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Laravel Event Sourcing

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Opinionated event sourcing framework for Laravel optimized for speed and type safety.

Functionality

  • Uses generators for fetching and storing events for a small memory footprint
  • Optimistic concurrent modification detection using event versioning
  • Snapshot support for faster aggregate root load times
  • Projections for read models using "native" Laravel events

Developer Experience

  • Has type extensive hints for great IDE and static analysis support (no magic method calls)
  • Integrated support for SQL and NoSQL event stores
  • Flexible, but not bloated framework
  • Unit-Test support via custom assertion helpers (TestAggregateRoot class)

Feature Support

Driver Event Store Snapshots
SQL βœ” βœ”
DynamoDB βœ” βœ”
In-Memory (for unit tests) βœ” ❌

Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require spaceemotion/laravel-event-sourcing

Usage

1. Planning your domain

For this example, we want to create a simple to do list. A list has a title and items that have a name and can be checked when they have been completed.

2. Custom identifier(s)

Every aggregate (root) is identified by a unique identifier. The package comes with a UUID base class that can be extended to create custom ID types for better type safety (like not using a UserId in a TodoList domain).

class ListId extends Uuid {}

2. Custom events

All changes in the system are driven by recorded events. Whenever a state change happens, there's a corresponding event created by an aggregate root.

class ListCreated implements Event
{
    private ListId $id;
    private string $title;

    public function __construct(ListId $id, string $title)
    {
        $this->id = $id;
        $this->title = $title;
    }

    public function getId(): ListId
    {
        return $this->id;
    }

    public function getTitle(): string
    {
        return $this->title;
    }

    public function serialize(): array
    {
        return ['id' => (string) $this->id, 'title' => $this->title];
    }

    public static function deserialize(array $payload): self
    {
        return new self(ListId::fromString($payload['id']), $payload['title']);
    }
}

Other events we'll use are:

  • ItemAdded
  • ItemCompleted

Let's just assume we've created them in a similar fashion.

3. Aggregate roots

Then we create the aggregate root that handles all the business requirements.

class TodoList extends AggregateRoot
{
    private ListId $id;
    private array $items;

    // This method creates a new instance.
    // All constructors are closed off, so only manual construction
    // or rebuilding from events are allowed.
    public static function create(string $title): self
    {
        $instance = new self();
        $instance->record(new ListCreated(ListId::next(), $title));

        return $instance;
    }

    // This is an abstract method that all aggregate roots need to implement.
    // Which means that for creation events you have to add the aggregate ID.
    // (which should be the first event recorded upon new-ing an instance).
    public function getId(): ListId
    {
        return $this->id;
    }

    public function addItem(string $name): self
    {
        // Prevent adding duplicate items
        if (array_key_exists($name, $this->items)) {
            return $this;
        }

        return $this->record(new ItemAdded($name));
    }

    public function complete(string $name): self
    {
        // This checks business requirements - we cannot complete a non-existent item
        if (!array_key_exists($name, $this->items)) {
            throw new InvalidItemException($name);
        }

        return $this->record(new ItemCompleted($name));
    }

    // Each recorded event will be applied either at runtime, or when rebuilding from a list
    // of stored events during the rebuilding process. These change the internal state of
    // the aggregate root to check against business requirements.
    protected function getEventHandlers(): array
    {
        // Not all recorded events need to have an event handler
        return [
            ListCreated::class => function (ListCreated $event) {
                $this->id = $event->getId();
            },
            ItemAdded::class => function (ItemAdded $event) {
                $this->items[$event->name] = false;
            },
            ItemCompleted::class => function (ItemCompleted $event) {
                $this->items[$event->name] = true;
            },
        ];
    }
}

4. Controller actions

Example usage inside a possible TodoListController:

function store(Request $request, EventStore $store)
{
    $list = TodoList::create($request->get('title'));
    $list->addItem('Read the documentation');

    $store->persist($list);

    return [
        'id' => (string) $list->getAggregateId(),
    ];
}

Example for a "create new item" action:

function store(string $id, Request $request, EventStore $store)
{
    $list = TodoList::rebuild($store->retrieveAll(ListId::fromString($id)));
    $list->addItem($request->get('name'));

    $store->persist($list);
}

Changelog

Please look at the releases for more information on what has changed recently.

Credits

License

The ISC License (ISC). Please see License File for more information.

About

Opiniated event sourcing framework for Laravel optimized for speed and type safety. STILL WORK IN PROGRESS 🚧

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