View Source Incident

Event Sourcing and CQRS building blocks.

Special thanks to my friend Paulo Gonzalez for the name suggestion for this library.

This library is in constant development phase and evaluation, that means core changes still can be made. While I am already using Incident in production, please be advised about the risks, once the library reaches its maturity, a release 1.x.x will be created.

goals

Goals

  • incentivize the usage of Event Sourcing and CQRS as good choice for domains that can leverage the main benefits of this design pattern;
  • offer the essential building blocks for using Event Sourcing in your system with proper contracts, but allowing specific needs to leverage what Elixir already brings to the table, for example, concurrency;
  • leverage functions and reducers for executing commands and applying events, facilitating stateless tests;
  • allow customization for fine-grained needs without compromising the principles;

getting-started

Getting Started

example-application

Example Application

There is an example application that implements a Bank application for reference with great documentation and including all the details and usage in IEx as well.

It also contains projections specific to the application domain with migration and schemas defined.

This example application will give you all the details in how to use Incident, including integration tests for both InMemory and Postgres adapters for both Event Store and Projection Store.

blog-posts

Blog Posts

event-sourcing-and-cqrs

Event Sourcing and CQRS

In a nutshell, Event Sourcing ensures that all changes to application state are stored as a sequence of events. But if you are new to Event Sourcing and CQRS I highly recommend watch Greg Young's presentation at Code on the Beach 2014 before moving forward.

main-components

Main Components

command

Command

It is a data structure used to define the command attributes with some basic validation.

command-handler

Command Handler

It is the entry point of a command in the write side. It performs basic command validation and executes the command through the Aggregate logic.

aggregate

Aggregate

Defines how a specific entity (User, for example) in your domain will execute each of its commands and apply each of its events. The aggregate itself only defines the logic but not its state.

aggregate-state

Aggregate State

Defines the initial state of an Aggregate and it is able to calculate the new state by replaying all the events through the aggregate logic.

event

Event

It is a data structure that defines the event data attributes.

event-handler

Event Handler

Receives a persisted event and perform actions in the read side such as to update the projection for an individual aggregate. Another usage is to build a new command and send to the Command Hanlder when specific events should trigger a new cycle.

projection

Projection

It represents the current state of an individual aggregate (User ID: 123456, for example) after replaying all events. Your application reads/queries data from the projection, that is similar to a persisted cache.

event-store

Event Store

All events from all aggregates are stored in the Event Store. The Event Store uses the Port/Adapter design pattern so through configuration you can define which adapter your application will use to store the events. Currently, Incident comes with two adapters, an InMemory to be used as playground and a Postgres one.

projection-store

Projection Store

Very similar to the Event Store, the Projection Store uses the Port/Adapter design pattern so through configuration you can define which adapter your application will use to store the aggregate projections. Currently, Incident comes with two adapters, an InMemory to be used as playground and a Postgres one.

installation

Installation

If available in Hex, the package can be installed by adding incident to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:incident, "~> 0.6.2"}
  ]
end

usage

Usage

Incident will be added as part of the application supervision tree, configuring the the adapters for the Event Store and the Projection Store.

with-postgres-adapters

With Postgres Adapters

The Postgres adapter uses Ecto behind the scenes so a lot of its configuration it is simply how you should configure a Postgres database for any application using Ecto.

There will be two Ecto Repos, one for the events and another one for the projections.

Optionally, you can even define two different databases, so the events database will contain only one table (events) and the projections database will contain one table fore each projection type.

Add the Ecto Repo modules for both databases:

defmodule AppName.EventStoreRepo do
  use Ecto.Repo,
    otp_app: :app_name,
    adapter: Ecto.Adapters.Postgres
end

defmodule AppName.ProjectionStoreRepo do
  use Ecto.Repo,
    otp_app: :app_name,
    adapter: Ecto.Adapters.Postgres
end

In your application config.exs specify the repositories:

config :app_name, ecto_repos: [AppName.EventStoreRepo, AppName.ProjectionStoreRepo]

In your application dev|test|prod.exs (the example below defines two databases but it could be only one):

config :app_name, AppName.EventStoreRepo,
  username: "postgres",
  password: "postgres",
  hostname: "localhost",
  database: "app_name_event_store_dev"

config :app_name, AppName.ProjectionStoreRepo,
  username: "postgres",
  password: "postgres",
  hostname: "localhost",
  database: "app_name_projection_store_dev"

Create the application databases running the Ecto mix task:

mix ecto.create

Use the Incident Mix Task below to generate the events and aggregate_locks table migrations, after that, run the migration task:

mix incident.postgres.init -r AppName.EventStoreRepo
mix ecto.migrate

The migrations and schemas for the projections will depend on your application domains and it follows the same process for any Ecto Migration.

Add Incident in the application.ex, adding into the application supervision tree:

defmodule AppName.Application do
  @moduledoc false

  use Application

  def start(_type, _args) do
    config = %{
      event_store: %{
        adapter: :postgres,
        options: [repo: AppName.EventStoreRepo]
      },
      projection_store: %{
        adapter: :postgres,
        options: [repo: AppName.ProjectionStoreRepo]
      }
    }

    children = [
      AppName.EventStoreRepo,
      AppName.ProjectionStoreRepo,
      {Incident, config}
    ]

    opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: AppName.Supervisor]
    Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
  end
end

with-inmemory-adapters

With InMemory Adapters

In case of InMemory adapters that use Agent there is no need for any Ecto configuration so it is simply addedIncident to the application supervision tree:

defmodule AppName.Application do
  @moduledoc false

  use Application

  def start(_type, _args) do
    config = %{
      event_store: %{
        adapter: :in_memory,
        options: []
      },
      projection_store: %{
        adapter: :in_memory,
        options: [
          initial_state: %{AppName.Projections.ProjectionName => []}
        ]
      }
    }

    children = [
      {Incident, config}
    ]

    opts = [strategy: :one_for_one, name: AppName.Supervisor]
    Supervisor.start_link(children, opts)
  end
end

planned-next-steps

Planned Next Steps

The list below is the upcoming enhacements or fixes, it will grow as the library is being developed.

  • [ ] allow Incident to be used by more than one application within the umbrella, if needed;
  • [ ] add Telemetry module and trigger telemetry events;
  • [ ] add Event Snapshots to improve performance for aggregates with long event history;
  • [ ] run migrations when using mix incident.postgres.init for Postgres adapter;
  • [ ] allow custom error modules to be used and incorporate as part of the contract in some components;

contributing

Contributing

We appreciate any contribution to Incident. Please see the Code of Conduct and Contributing guides.

documentation

Documentation

The full documentation can be found at https://hexdocs.pm/incident.