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* Implement string imports for Factory, Callable, Singletons, and Resource * Refactor the implementation * Add tests * Update tests to pass on Python 2 * Update typing and add typing tests * Update changelog * Update docs
243 lines
7.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
243 lines
7.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _factory-provider:
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Factory provider
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================
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.. meta::
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:keywords: Python,DI,Dependency injection,IoC,Inversion of Control,Factory,Abstract Factory,
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Pattern,Example,Aggregate
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:description: Factory provider helps to implement dependency injection in Python. This page
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demonstrates how to use Factory provider, inject the dependencies, and assemble
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object graphs passing the injections deep inside. It also provides the examples
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of the Abstract Factory pattern & provider and Factories Aggregation pattern.
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.. currentmodule:: dependency_injector.providers
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:py:class:`Factory` provider creates new objects.
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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The first argument of the ``Factory`` provider is a class, a factory function or a method
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that creates an object.
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The rest of the ``Factory`` positional and keyword arguments are the dependencies.
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``Factory`` injects the dependencies every time when creates a new object. The dependencies are
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injected following these rules:
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+ If the dependency is a provider, this provider is called and the result of the call is injected.
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+ If you need to inject the provider itself, you should use the ``.provider`` attribute. More at
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:ref:`factory_providers_delegation`.
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+ All other dependencies are injected *"as is"*.
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+ Positional context arguments are appended after ``Factory`` positional dependencies.
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+ Keyword context arguments have the priority over the ``Factory`` keyword dependencies with the
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same name.
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.. image:: images/factory_init_injections.png
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_init_injections.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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``Factory`` provider can inject attributes. Use ``.add_attributes()`` method to specify
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attribute injections.
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_attribute_injections.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 18-18
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Passing arguments to the underlying providers
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---------------------------------------------
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``Factory`` provider can pass the arguments to the underlying providers. This helps when you need
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to assemble a nested objects graph and pass the arguments deep inside.
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Consider the example:
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.. image:: images/factory_init_injections_underlying.png
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To create an ``Algorithm`` you need to provide all the dependencies: ``ClassificationTask``,
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``Loss``, and ``Regularizer``. The last object in the chain, the ``Regularizer`` has a dependency
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on the ``alpha`` value. The ``alpha`` value varies from algorithm to algorithm:
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.. code-block:: python
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Algorithm(
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task=ClassificationTask(
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loss=Loss(
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regularizer=Regularizer(
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alpha=alpha, # <-- the dependency
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),
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),
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),
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)
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``Factory`` provider helps to deal with the such assembly. You need to create the factories for
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all the classes and use special double-underscore ``__`` syntax for passing the ``alpha`` argument:
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_init_injections_underlying.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 44,49
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When you use ``__`` separator in the name of the keyword argument the ``Factory`` looks for
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the dependency with the same name as the left part of the ``__`` expression.
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.. code-block:: none
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<dependency>__<keyword for the underlying provider>=<value>
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If ``<dependency>`` is found the underlying provider will receive the
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``<keyword for the underlying provider>=<value>`` as an argument.
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.. _factory_providers_delegation:
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Passing providers to the objects
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--------------------------------
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When you need to inject the provider itself, but not the result of its call, use the ``.provider``
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attribute of the provider that you're going to inject.
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.. image:: images/factory_delegation.png
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_delegation.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 28
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.. note:: Any provider has a ``.provider`` attribute.
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.. _factory-string-imports:
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String imports
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--------------
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``Factory`` provider can handle string imports:
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.. code-block:: python
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class Container(containers.DeclarativeContainer):
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service = providers.Factory("myapp.mypackage.mymodule.Service")
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You can also make a relative import:
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.. code-block:: python
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# in myapp/container.py
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class Container(containers.DeclarativeContainer):
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service = providers.Factory(".mypackage.mymodule.Service")
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or import a member of the current module just specifying its name:
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.. code-block:: python
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class Service:
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...
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class Container(containers.DeclarativeContainer):
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service = providers.Factory("Service")
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.. note::
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``Singleton``, ``Callable``, ``Resource``, and ``Coroutine`` providers handle string imports
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the same way as a ``Factory`` provider.
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.. _factory-specialize-provided-type:
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Specializing the provided type
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------------------------------
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You can create a specialized ``Factory`` provider that provides only specific type. For doing
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this you need to create a subclass of the ``Factory`` provider and define the ``provided_type``
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class attribute.
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_provided_type.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 12-14
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.. _abstract-factory:
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Abstract factory
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----------------
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:py:class:`AbstractFactory` provider helps when you need to create a provider of some base class
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and the particular implementation is not yet know. ``AbstractFactory`` provider is a ``Factory``
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provider with two peculiarities:
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+ Provides only objects of a specified type.
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+ Must be overridden before usage.
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.. image:: images/abstract_factory.png
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:width: 100%
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:align: center
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/abstract_factory.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 34
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.. _factory-aggregate-provider:
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Factory aggregate
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-----------------
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:py:class:`FactoryAggregate` provider aggregates multiple factories.
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.. seealso::
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:ref:`aggregate-provider` – it's a successor of ``FactoryAggregate`` provider that can aggregate
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any type of provider, not only ``Factory``.
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The aggregated factories are associated with the string keys. When you call the
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``FactoryAggregate`` you have to provide one of the these keys as a first argument.
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``FactoryAggregate`` looks for the factory with a matching key and calls it with the rest of the arguments.
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.. image:: images/factory_aggregate.png
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:width: 100%
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:align: center
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_aggregate.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 33-37,47
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You can get a dictionary of the aggregated providers using ``.providers`` attribute.
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To get a game provider dictionary from the previous example you can use
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``game_factory.providers`` attribute.
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You can also access an aggregated factory as an attribute. To create the ``Chess`` object from the
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previous example you can do ``chess = game_factory.chess("John", "Jane")``.
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.. note::
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You can not override the ``FactoryAggregate`` provider.
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.. note::
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When you inject the ``FactoryAggregate`` provider it is passed "as is".
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To use non-string keys or string keys with ``.`` and ``-``, you can provide a dictionary as a positional argument:
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.. code-block:: python
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providers.FactoryAggregate({
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SomeClass: providers.Factory(...),
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"key.with.periods": providers.Factory(...),
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"key-with-dashes": providers.Factory(...),
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})
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Example:
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.. literalinclude:: ../../examples/providers/factory_aggregate_non_string_keys.py
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:language: python
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:lines: 3-
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:emphasize-lines: 30-33,39-40
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.. disqus::
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