How we use Kotlin with Exposed at TouK

Why Kotlin? At TouK, we try to early adopt technologies. We don’t have a starter project skeleton that is reused in every new project, we want to try something that fits the project needs, even if it’s not that popular yet. We tried Kotlin first it mid 2016, right after reaching 1.0.2 version

Why Kotlin?

At TouK, we try to early adopt technologies. We don’t have a starter project skeleton reused in every new project; we want to try something that fits the project’s needs, even if it’s not that popular yet. We tried Kotlin first in mid-2016, right after reaching the 1.0.2 version. It was getting really popular in Android development, but almost nobody used it on the backend, especially — with production deployment. After reading some “hello world” examples, including this great article by Sebastien Deleuze we decided to try Kotlin as main language for a new MVNO project. The project was mainly a backend for a mobile app, with some integrations with external services (chat, sms, payments) and background tasks regarding customer subscriptions. We felt that Kotlin would be something fresh and more pleasant for developers, but we also liked the “not reinventing the wheel” approach — reusing large parts of the Java/JVM ecosystem we were happy with for existing projects (Spring, Gradle, JUnit, Mockito).

Why Exposed?

We initially felt that Kotlin + JPA/Hibernate is not a perfect match. Kotlin’s functional nature with first-class immutability support was not something that could seemly integrate with full-blown ORM started in the pre-Java8 era. But Sebastien’s article led us to try Exposed — a SQL access library maintained by JetBrains. From the beginning, we really liked the main assumptions of Exposed:

  • not trying to be full ORM framework
  • two flavors — typesafe SQL DSL and DAO/ActiveRecord style
  • lightweight, no reflection
  • no code generation
  • Spring integration
  • no annotations on your domain classes (in SQL DSL flavor)
  • open for extension (e.g. PostGIS and new DB dialects)

TL;DR

If you want to see how we use Kotlin + Exposed duo in our projects, check out this Github repo. It’s a Spring Boot app exposing REST API with the implementation of Medium clone as specified in http://realworld.io (“The mother of all demo apps”).

Another nice example is this repo by Seb Schmidt.

SQL DSL

In our projects we decided to try the “typesafe SQL DSL” flavor of Exposed. In this approach you don’t have to add anything to your domain classes, just need to write a simple schema mapping using Kotlin in configuration-as-code manner:

data class User(
  val username: Username,
  val password: String,
  val email: String
)

object UserTable : Table("users") {
    val username = text("username")
    val email = text("email")
    val password = text("password")
}

And then you can write type/null-safe queries with direct mapping to your domain classes:

UserTable.select { UserTable.username eq username }?.toUser()

// or 

UserTable.select { UserTable.username like username }.map { it.toUser() }

fun ResultRow.toUser() = User(
       username = this[UserTable.username],
       email = this[UserTable.email],
       password = this[UserTable.password]
)

RefIds

We like type-safe RefIds in our domain code. This is particularly useful in DDD-ish architectures, where you can keep those RefIds in a shared domain and use them to communicate between contexts.

So we wrap plan ids (longs, strings) into simple wrapper classes (e.g. UserId, ArticleId, Username, Slug). Exposed allows to easily register your own column types or even generic WrapperColumnType implementation that you can find in our repo.

Using this technique you can rewrite this mapping to something like this:

sealed class UserId : RefId<Long>() {
  object New : UserId() {
    override val value: Long by IdNotPersistedDelegate<Long>()
  }
  data class Persisted(override val value: Long) : UserId() {
    override fun toString() = "UserId(value=$value)"
  }
}

data class User(
   val id: UserId = UserId.New,
   //...
)

fun Table.userId(name: String) = longWrapper<UserId>(name, UserId::Persisted, UserId::value)

object UserTable : Table("users") {
  val id = userId("id").primaryKey().autoIncrement()
//...
}

And now we can query by type-safe RefIds:

override fun findBy(userId: UserId) =
  UserTable.select { UserTable.id eq userId }?.toUser()

Relationship mapping

One of the most significant selling points of ORMs is how easy it is to deal with relations. You just annotate the related field/collection with OneToOne or OneToMany and then can fetch the whole graph of objects at once. In theory — quite a nice idea, but in practice, things often go wrong. I’m not going to dig into details, instead, I recommend you read e.g. these fragments of “Opinionated JPA with Querydsl” book:

In Exposed SQL DSL approach you have to do relationship mapping by yourself — if you need to. Let’s consider Article and Tag case from our project’s domain. We have a many-to-many relation here, so we need additional “article_tags” table:

object ArticleTagTable : Table("article_tags") {
   val tagId = tagId("tag_id").references(TagTable.id)
   val articleId = articleId("article_id").references(ArticleTable.id)
}

When creating an Article, we have to attach all the associated Tags by populating Article’s generated id into ArticleTabTable entries:

override fun create(article: Article): Article {
   val savedArticle = ArticleTable.insert { it.from(article) }
           .getOrThrow(ArticleTable.id)
           .let { article.copy(id = it) }
   savedArticle.tags.forEach { tag ->
       ArticleTagTable.insert {
           it[ArticleTagTable.tagId] = tag.id
           it[ArticleTagTable.articleId] = savedArticle.id
       }
   }
   return savedArticle
}

The funny part is the mapping of Article with Tags in query methods — in API specification Tags are always returned with the Article — so we need to eagerly fetch tags by using leftJoin:

val ArticleWithTags = (ArticleTable leftJoin ArticleTagTable leftJoin TagTable)

override fun findBy(articleId: ArticleId) =
  ArticleWithTags
    .select { ArticleTable.id eq articleId }
    .toArticles()
    .singleOrNull()

After joining, we have then one ResultRow per one Article-Tag pair, so we have to group them by ArticleId, and build the correct Article object by adding Tags for each matching resultRow:

fun Iterable<ResultRow>.toArticles(): List<ResultRow> {
   return fold(mutableMapOf<ArticleId, Article>()) { map, resultRow ->
       val article = resultRow.toArticle()
       val tagId = resultRow.tryGet(ArticleTagTable.tagId)
       val tag = tagId?.let { resultRow.toTag() }
       val current = map.getOrDefault(article.id, article)
       map[article.id] = current.copy(tags = current.tags + listOfNotNull(tag))
       map
   }.values.toList()
}

This implementation allows us to solve all the possible cases:

  • no articles (fold just returns empty map)
  • articles with no tags (tag is null, so listOfNotNull(tag) is empty)
  • articles with many tags (an article with a single tag is inserted into the map, then other tags are added in copy method)

However, consider when you need to fetch the dependent structure with the root object? For tags it makes sense since you always want the tags with the article, and the count of tags for any article should not be that huge. What about the comments? You definitely don’t want all the comments each time you fetch the article, instead you’ll need some kind of paging or even making a parent-child hierarchy for comments for the article. That’s why we recommend having this relationship mapped indirectly — every Comment should have ArticleId property, and the CommentRepository could have methods like:

fun findAllBy(articleId: ArticleId): List<Comment>
// or
fun findAllByPaged(articleId: ArticleId, pageRequest: PageRequest): Page<Comment>

Extendibility

Exposed is by design open for extension, making it even easier with Kotlin’s support for extension methods. You can define your own column type or expressions, e.g. for PostGIS point type support as Sebastian showed in his article. We used similar PostGIS extension in our project too. We were also able to implement a simple support for Java8 DateTime column type — for now, Exposed has Joda-time support, a generic approach for various date/time libraries is planned in the roadmap.

The bigger thing was Oracle DB dialect — we were forced to migrate to Oracle at some time in our project. We submitted a pull-request with foundations of Oracle 12 support, being tested in production for a while (then, we moved back to PostgreSQL…). The implementation was rather straightforward, with DataType- and FunctionProvider interfaces to provide and just a few tweaks in batch insert support.

Final thoughts

Our developer experience with Kotlin+Exposed duo was really pleasant. If you don’t plan to map many relations directly, just use simple data classes, connected by RefIds, it works really well. The Exposed library itself may need more exhaustive documentation and removing some annoying details (e.g. transaction management via thread-local — which is already on the roadmap), but we definitely recommend you give it a try in your project!

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Grails session timeout without XML

This article shows clean, non hacky way of configuring featureful event listeners for Grails application servlet context. Feat. HttpSessionListener as a Spring bean example with session timeout depending on whether user account is premium or not.

Common approaches

Speaking of session timeout config in Grails, a default approach is to install templates with a command. This way we got direct access to web.xml file. Also more unnecessary files are created. Despite that unnecessary files are unnecessary, we should also remember some other common knowledge: XML is not for humans.

Another, a bit more hacky, way is to create mysterious scripts/_Events.groovy file. Inside of which, by using not less enigmatic closure: eventWebXmlEnd = { filename -> ... }we can parse and hack into web.xml with a help of XmlSlurper.
Even though lot of Grails plugins do it similar way, still it’s not really straightforward, is it? Besides, where’s the IDE support? Hello!?

Examples of both above ways can be seen on StackOverflow.

Simpler and cleaner way

By adding just a single line to the already generated init closure we have it done:
class BootStrap {

def init = { servletContext ->
servletContext.addListener(OurListenerClass)
}
}

Allrighty, this is enough to avoid XML. Sweets are served after the main course though :)

Listener as a Spring bean

Let us assume we have a requirement. Set a longer session timeout for premium user account.
Users are authenticated upon session creation through SSO.

To easy meet the requirements just instantiate the CustomTimeoutSessionListener as Spring bean at resources.groovy. We also going to need some source of the user custom session timeout. Let say a ConfigService.
beans = {    
customTimeoutSessionListener(CustomTimeoutSessionListener) {
configService = ref('configService')
}
}

With such approach BootStrap.groovy has to by slightly modified. To keep control on listener instantation, instead of passing listener class type, Spring bean is injected by Grails and the instance passed:
class BootStrap {

def customTimeoutSessionListener

def init = { servletContext ->
servletContext.addListener(customTimeoutSessionListener)
}
}

An example CustomTimeoutSessionListener implementation can look like:
import javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionEvent    
import javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionListener
import your.app.ConfigService

class CustomTimeoutSessionListener implements HttpSessionListener {

ConfigService configService

@Override
void sessionCreated(HttpSessionEvent httpSessionEvent) {
httpSessionEvent.session.maxInactiveInterval = configService.sessionTimeoutSeconds
}

@Override
void sessionDestroyed(HttpSessionEvent httpSessionEvent) { /* nothing to implement */ }
}
Having at hand all power of the Spring IoC this is surely a good place to load some persisted user’s account stuff into the session or to notify any other adequate bean about user presence.

Wait, what about the user context?

Honest answer is: that depends on your case. Yet here’s an example of getSessionTimeoutMinutes() implementation using Spring Security:
import org.springframework.security.core.context.SecurityContextHolder    

class ConfigService {

static final int 3H = 3 * 60 * 60
static final int QUARTER = 15 * 60

int getSessionTimeoutSeconds() {

String username = SecurityContextHolder.context?.authentication?.principal
def account = Account.findByUsername(username)

return account?.premium ? 3H : QUARTER
}
}
This example is simplified. Does not contain much of defensive programming. Just an assumption that principal is already set and is a String - unique username. Thanks to Grails convention our ConfigService is transactional so the Account domain class can use GORM dynamic finder.
OK, config fetching implementation details are out of scope here anyway. You can get, load, fetch, obtain from wherever you like to. Domain persistence, principal object, role config, external file and so on...

Any gotchas?

There is one. When running grails test command, servletContext comes as some mocked class instance without addListener method. Thus we going to have a MissingMethodException when running tests :(

Solution is typical:
def init = { servletContext ->
if (Environment.current != Environment.TEST) {
servletContext.addListener(customTimeoutSessionListener)
}
}
An unnecessary obstacle if you ask me. Should I submit a Jira issue about that?

TL;DR

Just implement a HttpSessionListener. Create a Spring bean of the listener. Inject it into BootStrap.groovy and call servletContext.addListener(injectedListener).