • Bind the service interface with the default implementation

The interface should provide the blueprint of your business requirements that should be fulfilled.

package com.axelor.contact.service;

import com.axelor.contact.db.Contact;

public interface HelloService {

  String say(Contact contact);

  String hello();
}

The interface defines two methods to fulfill our business requirements. The application module that defines the interface can provide a default implementation of this interface.

For the above example, an implementation may look like this:

package com.axelor.contact.service;

import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;

import com.axelor.contact.db.Contact;

public class HelloServiceImpl implements HelloService {

  protected Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(getClass());

  @Override
  public String say(Contact contact) {
    return String.format("Welcome, '%s!'", contact.getFullName());
  }

  @Override
  public String hello() {
    return "Hello, World!";
  }
}

You can mark the implementation with appropriate scope if required (read the docs carefully before using them).

Now the business service should be utilized somewhere to fulfill the business requirement. Generally, use web controllers to expose services.

Controllers

The controllers are intermediary between views & service layer.

package com.axelor.contact.web;

import javax.inject.Inject;
import com.google.inject.servlet.RequestScoped;

import com.axelor.contact.db.Contact;
import com.axelor.contact.service.HelloService;

import com.axelor.meta.CallMethod;

import com.axelor.rpc.ActionRequest;
import com.axelor.rpc.ActionResponse;
import com.axelor.rpc.Response;

@RequestScope (1)
public class HelloController {

  @Inject private HelloService service; (2)

  public void say(ActionRequest request, ActionResponse response) { (3)

    Contact contact = request.getContext().asType(Contact.class); (4)
    String message = service.say(contact); (5)

    response.setFlash(message); (6)
  }

  @CallMethod (7)
  public Response validate(String email) { (8)

    Response response = new ActionResponse();

    // validate email & set response properties
    // logic can be moved to service layer

    if (email == null) {
      response.addError("email", "Email required");
    } else if (!email.matches("\w+@\w+")) {
      response.addError("email", "Invalid email.");
    }

    return response;
  }
}
1 controller lifecycle
2 inject a service
3 controller method
4 get the view context and convert to business object
5 call service method
6 mark the response to flash the message on client
7 free form controller method should be annotated with @CallMethod
8 free form controller method

The ActionRequest and ActionResponse are special classes to deal with action requests and responses. For more details see the http://docs.axelor.com/adk/5.4/javadoc.

Response Signals

ActionResponse.setSignal(signal, data) is used to send any arbitrary signal to the client. Here are a couple of them that might be of interest:

refresh-app

refresh browser tab (send null data)

refresh-tab

refresh current tab in the application (send null data) - new in version 5.4

The free form controller methods can accept any parameter. The views/actions can pass the param values from the current context.

Controllers generally don’t implement business logic, but deal with RPC requests only.

The controller methods can be used from XML actions and views:

<button name="greet" title="Greet" onClick="com.axelor.contact.web.HelloController:say" />

Or a free form controller method

<form name="contact-form" model="com.axelor.contact.db.Contact">
  ...
  <field name="email" onChange="com.axelor.contact.web.HelloController:validate(email)"/>
  ...
</form>

The format of using controller method is like this:

<fqn>:<method>[(var1,var2[,...])]

where fqn is fully qualified name of the controller, followed by a colon : followed by method name and optionally parameter values from current context if the method is a free form method.

Configuration

The services should be configured with a special class called Guice module but in our case should be derived from the com.axelor.app.AxelorModule.

Like this:

package com.axelor.contact;

import com.axelor.app.AxelorModule;
import com.axelor.contact.service.HelloService;
import com.axelor.contact.service.HelloServiceImpl;

public class ContactModule extends AxelorModule { (1)

  @Override
  protected void configure() {
    bind(HelloService.class).to(HelloServiceImpl.class); (2)
  }
}
1 The guice module class used to configure services
2 Bind the service with desired implementation

The bind(HelloService.class).to(HelloServiceImpl.class); tells the application that "bind HelloService interface to HelloServiceImpl".

See Guice documentation for more details on dependency injection and bindings.

Overriding

For some different business requirements, we may have to provide some different implementation.

For example, here the default implementation of say method returns "Welcome 'Some Name!'" message. If we want to replace this message with say "You are welcome 'Some Name!'" without changing the original code, we provide a new implementation.

The pattern is like this:

  • Override the default implementation in another module

  • Chain bind the default implementation with new implementation

  • The service interface now binds to the new implementation

package com.axelor.sale.service;

import com.axelor.contact.db.Contact;
import com.axelor.contact.service.HelloServiceImpl;

public class HelloServiceSaleImpl extends HelloServiceImpl {

  @Override
  public String say(Contact contact) {
    log.info("Overriding the default HelloService.say ...");
    String message = super.say(contact);
    log.info("The default message was: {}", message);
    message = String.format("You are welcome '%s!'", contact.getFullName());
    log.info("I would say: {}", message);
    return message;
  }
}

Technically, we can provide pure implementation of HelloService other then extending the default implementation but that requires much more efforts to configure the application. In that case, the main application module should exclusively bind the business services.

However, in most cases the scheme described here works just fine.

The HelloServiceSaleImpl extends the HelloServiceImpl and overrides the say method with different message.

Now the new implementation must be configured so that the application can know about it. This should be again done from the configuration module.

package com.axelor.sale;

import com.axelor.app.AxelorModule;
import com.axelor.contact.service.HelloServiceImpl;
import com.axelor.sale.service.HelloServiceSaleImpl;

public class SaleModule extends AxelorModule {

  @Override
  protected void configure() {
    bind(HelloServiceImpl.class).to(HelloServiceSaleImpl.class);
  }
}

Here you can see, we are not binding HelloService interface but the default implementation with the new one. This is called chain binding. It is because, we can’t bind same interface/implementation more then once in the application.

If we have to do that in some case, the binding should be done from the main application module exclusively.

Now, with this configuration. The application will pick up the HelloServiceSaleImpl for the HelloService interface and wherever you inject the HelloService, you will get an instance of the HelloServiceSaleImpl class.

See Guice Documentation for more details.