85
Copyright 2009 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. Practical Domain-Specific Languages with Groovy All the techniques to create your own DSLs Guillaume Laforge Head of Groovy Development

Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2009 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Practical Domain-Specific Languages with Groovy

All the techniques to create your own DSLs

Guillaume Laforge

Head of Groovy Development

Page 2: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• Groovy Project Manager

• JSR-241 Spec Lead

• Head of Groovy Developmentat SpringSource

• Initiator of the Grails framework

• Co-author of Groovy in Action

• Speaker: JavaOne, QCon, JavaZone, Sun TechDays, Devoxx, The Spring Experience, JAX, Dynamic Language World, IJTC, and more...

Guillaume Laforge

2

Page 3: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

A few words about Groovy

• Groovy is a dynamic language for the JVM

–with a Meta Object Protocol

–compiles directly to bytecode, seamless Java interop

• Open Source ASL 2 project hosted at Codehaus

• Relaxed grammar derived from Java 5

–+ borrowed good ideas from Ruby, Python, Smalltalk

• Fast... for a dynlang on the JVM

• Closures, properties, optional typing, BigDecimal by default, nice wrapper APIs, and more...

3

Page 4: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• The context and the usual issues we face

• Some real-life examples of Domain-Specific Languages

• Groovy’s DSL capabilities

• Integrating a DSL in your application

• Considerations to remember when designing your own DSL

Agenda

4

Page 5: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

The context

Page 6: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Subject Matter Experts,Business analysts...

Page 7: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

HAI

CAN HAS STDIO?

I HAS A VAR

IM IN YR LOOP

UP VAR!!1

VISIBLE VAR

IZ VAR BIGGER THAN 10?

KTHXBYE

IM OUTTA YR LOOP

KTHXBYE

Developer producing LOLCODE

Page 8: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Lots of languages...

Page 9: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

And in the end......nobody understands each other

Page 10: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. 10

Expressing requirements...

Page 11: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

DSL: a potential solution?

•Use a more expressive language than a general purpose one

•Share a common metaphore of understanding between developers and subject matter experts

•Have domain experts help with the design of the business logic of an application

•Avoid cluttering business code with too much boilerplate technical code

•Cleanly separate business logic from application code

•Let business rules have their own lifecycle

11

Page 12: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (1)

12

Page 13: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (1)

12

Page 14: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (1)

20%

12

Page 15: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (2)

13

Page 16: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (2)

13

Page 17: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Towards more readibility (2)

80%

13

Page 18: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• The context and the usual issues we face

• Some real-life examples of Domain-Specific Languages

• Groovy’s DSL capabilities

• Integrating a DSL in your application

• Considerations to remember when designing your own DSL

Agenda

14

Page 19: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• In our everyday life, we’re surrounded by DSLs

–Technical dialects

–Notations

–Business languages

15

A collection of DSLs

Page 20: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. 16

Technical dialects

Page 21: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

SQL

Page 22: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. 18

^[\w-\.]+@([\w-]){2,4}$

Page 23: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. 19

Notations

Page 24: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

1. e4 e52. Nf3 Nc63. Bb5 a6

Page 25: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

L2 U F-1 B L2 F B -1 U L2

Page 26: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Visual!

Page 27: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited. 23

Business languages

Page 28: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Real-life Groovy examples

• Anti-malaria drug resistance simulation

• Human Resources employee skills representation

• Insurance policies risk calculation engine

• Loan acceptance rules engine for a financial platform

• Mathematica-like lingua for nuclear safety simulations

• Market data feeds evolution scenarios

• and more...

24

Page 29: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• The context and the usual issues we face

• Some real-life examples of Domain-Specific Languages

• Groovy’s DSL capabilities

• Integrating a DSL in your application

• Considerations to remember when designing your own DSL

Agenda

25

Page 30: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

A flexible & malleable syntax

• No need to write full-blown classes, use scripts

• Optional typing (def)

–in scripts, you can even omit the def keyword

• Native syntax constructs

• Parentheses & semi-colons are optional

• Named arguments

• BigDecimal by default for decimal numbers

• Closures for custom control structures

• Operator overloading

26

Page 31: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Scripts vs classes

• Hide all the boilerplate technical code

–an end-user doesn’t need to know about classes

–public class Rule { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(“Hello”); }}

–println “Hello”

27

Page 32: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Optional typing

• No need to bother with types or even generics

–unless you want to!

• Imagine an interest rate lookup table method returning some generified type:

–Rate<LoanType, Duration, BigDecimal>[] lookupTable() { ... }def table = lookupTable()

• No need to repeat the horrible generics type info!

28

Page 33: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Native syntax constructs

• Lists

–[Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday]

• Maps

–[CA: ‘California’, TX: ‘Texas’]

• Ranges

–def bizDays = Monday..Friday

–def allowedAge = 18..65

–You can create your own custom ranges

29

Page 34: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Optional parens & semis

• Make statements and expressions look more like natural languages

–move(left);

–move left

30

Page 35: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Named arguments

• In Groovy you can mix named and unnamed arguments for method parameters

–named params are actually put in a map parameter

–plus optional parens & semis

• take 1.pill, of: Chloroquinine, after: 6.hours

• Corresponds to a method signature like:

–def take(Map m, MedicineQuantity mq)

31

Page 36: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

BigDecimal by default

• Main reason why financial institutions often decide to use Groovy for their business rules!

–Although these days rounding issues are overrated!

• Java vs Groovy for a simple interpolation equation

• BigDecimal uMinusv = c.subtract(a); BigDecimal vMinusl = b.subtract(c); BigDecimal uMinusl = a.subtract(b); return e.multiply(uMinusv) .add(d.multiply(vMinusl)) .divide(uMinusl, 10, BigDecimal.ROUND_HALF_UP);

• (d * (b - c) + e * (c - a)) / (a - b)

32

Page 37: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• When closures are last, they can be put “out” of the parentheses surrounding parameters

•unless (account.balance > 100.euros, { account.debit 100.euros })

•unless (account.balance > 100.euros) { account.debit 100.euros}

• Signature def unless(boolean b, Closure c)

33

Custom control structures,thanks to closures

Page 38: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Operator overloading

•Currency amounts–15.euros + 10.dollars

•Distance handling–10.kilometers - 10.meters

•Workflow, concurrency–taskA | taskB & taskC

•Credit an account–account << 10.dollarsaccount += 10.dollarsaccount.credit 10.dollars

a + b a.plus(b)

a - b a.minus(b)

a * b a.multiply(b)

a / b a.divide(b)

a % b a.modulo(b)

a ** b a.power(b)

a | b a.or(b)

a & b a.and(b)

a ^ b a.xor(b)

a[b] a.getAt(b)

a << b a.leftShift(b)

a >> b a.rightShift(b)

+a a.positive()

-a a.negative()

~a a.bitwiseNegate()

34

Page 39: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Groovy’s dynamic heart:

The MOP!MetaObject Protocol

Page 40: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Groovy’s MOP

• All the accesses to methods, properties, constructors, operators, etc. can be intercepted thanks to the MOP

• While Java’s behavior is hard-wired at compile-time in the class

• Groovy’s runtime behavior is adaptable at runtime through the metaclass.

• Different hooks for changing the runtime behavior

–GroovyObject, custom MetaClass implementation, categories, ExpandoMetaClass

36

Page 41: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

GroovyObject

• All instances of classes created in Groovy implement the GroovyObject interface:

–getProperty(String name)

–setProperty(String name, Object value)

–invokeMethod(String name, Object[] params)

–getMetaClass()

–setMetaClass(MetaClass mc)

• A GO can have “pretended” methods and properties

37

Page 42: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

MetaClass

• The core of Groovy’s MOP system

–invokeConstructor()

–invokeMethod() and invokeStaticMethod()

–invokeMissingMethod()

–getProperty() and setProperty()

–getAttribute() and setAttribute()

–respondsTo() and hasProperty()

• MetaClasses can change the behavior of existing third-party classes — even from the JDK

38

Page 43: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

ExpandoMetaClass

• A DSL for MetaClasses!

• MoneyAmount.metaClass.constructor = { ... }Number.metaClass.getDollars = { ... }Distance.metaClass.toMeters = { ... }Distance.metaClass.static.create = { ... }

• To avoid repetition of Type.metaClass, you can pass a closure to metaClass { ... }

• The delegate variable in closure represents the

current instance, and it the default parameter

39

Page 44: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

The Builder pattern

Page 45: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

The Groovy MarkupBuilder

•def mkp = new MarkupBuilder()mkp.html { head { title “Groovy in Action” } body { div(width: ‘100’) { p(class: ‘para) { span “Best book ever!” } } }}

41

Page 46: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

A builder for HR

• softskills { ideas { capture 2 formulate 3 } ...}knowhow { languages { java 4 groovy 5 } ...}

42

Page 47: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

A builder for HR

• softskills { ideas { capture 2 formulate 3 } ...}knowhow { languages { java 4 groovy 5 } ...}

42

Page 48: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Builders

• Builders are...

–a mechanism for creating any tree-structered graph

–the realization of the GoF builder pattern at the syntax level in Groovy

–simply a clever use of chained method invocation, closures, parentheses omission, and use of the GroovyObject methods

• Existing builders

–XML, Object graph, Swing, Ant, JMX, and more...

43

Page 49: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

The clever trick

• GroovyObject#invokeMethod() is used to catch all non-existing method calls in the context of the builder

• The nesting of closures visually shows the level of nesting / depth in the tree

• builder.m1(attr1:1, attr2:2, { builder.m2(...,

{...}) } becomes equivalent to

builder.m1(attr1:1, attr2:2) { m2(...) {...} }

thanks to parens omission

44

Page 50: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Adding properties to numbers

• Three possible approaches

–create a Category

•a category is a kind of decorator for default MCs

–create a custom MetaClass

•a full-blown MC class to implement and to set on the POGO instance

–use ExpandoMetaClass

•friendlier DSL approach but with a catch

45

Page 51: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

With a Category

• class DistanceCategory { static Distance getMeters(Integer self) { new Distance(self, Unit.METERS) }}

use(DistanceCategory) { 100.meters}

• Interesting scope: thread-bound & lexical

• But doesn’t work across the hierarchy of classes

–ie. subclasses won’t benefit from the new property

46

Page 52: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

With an ExpandoMetaClass

• Number.metaClass.getMeters = {-> new Distance(delegate, Unit.METERS) }

100.meters

• Works for the class hierarchy for POJOs, and a flag exists to make it work for POGOs too

• But the catch is it’s really a global change, so beware EMC enhancements collisions

47

Page 53: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Compile-time metaprogramming

• Groovy 1.6 introduced AST Transformations

• Compile-time == No runtime performance penalty!

Transformation

48

Page 54: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

AST Transformations

• Two kinds of transformations

–Global transformations

•applicable to all compilation units

–Local transformations

•applicable to marked program elements

•using specific marker annotations

49

Page 55: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Example #1: @Singleton

• Let’s revisit this evil (anti-)pattern! public class Evil { public static final Evil instance = new Evil (); private Evil () {} Evil getInstance() { return instance; } }

• In Groovy! @Singleton class Evil {}

• Also a “lazy” version! @Singleton(lazy = true) class Evil {}

50

Page 56: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• You can delegate to fields of your classes

–class Employee { def doTheWork() { “done” }}class Manager { @Delegate Employee slave = new Employee()}def god = new Manager()assert god.doTheWork() == “done”

• Damn manager who will get all the praiser...

51

Example #2: @DelegateNot just for Managers

Page 57: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Global transformations

• Implement ASTTransformation

• Annotate the transfo specifying a compilation phase

• @GroovyASTTransformation(phase=CompilePhase.CONVERSION)public class MyTransformation implements ASTTransformation { public void visit(ASTNode[] nodes, SourceUnit unit) { ... }}

• For discovery, create the file META-INF/services/org.codehaus.groovy.transform.ASTTransformation

• Add the fully qualified name of the class in that file

52

Page 58: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Local transformations

• Same approach as Globale transformations

• But you don’t need the META-INF file

• Instead create an annotation to specify on which element the transformation should apply

• @Retention(RetentionPolicy.SOURCE)@Target([ElementType.METHOD])@GroovyASTTransformationClass( ["fqn.MyTransformation"])public @interface WithLogging {...}

53

Page 59: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Example: the Spock framework

• Changing the semantics of the original code

• But keeping a valid Groovy syntax

• @Speckclass HelloSpock { def "can you figure out what I'm up to?"() { expect: name.size() == size

where: name << ["Kirk", "Spock", "Scotty"] size << [4, 5, 6] }}

54

Page 60: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• The context and the usual issues we face

• Some real-life examples of Domain-Specific Languages

• Groovy’s DSL capabilities

• Integrating a DSL in your application

• Considerations to remember when designing your own DSL

Agenda

55

Page 61: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Various integration mechanisms

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• Java 6’s javax.script.* APIs (aka JSR-223)

• Spring’s language namespace

• Groovy’s own mechanisms

• But a key idea is to externalize those DSL programs

–DSL programs can have their own lifecycle

–no need to redeploy an application because of a rule change

–business people won’t see the technical code

56

Page 62: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Java 6’s javax.script.* API

• Groovy 1.6 provides its own implementation of the javax.script.* API

• ScriptEngineManager mgr = new ScriptEngineManager();ScriptEngine engine = mgr.getEngineByName(“Groovy”);

String result = (String)engine.eval(“2+3”);

57

Page 63: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Spring’s lang namespace

• POGOs (Plain Old Groovy Objects) can be pre-compiled as any POJO and used interchangeably with POJOs in a Spring application

• But Groovy scripts & classes can be loaded at runtime through the <lang:groovy/> namespace and tag

• Reloadable on change

• Customizable through a custom MetaClass

• <lang:groovy id="events" script-source="classpath:dsl/eventsChart.groovy" customizer-ref="eventsMetaClass" />

58

Page 64: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Groovy’s own mechanisms

• Eval

–for evaluating simple expressions

• GroovyShell

–for more complex scripts and DSLs

• GroovyClassLoader

–the most powerful mechanism

59

Page 65: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Eval

• Simple mechanism to evaluate math-like formulas

• Eval.me ( ‘3*4’)Eval.x (1, ‘3*x + 4’)Eval.xy (1, 2, ‘x + y’)Eval.xyz(1, 2, 3, ‘x * y - z’)

60

Page 66: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• A Binding provides a context of execution

–can implement lazy evaluation if needed

• A base script class can be specified

• def binding = new Binding()binding.mass = 22.3binding.velocity = 10.6def shell = new GroovyShell(binding)shell.evaluate(“mass * velocity ** 2 / 2”)

61

GroovyShell

Page 67: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

GroovyClassLoader

• Most powerful mechanism

–could also visit or change the AST

–scripts & classes can be loaded from elsewhere

–more control on compilation

• GroovyClassLoader gcl = new GroovyClassLoader();Class clazz = gcl.parseClass( new File(“f.groovy”));GroovyObject instance = (GroovyObject)clazz.newInstance();instance.setMetaClass(customMC);

62

Page 68: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Externalize business rules

• Although Groovy DSLs can be embedded in normal Groovy classes, you should externalize them

• Store them elsewhere

–in a database, an XML file, etc.

• Benefits

–Business rules are not entangled in technical application code

–Business rules can have their own lifecycle, without requiring application redeployments

63

Page 69: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• The context and the usual issues we face

• Some real-life examples of Domain-Specific Languages

• Groovy’s DSL capabilities

• Integrating a DSL in your application

• Considerations to remember when designing your own DSL

Agenda

64

Page 70: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Start small, with key concepts

Beware overengineering!

Page 71: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Grow your language progressively

Page 72: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Get your hands dirty

Play with the end-users

Page 73: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Let your DSL fly, it’s not yours, it’s theirs!

Page 74: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Tight feedback loop

Iterative process

Page 75: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Stay humble.

You can’t get it right the first time.

Don’t design alone at your deskInvolve the end users from the start

Page 76: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Playing it safein a sandbox

Page 77: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Various levels of sandboxing

• Groovy supports the usual Java Security Managers

• Use metaprogramming tricks to prevent calling / instanciating certain classes

• Create a special GroovyClassLoader AST code visitor to filter only the nodes of the AST you want to keep

–ArithmeticShell in Groovy’s samples

72

Page 78: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Test, test, test!

• Don’t just test for nominal cases

–Explicitely test for errors!

• Ensure end-users get meaninful error messages

73

Page 79: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• Summary

• Questions & Answers

Agenda

74

Page 80: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Summary

• Groovy’s a great fit for Domain-Specific Languages

–Malleable & flexible syntax

–Full object-orientation

• Metaprogramming capabilities

–Runtime metaprogramming

–Compile-time metaprogramming

• Groovy’s very often used for mission-critical DSLs

75

Page 81: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

GR8 Conference

• If you wish to learn more about Groovy, Grails and Griffon, register for the GR8 Conference

• A conference dedicated to Groovy, Grails, Griffon and other Groovy related technologies

• Co-organized by SpringSource and the Danish JUG (Javagruppen)

• Takes place in Copenhagen, Denmark, on May 18th and 19th

• Use the code SPRING to get a discount ;-)

76

Page 82: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

I kan haz my cheezburgr naw?Or do ya reely haz keshtionz?

?

Page 83: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

Appendix

78

Page 84: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/wheatfields/420088151/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/therefromhere/518053737/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/romainguy/230416692/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/addictive_picasso/2874279971/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/huangjiahui/3127634297/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/25831000@N08/3064515804/sizes/o/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/lanier67/3147696168/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/ktb/4916063/sizes/o/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/nathonline/918128338/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/kevinsteele/39300193/sizes/l/

• http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Brueghel-tower-of-babel.jpg

• http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Platypus.jpg

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/joaomoura/2317171808/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/wiccked/132687067/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/xcbiker/386876546/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/pietel/152403711/sizes/o/

79

Page 85: Practical Groovy Domain-Specific Languages - SpringOne Europe 2009

Copyright 2008 SpringSource. Copying, publishing or distributing without express written permission is prohibited.

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/forezt/192554677/sizes/o/

• http://keremkosaner.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/softwaredevelopment.gif

• http://www.jouy.inra.fr

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/ejpphoto/408101818/sizes/o/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/solaro/2127576608/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/biggreymare/2846899405/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/timsamoff/252370986/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/29738009@N08/2975466425/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/howie_berlin/180121635/sizes/o/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/yogi/1281980605/sizes/l/

• http://www.flickr.com/photos/dorseygraphics/1336468896/sizes/l/

80