appconfig

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Published: Nov 6, 2024 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 16 Imported by: 32

README

Wiring up app modules for use with appconfig

The appconfig framework allows Cosmos SDK modules to be composed declaratively using a configuration file without requiring the app developer to understand the details of inter-module dependencies.

1. Create a module config protobuf message

The first step in creating a module that works with appconfig, is to create a protobuf message for the module configuration. The best practices for defining the module configuration message are:

  • Use a dedicated protobuf package for the module configuration message instead of placing it in the API protobuf package. For example, the module configuration for bank would go in cosmos.bank.module.v1 instead of just cosmos.bank.v1. This decouples the state machine version from the API version.
  • The module configuration message is usually called simply Module, ex. cosmos.bank.module.v1.Module.
  • Create a new protobuf package and configuration message for each state machine breaking version of the module, ex. cosmos.bank.module.v2.Module, etc.

The module configuration message should include any parameters which should be initialized at application startup. For example, the auth module needs to know the bech32 prefix of the app and the permissions of module accounts.

In the future, it may be possible to update the app config through a governance proposal at runtime.

All module configuration messages should define a module descriptor, using the cosmos.app.v1alpha1.module message option.

Here is an example module configuration message for the auth module:

package cosmos.auth.module.v1;

import "cosmos/app/v1alpha1/module.proto";

message Module {
  option (cosmos.app.v1alpha1.module) = {
    go_import: "github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/x/auth"
  };
  string bech32_prefix = 1;
  repeated ModuleAccountPermission module_account_permissions = 2;
}

2. Register module depinject providers and invokers

Once we have a module config object, we need to register depinject providers and invokers for the module using the cosmossdk.io/core/appmodule package.

At the most basic level, we must define an init function in the package listed as the go_import in the module descriptor. This init function must call appconfig.RegisterModule with an empty instance of the config object and some options for initializing the module, ex:

func init() {
 appconfig.RegisterModule(&modulev1.Module{},
    // options
  )
}
depinject Provider and Invoker Basics

A depinject "provider" is a function which takes dependencies from other modules as inputs and returns outputs for other modules to use as dependencies. A depinject "invoker" is function which takes optional dependencies as inputs, returns no outputs, and is run at the end of initializing the dependency graph. Providers are much more common than invokers and should be the preferred method of wiring up modules when possible. Providers and invokers can be registered for modules by using appconfig.Provide and appconfig.Invoke to create options which get passed to appconfig.RegisterModule in the module init function, ex:

func init() {
  appconfig.RegisterModule(&modulev1.Module{},
   appconfig.Provide(provideSomething, provideSomethingElse),
   appconfig.Invoke(invokeSomething),
  )
}
depinject Types

depinject constructor functions support these classes of input and output parameter types:

  • regular golang types (with special treatment of interface types as input parameters)
  • structs with depinject.In and depinject.Out embedded
  • depinject.OnePerModuleTypes
  • depinject.ManyPerContainerTypes
  • depinject.ModuleKey (which can only be defined as an input type)
  • error (which gets special treatment as an output type)
Regular Golang Types

Regular golang types (besides the special cases described above) can be provided as both input and output parameters to providers and invokers. For depinject to match an output parameter of one provider to an input parameter of another, there must be an exact match for the type unless the input parameter is an input type. For instance, if a provider defines a dependency on Foo and some module provides *Foo, these two types will not match and there will be an error.

Interface Input Types

When interfaces are used as input parameters to providers and invokers, depinject will search the container for all types that implement this interface. If there is an unambiguously matching type, then this type will be used to satisfy that interface. If there is a conflict between two types matching the interface, the app developer can use golang_bindings options in their app config in order to resolve the conflict.

Structs with embedded depinject.In and depinject.Out

Structs that have depinject.In or depinject.Out as an embedded field are treated specially by depinject, where all of these structs fields are treated as input or output parameters, respectively. These structs allow custom options to be defined using struct field tags. Currently, the only supported custom option is optional:"true" which marks a field as optional.

depinject.OnePerModuleTypes

Any type which implements the depinject.OnePerModuleType interface can be provided at most once by every module. These types can be collected as an input parameter to some provider or invoker by defining an input parameter which is a map of module names as strings to this parameter type. For example if Foo is a OnePerModuleType, then map[string]Foo can be declared as an input parameter by some provider (which obviously cannot provide an instance of Foo itself because that would cause a circular dependency).

OnePerModuleTypes should be used whenever different modules may provide the type and there is a need to provide an ordering of these types based on the module name. Generally, in blockchains there is always a need for deterministic orderings so using module names to provide that ordering is generally a good strategy for this use case. Ordering based on module names can either be done implicitly by sorting the module names or explicitly as a parameter in the module configuration object.

depinject.ManyPerContainerTypes

ManyPerContainerTypes can be provided by as many providers in as many modules as the user would like. If a type Bar is a ManyPerContainerType, a provider may define an output parameter of Bar or []Bar to provide Bar instances to the container. A provider may define an input parameter of []Bar to get all of the Bar instances in the container (such a provider may not also return Bar as that would cause a circular dependency). The ordering of Bar instances in the []Bar input type should be assumed to be deterministic.

ManyPerContainerTypes should be used only when 1) ordering is unimportant or 2) the ordering can be defined by some parameter on the type. For instance, if Bar had a field Name string, that is supposed to be unique in the container then that could be used to provide an ordering. An example of a type that could work as a ManyPerContainerType in this way is a wrapper around *cobra.Command, ex. type QueryCommand struct {*cobra.Command}. This could be used to collect all the query commands in an app and then cobra would take care of ordering. If this type of ordering is not available, a OnePerModuleType is probably a better bet.

Module-scoped Providers/depinject.ModuleKey as an input

If depinject.ModuleKey is used as input parameter for a provider, the provider function will be treated as a "module-scoped provider" which means that the provider function will be called exactly once every time one of its outputs is needed by a module so that the provider can provide a unique instance of the dependency to each module.

Module-scoped dependencies should be used to provide dependencies which are private and unique to each module. Examples of these are store keys and param subspaces.

error as an output parameter

error can be used as the last output parameter on any provider or invoker. If a provider or invoker with an error parameter returns a non-nil value for error, depinject will fail and propagate this error up to the caller.

Provider Invocation Details

Providers are called lazily as they are needed and will be invoked at most once (except for "module-scoped providers" described above) if and only if at least one of their outputs is needed somewhere in the dependency graph. Providers will only get called if all of their non-optional inputs can successfully be resolved by some other module, otherwise an error will occur. Modules should proactively mark dependencies as optional if the module can still be successfully built without this dependency.

Invoker Invocation Details

Invokers are called at the end of container initialization after all providers that were needed to build the graph were called. All the dependencies of invokers are automatically marked as optional so invokers should nil check every input parameter. Invokers may cause additional providers to get run if they have a dependency that wasn't built yet. But if a dependency to an invoker cannot be provided for some reason, the invoker will still get called but with nil for that input. This allows invokers to still work with the lazy invocation model of providers which only builds things which are actually necessary as a dependency for some module or the caller.

Invokers should generally be used sparingly to perform some initialization logic which can't be done in the initial provider, usually because of a circular dependency, and which may be optional.

Best practices
  • make dependencies optional whenever possible!
  • interface types should be used whenever possible to avoid tight couplings between two modules.
  • OnePerModuleTypes should be used when there is something occurs at most once per module and the module name is a convenient way for providing a deterministic order.
  • ManyPerContainerTypes should be used only when there is an obvious way to create an ordering from the types or when ordering really doesn't matter (which is rare).
  • module-scoped providers should be used for private, module-scoped dependencies
  • use different providers for unrelated or loosely components or to resolve circular dependencies (see below)
  • use invokers sparingly and always nil-check the inputs.
Resolving Circular Dependencies

Circular dependencies are inevitable to crop up and there are ways to avoid them. While depinject cannot handle circular dependency graphs of providers, many of the above tools are designed to enable satisfying circular dependencies between modules.

One of the key tactics for resolving circular dependencies is to use different providers and/or invokers to allow a circular dependency between components. For example, say the slashing keeper depends on the keeper module but the staking keeper also depends on the staking module indirectly (in the form of "staking hooks"). The slashing module can declare a dependency directly on the staking keeper (using an interface to avoid actually importing the staking keeper package). It can also provide an instance of the slashing keeper wrapped as staking hooks in a OnePerModuleType we'll call StakingHooksWrapper. Now, if the staking module directly depended on the staking hooks wrappers (map[string]StakingHooksWrapper) we would have a circular dependency graph and depinject would fail. To fix this, the staking module can define an invoker which depends on map[string]StakingHooksWrapper and the staking keeper (which was provided by the staking module already in a separate provided). In this way depinject will be able to satisfy this dependency graph which allows staking and slashing to depend on each other in this order:

  • provide staking keeper -> slashing keeper
  • provide slashing keeper wrapped as StakingHooksWrapper
  • get map[string]StakingHooksWrapper and the staking keeper and wire them together

3. Testing and Debugging The Module

In order to test and debug the module configuration, we need to build an app config, generally defined in a YAML file. This configuration should be passed first to appconfig.LoadYAML to get an depinject.Config instance.Then the depinject.Config can be passed to depinject.Inject and we can try to resolve dependencies in the app config. Alternatively, the depinject.Config can be created via pure Go code.

Ex:

//go:embed app.yaml
var appConfig []byte

var AppConfig = appconfig.LoadYAML(appConfig)

func TestModule(t *testing.T) {
 var keeper Keeper
 assert.NilError(t, depinject.Inject(AppConfig, &keeper))
}
Debugging depinject Graphs

Whenever there is an error in a depinject graph, by default depinject will dump a bunch of logging output to the console, print the error message, and save the dependency graph in GraphViz DOT format to the file debug_container.dot. Inspecting the GraphViz output by converting it to an SVG and viewing it in a web browser or using some other GraphViz tool is highly recommended.

If depinject does not return an error but there is still some weird issue wiring up modules, inspecting the GraphViz and logging output is still highly recommended and can be done using depinject.InjectDebug with the debug option depinject.Debug.

App developers should attempt to familiarize themselves with the GraphViz graph of their app to see which modules depend on which other modules.

Documentation

Overview

Package appconfig defines functionality for loading declarative Cosmos SDK app configurations.

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

View Source
var Register = RegisterModule

Functions

func Compose

func Compose(appConfig gogoproto.Message) depinject.Config

Compose composes an app config into a container option by resolving the required modules and composing their options. appConfig should be an instance of cosmos.app.v1alpha1.Config (it doesn't matter whether you use gogo proto or google.golang.org/protobuf types).

func LoadJSON

func LoadJSON(bz []byte) depinject.Config

LoadJSON loads an app config in JSON format.

func LoadYAML

func LoadYAML(bz []byte) depinject.Config

LoadYAML loads an app config in YAML format.

func RegisterModule

func RegisterModule(config any, options ...Option)

RegisterModule registers a module with the global module registry. The provided protobuf message is used only to uniquely identify the protobuf module config type. The instance of the protobuf message used in the actual configuration will be injected into the container and can be requested by a provider function. All module initialization should be handled by the provided options.

Protobuf message types used for module configuration should define the cosmos.app.v1alpha.module option and must explicitly specify go_package to make debugging easier for users.

func WrapAny

func WrapAny(config gogoproto.Message) *anypb.Any

WrapAny marshals a proto message into a proto Any instance

Types

type Option

type Option interface {
	// contains filtered or unexported methods
}

Option is a functional option for implementing modules.

func Invoke

func Invoke(invokers ...interface{}) Option

Invoke registers invokers to run with depinject (depinject.InvokeInModule). Each invoker will be called at the end of dependency graph configuration in the order in which it was defined. Invokers may not define output parameters, although they may return an error, and all of their input parameters will be marked as optional so that invokers impose no additional constraints on the dependency graph. Invoker functions should nil-check all inputs.

func Provide

func Provide(providers ...interface{}) Option

Provide registers providers with the dependency injection system that will be run within the module scope (depinject.ProvideInModule). See cosmossdk.io/depinject for documentation on the dependency injection system.

Directories

Path Synopsis

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