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spectomic

CircleCI

Generate Datomic or Datascript schema from your Clojure(script) specs.

Installation

[provisdom/spectomic "1.0.78"] ;; latest release

Usage

Let's take a look at a basic example.

(require '[clojure.spec :as s]
         '[provisdom.spectomic.core :as spectomic])
=> nil

(s/def ::string string?)
=> :boot.user/string

(spectomic/datomic-schema [::string])
=> [{:db/ident       :boot.user/string
     :db/valueType   :db.type/string
     :db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}]

In this example we define the spec ::string and then pass it to datomic-schema which returns a collection of schema matching the data our ::string spec represents. Now let's look at a more complicated example.

(s/def :entity/id uuid?)
=> :entity/id

(s/def :user/name string?)
=> :user/name

(s/def :user/favorite-foods (s/coll-of string?))
=> :user/favorite-foods

(s/def :order/name string?)
=> :order/name

(s/def :user/order (s/keys :req [:entity/id :order/name]))
=> :user/orders

(s/def :user/orders (s/coll-of :user/order))
=> :user/orders

(s/def ::user (s/keys :req [:entity/id :user/name :user/favorite-foods :user/orders]))
=> :boot.user/user

(spectomic/datomic-schema [[:entity/id {:db/unique :db.unique/identity
                                        :db/index  true}]
                           :user/name
                           :user/favorite-foods
                           :user/orders])
=> [{:db/ident       :entity/id
     :db/valueType   :db.type/uuid
     :db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one
     :db/unique      :db.unique/identity
     :db/index       true}
    {:db/ident       :user/name
     :db/valueType   :db.type/string
     :db/cardinality :db.cardinality/one}
    {:db/ident       :user/favorite-foods
     :db/valueType   :db.type/string
     :db/cardinality :db.cardinality/many}
    {:db/ident       :user/orders
     :db/valueType   :db.type/ref
     :db/cardinality :db.cardinality/many}]

In this example we have a ::user entity that is uniquely identified by an :entity/id. The user also has a collection of his or her favorite foods :user/favorite-foods and a collection of orders :user/orders.

We need to let datomic-schema know that :entity/id is unique. We do this be providing datomic-schema with a tuple instead of just the spec keyword. The first element of the tuple is the spec and the second element is any extra schema fields to be added to the attribute. In this case we attach :db/unique and :db/index. You can see in the outputted schema that :entity/id does indeed have those extra fields.

:user/name is not particularly interesting as it is similar to our basic example.

:user/favorite-foods is represented as a collection of strings in our example. And as you can see in the returned schema, :user/favorite-foods is :db.cardinality/many and :db.type/string.

:user/orders is a collection of maps of the for dictated by the spec ::orders. And our returned schema is of type :db.type/ref and :db.cardinality/many.

Resolving Custom Types

Your code may use types that are not resolvable to Datomic types with the default type type resolver implementation. One option to this problem is to use the schema entry format you saw above with :entity/id. If you recall, we set the :db/unique property for :entity/id to :db.unique/identity. You can actually manually set the :db/valueType too. This could, however, become very repetitive.

The second option is to pass a map with the :custom-type-resolver key set to a function that returns a Datomic type. If the default type resolver cannot resolve an object's type, your function will be called with the object passed to it as the only argument. Your function is expected to return a valid Datomic type, as defined here.

Usage in Production

This library provides two functions for generating schema from specs: datomic-schema and datascript-schema. Both function calls occur at runtime. This means that if you include this library as a runtime dependency, test.check will also be included. Often you don't want test.check as a runtime dependency so it is suggested that you include this dependency as test scope (e.g. [provisdom/spectomic "x.x.x" :scope "test"]). Including this library with test scope means that all your calls need to happen at compile time or elsewhere. Here are two examples of how this library can be used at compile time.

Macro

It is convenient to store the list of specs you want to convert into schema as a var. By doing so you are able to easily add new specs to the schema list at any time. We will use a def'ed var as an example.

(def schema-specs [[:entity/id {:db/unique :db.unique/identity :db/index true}] :user/name :user/favorite-foods])

Now let's write a def-like macro that will generate our schema at compile time:

(defmacro defschema
  [name]
  `(def ~name (spectomic/datomic-schema schema-specs)))

(defschema my-schema)

Now our schema is statically compiled and available in the var my-schema.

Build time

Sometimes you may want to save your schema into an actual EDN file for use in multiple places. This can be easily accomplished with a Boot task.

(require '[provisdom.spectomic.core :as spectomic])

(deftask generate-schema
  [s sym VAL sym "This symbol will be resolved and have its content passed to `datomic-schema`."]
  (spit "my-schema.edn" (spectomic/datomic-schema @(resolve sym))))

This task is simple but does not adhere to Boot's design patterns. Here's a slightly more complex example that integrates well with other tasks.

(require '[clojure.java.io :as io])

(deftask generate-schema
  [s sym VAL sym "This symbol will be resolved and have its content passed to `datomic-schema`."
   o out-file VAL str "Name of the file for the schema to be outputted to. Defaults to schema.edn"]
  (let [specs-var (resolve sym)]
    (assert specs-var "The symbol provided cannot be resolved.")
    (with-pre-wrap fileset
      (let [out-file-name (or out-file "schema.edn")
            out-dir (tmp-dir!)
            out-file (io/file out-dir out-file-name)]
        (spit out-file (spectomic/datomic-schema @specs-var))
        (commit! (add-resource fileset out-dir))))))

Caveats

Misleading Generators

When writing your specs you need to be mindful of the generator that is used for the spec. One misleading predicate generator is float?. float?'s generator actually uses the same generator as double?, meaning it does not return a number with type java.lang.Float. This is problematic for our schema generator as it relies on your objects having the correct type that they represent. This is not a bug in Clojure spec however. If you look at how float? is defined you will see that float? returns true if the object is a java.lang.Double or a java.lang.Float. To combat this we can write our own ::float spec like this:

(s/def ::float
  (s/with-gen
    #(instance? java.lang.Float %)
    #(gen/fmap float
               (s/gen (s/double-in :min Float/MIN_VALUE :max Float/MAX_VALUE :infinite? false :NaN? false)))))

Rare Edge Cases

If you write a Spec that uses a generator that will return values of a different type very rarely then you will run into schema generation problems. Make sure your generators are returning consistent types.

Implementation

Rather than parsing every Spec form, we chose to implement this library using generators. Every Spec that is passed to datomic-schema or datascript-schema is sampled 100 times using test.check. The type of each sample is then matched with a Datomic type. Next we make sure that each sample is of the same type. If your generator is returning multiple types for a Spec then it's not clear how the schema should be generated so an error is thrown. If the type is a collection then we need to verify that for each sample, every element in the collection is of the same type. If that is true then we return a map with :db.cardinality/many and the :db/valueType set to the type of object the collection contains.

Because generating samples for specs can end up taking a significant amount of time, we do some Spec form parsing up front to try and determine the Datomic type. If the Spec form is not handled then we fall back on generation.

License

Copyright © 2017 Provisdom

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.