View Source Domains
Domains serve three primary purposes:
- They group related resources together, providing organization and structure to your project.
- They allow you to define a centralized code interface
- They allow you to configure certain cross-cutting concerns of those resources in a single place.
If you are familiar with a Phoenix Context, you can think of a domain as the Ash equivalent.
Grouping Resources
In an Ash.Domain
, you will typically see something like this:
defmodule MyApp.Tweets do
use Ash.Domain
resources do
resource MyApp.Tweets.Tweet
resource MyApp.Tweets.Comment
end
end
With this definition, you can do things like placing all of these resources into a GraphQL Api with AshGraphql. You'd see a line like this:
use AshGraphql, domains: [MyApp.Tweets]
Centralized Code Interface
Working with our domain & resources in code can be done the long form way, by building changesets/queries/action inputs and calling the relevant function in Ash
. However, we generally want to expose a well defined code API for working with our resources. This makes our code much clearer, and gives us nice things like auto complete and inline documentation.
defmodule MyApp.Tweets do
use Ash.Domain
resources do
resource MyApp.Tweets.Tweet do
# define a function called `tweet` that uses
# the `:create` action on MyApp.Tweets.Tweet
define :tweet, :create, args: [:text]
end
resource MyApp.Tweets.Comment do
# define a function called `comment` that uses
# the `:create` action on MyApp.Tweets.Comment
define :comment, :create, args: [:tweet_id, :text]
end
end
end
With these definitions, we can now do things like this:
tweet = MyApp.Tweets.tweet!("My first tweet!", actor: user1)
comment = MyApp.Tweets.comment!(tweet.id, "What a cool tweet!", actor: user2)
Configuring Cross-cutting Concerns
Built in configuration
Ash.Domain
comes with a number of built-in configuration options. See Ash.Domain
for more.
For example:
defmodule MyApp.Tweets do
use Ash.Domain
resources do
resource MyApp.Tweets.Tweet
resource MyApp.Tweets.Comment
end
execution do
# raise the default timeout for all actions in this domain from 30s to 60s
timeout :timer.seconds(60)
end
authorization do
# disable using the authorize?: false flag when calling actions
authorize :always
end
end
Extensions
Extensions will often come with "domain extensions" to allow you to configure the behavior of all resources within a domain, as it pertains to that extension. For example:
defmodule MyApp.Tweets do
use Ash.Domain,
extensions: [AshGraphql.Domain]
graphql do
# skip authorization for these resources
authorize? false
end
resources do
resource MyApp.Tweets.Tweet
resource MyApp.Tweets.Comment
end
end
Policies
You can also use Ash.Policy.Authorizer
on your domains. This allows you to add policies that apply to all actions using this domain. For example:
defmodule MyApp.Tweets do
use Ash.Domain,
extensions: [Ash.Policy.Authorizer]
resources do
resource MyApp.Tweets.Tweet
resource MyApp.Tweets.Comment
end
policies do
# add a bypass up front to allow administrators to do whatever they want
bypass actor_attribute_equals(:is_admin, true) do
authorize_if always()
end
# forbid all access from disabled users
policy actor_attribute_equals(:disabled, true) do
forbid_if always()
end
end
end