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ketamine

Addictive dependency injection for JavaScript

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###Installation

$ npm install ketamine

###Description

Ketamine is a dependency injection framework which targets CommonJs environments (i.e NodeJs). It lets you define custom context-independent bindings and then uses a supplied require function to load individual modules, currying in their dependency trees at runtime.

var k = require('ketamine')(require);

###Usage

Suppose you're developing a layered application, and you would like to get rid of those nasty inter-module dependencies. Say your project's folder structure looks something like this:

- node_modules
- services
  | - userService.js
  |_
- repositories
  | - userRepository.js
  | - profileRepository.js
  |_
- database
  | - dbContext.js
  |_

Consider the following: the files in services and repositories folders are exporting constructor functions, and the dbContext file contains an object aggregating your database tables. Now, both userRepository and profileRepository rely on dbContext to get their data, and userService should rely on both repositories to perform more complex operations. The dependencies are now identified, so your components should look something like this:

UserService = function (userRepo, profileRepo) { /* ... */ };
// ....
UserRepo = function (dbContext) { /* ... */ };
// ....
ProfileRepo = function (dbContext) { /* ... */ };
// ...
dbContext = { /* ... */ };

Configuring your components' dependencies has never been easier! Take a look at the following example, which will supply the right modules to those constructors' parameters:

var k = require('ketamine')(require);

k.configure(function (module) {

	module('services/userService')
		.requires('repositories/userRepository')
		  .asInstance()
		.requires('repositories/profileRepository')
		  .asInstance();

	module('repositories/userRepository')
		.requires('database/dbContext');

	module('repositories/profileRepository')
		.requires('database/dbContext');
});

// Now you can get the new bound user service constructor
var UserService = k.require('services/userService');

// Or you can just create a new UserService instance
var userService = k.create('services/userService');

Notice the presence of the module('module').requires('dependency').asInstance() method chains. These flags tell the injector that, for the given module, it should instantiate the component exported by dependency before injecting it, therefore recursively loading any other dependencies for dependency in the same manner. If asInstance() is not specified, the raw exported content is injected for the given dependency.

###Enforcing interfaces

Besides specifying instantiation policies for individual module dependencies, you may also apply filters on what you can inject into one module. For example, in a dependent module, you would use regularly use it's dependencies' methods, so you need to make sure that those dependencies actually have those methods.

var UserService = function (userRepo /* and other deps... */) {
  this.userRepo = userRepo;
};

UserService.prototype.create = function (mail, password) {

  // use the repo to access the database
  this.userRepo.create(mail, password, function (user) {
  
    // then do some other stuff
    console.log('User created successfully!');
  });
};

To validate any candidate userRepo, when configuring ketamine, you could specify what interface the dependency should implement:

k.configure(function (module) {

	module('services/userService')
		.requires('repositories/userRepository')
			.asInstance()
			.asImplementationOf([
			  {
			    create: function () {}
			  }
			]);
			
	// then specify your other bindings...
});

The asImplementationOf method accepts an array of interfaces that the dependency should implement. The array's items can be prototype-like objects, such as the one in the example, constructor functions or even strings representing paths to other modules.

Use with RequireJS

Ketamine will soon expose a fluent syntactic sugar API to use with RequireJS. Comming soon...

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