last day (14 days later) » 

08:47
0
A: Implementing Class Table Inheritance in Loopback

OverdrivrLoopback doesn't provide this type of inheritance. Models are merely templates, and extending a model just create a new template with properties/methods obtained from the inherited model. I understand that you want to abstract whether a customer is a person or an organization.This looks like a...

Thanks - I don't have an Order model - did you mean Customer?
No, I really meant Orders to store your orders, sales. IMO you should drop the customer model since it represents more a relation between an order and a client.
IMO you should drop the customer model since it represents more a relation between an order and a client - What happens to fields that are common between a Person and an Organisation then? Duplicate them in each model? Also the Order model you have is confusing me - I don't and won't have Orders in any part of the system at all
I called the polymorphic relation orderable, but not a wise choice. Best name would actually be customers, because then could do a GET api/Orders/customers and get all person and orgs that passed an order. I will edit my answer
You can either duplicate them or build a specific model for storing them, then add a relation Person hasOne CommonProps and Organisation hasOne CommonPros.
I thought your system was meant to keep tracks of orders made by customers. In that case it made sense to have a polymorphic relation. But if you don't keep track of orders, I suspect you don't need to bother with inheritance at all. Could you detail more your goal ? Why do you need inheritance ?
Well, I've got 2 Similar entities, the Person and the Organisation - Those 2 will share a lot of common fields and relations with other tables. They need to be kept distinct (no way of having only Customer), because while they share a lot of stuff, in other cases they don't
08:47
OK I see better now. Let me formulate another answer
Would it make more sense to give you more info here?
I'd hate to pollute the answer with comments :)
And first of all, thanks for taking the time
I've been banging my head against the wall
Sure, no problem
So, the way I see it
You should use forget about inheritance in this case
So Basically I've got 2 extremely similar Entities in many aspects (relationships with other models, fields and even methods)
Okay
Have all models extend persisted models
That means that I would have a lot of duplication though no?
08:50
PersistedModel
Not necessarily
Then you have either your Person or Organization models
where you store specific data
Then use the Customer model
to store common data and methods
got it
Then again
Finally, create a Person hasOne Customer (then maybe customer is not the ideal name here)
same for Organization
Hum
Why not the other way around
Customer has one person
Customer has one Organisation
08:53
Because in that case it means a single Customer instance will belong to both a person and an organization
this is not what you are trying to do right ?
ok
Nop - A Customer can be either a Person or an Organisation
Ok
But the best option would be for customer to use a polymorphic relation anyway
Basically, it will say Customer belongsTo (Person OR Organization)
This is ideal for you no ?
I'm not exactly sure since i have 0 experieence with Active-Record style relationships
The way you describe it, how would I create a new Person ?
Post to which endpoint?
POST /customer or POST /person?
I'm asking this because it viewing it from a POST standpoint will make it more clear in my head
08:57
Without extra code, you will have to do it in two steps
First create a person (or an org) POST api/Persons or POST api/Organizations
get the id and use it to POST api/Customers
Then POST api/Persons/:id/customerable
oh got it
yikes
not really an elegant solution :/
What would you do?
You can also make a POST api/Customers, but then will need one more call to create the relation between the Customer and the Organization/Person
09:00
If you want to do it in a single call, it's not an issue
How would you do that?
You can create a custom endpoint
Got it
Where I perform the inserts manually
Yes ;)
Okay in the custom endpoint case
I get it that I need to create a custom POST endpoint
do I need a customer endpoint for GETting a customer as well
along the lines of this
GET api/customers/1
09:02
To also get the owner (person or org) ?
sorry I'm confusing you
No, you can use an include filter in your GET request
let me try again
oh got it
and search in either Person or Organisation for a match
?
Assuming customer with id=1 is a Person
If I do GET api/customers/1, will it fetch both the common and the person-specific fields?
How would it know which customer type is 1?
Or do I need to use a custom endpoint for GET as well?
09:08
ok so
If you do GET api/ustomers/1 you will get only customer data
but if you do
GET api/customers/1?filter[include]=customerable
You will get either the Person or the Org
(I have updated my example, customerable is the name of the polymorphic relationship)
Then, to know if it's a person or org
You can add a discriminator value to the polymorphic relationship
For instance in the org model
"polymorphic": {
"as": "customerable",
"discriminator": "org"
}
and when you make GET api/customers/1?filter[include]=customerable
if it's an org, you will get in the discriminator prop the value org
got it
thanks
if you had to choose between duplication and the solution we just discussed?
what would you do
Reason I ask is this
I'm feeling that using this workaround to Class Table Inheritance might cause problems with other relations later on
It doesn't seem like Loopback is meant for this kind of workaround
I.E from what you described it looks like it wants to deal with models in a more atomic way
By workaround you mean polymorphic relationships ?
yup
Or are the polymorphic relationships meant to be used for this kind of problems?
Well that's not a workaround that's really the standard way when dealing with this kind of situation
Oh perfect
But okay
If I ditch any type of inheritance
how do I inherit the custom methods of Customer?
for Person and Org
?
Because the polymorphic relationship is at the end just that...a relation
it won't give me access to Customer methods in Person/Org
But then again I might not need them at all
Since I will be dealing GET/POST/PUT/DELETE only on Customer
09:18
Ok so I'm not sure exactly what you mean
Ugh - a bit confusing :)
You are talking about duplicating fields inside Person and Orgs right ?
yup
i'm talking about the next thing now
Let's say that there are common Custom Methods in both Person/Org
09:19
Well in that case that's not good, you will need to implement them in Person and in Org
Got it
So there's no clean way to go about this
If I want all the eggs in one basket
But polymorphic relation (and relation in general) let you obtain the related object (either in REST api with the id or node api with the object itself)
Once you have the related object of a customer (Person or Org) you can call methods of it
So really the clean way should be to go polymorphic :)
Yeah I think sharing Custom Methods doesn't make sense at all
Common Methods are on Customer
Specific Methods on Person, Specific on Organisation
hm...
nice
Thanks - I think that covers me :)
09:22
Perfect - I have edited my post with exactly the config that should suit you
I'll give it a spin first thing when I finish work
Yes that's the best way to understand LB
Have you used it extensively?/
For over a year now
Launched a service with it last week
Comments??
It got me intrigued because I'm doing everything by hand here (meaning just use Express) and define my own architectures in my server)
09:24
At first I was a bit dubious because generally I am dubious regarding stuff that tell you "get smth running in minutes"
yeah same here
It looks like a structured way of doing stuff
I mean it's a framework
I really like the concept but I'm afraid it might restrict me
But frankly I have never felt restricted by it
That's really nice to hear
What have you been using previously to this?
And it does many essential things that would take a long time to develop test and maintain
authentication for instance
Exactly
I've rolled my own
But I'd prefer if I didn't
I also really liked the whole portable across DB's thing
09:26
That too
I've got a huge project that I'm about to finish
And all the plugins
cloud-storage
email
etc.
And I got that gnarling feeling where you want to just refactor everything to the new thing you just found (i.e Loopback)
hehe
Oh wow - it's got plugins as well?
Well, don't know if it's called plugin
but all the connectors are useful
Oh and almost forget what is most definitely the biggest selling point to me
yeah please shoot
09:29
Automatic generation of the matching angular service for your server
I'm all ears
ohh, you mean the SDK stuff it spits out
This is just great
Yes
I'm using Polymer
don't think it spits out Polymer-ic SDKs as well
but I really don't mind - everything else still sells it to me
Hum, not in the standard distribution
But I think someone wrote a tool that creates SDK for a bunch of client-side framework
I'll look into it
Where are you deploying?
Like, which PaaS?
09:32
Nope, just vps on OVH - it's mostly an experiment so we're just trying to keep costs low
Okay great
Can I shoot another question or 2?
Okay so here's the deal
The project I'm doing right now is meant for local environments
Meaning corporate networks where speeds are high
I'm fetching a huge JSON for my Customers which includes data from multiple DB tables
The user modifies parts of that JSON and sends it back as a whole - my server processes and saves stuff accordingly
Can I do that in Loopback?
Like assemble a huge JSON from many related tables
with a single call
same for POST/PUT
Normal, web-facing apps just GET/POST a single model
Well you can do it, but you should not do it with your API server
Okay, you mean make the calls on the front-end and assemble it there
make the calls for each Model on the front, and the front assembles it to that huge JSON
same when POST/PUT ing back
?
09:38
You could do it client-side, not sure if it will be really efficient though. you can do it in the backend too, but just you should run a microservice for doing it
To offload the task from your api server
otherwise it will become unresponsive during the processing
Ah got it
Why not on the client?
Use a lightweight communication protocol like AMQP between the api server and the microservice
otherwise it will become unresponsive during the processing <- You mean it's gonna block the thread
You can do it on the client-side too
I think it makes more sense than introducing a microservice
09:40
But if it's computationnally intensive, maybe on some machines it will slow down the user's browser
No I don't think so
I mean - if I rapid-fire 20 calls to fetch the models and assemble them into one huge Customer JSON is that too much?
AJAX is async no?
And I don't see where that is computationally intensive
I cannot answer that for sure, depends on too many things ;) Requests are ok, it's really no problem (when the browser loads a website it does hundreds of GET requests)
Yup exactly
Perfect
If the computation is not intensive then yes sounds smart to do it client side
I think that's the way to go
09:42
The last question is do you trust the client to make that task
If yes, then it's ideal client-side
Yeah why not?
I'm building the front-end as well
it's just a matter of coding it
It's not a public facing API
I mean
It's running on corporate network so chances that somebody will modify front-end scripts is low right ?
No one in the company will be dumb enough to do it ? :)
Um, you mean maliciously?
Even if they do what's the issue?
How can that be exploited?
09:48
Depends on what you do with the JSON data
But still
It's a Customer that they can modify
It's on a corporate network but I like to think of it as a real web-facing application so I make it efficient and secure
If they have the rights to make any changes to the JSON client-side, then you can do it client-side
Ahh got it
Because then I don't have granularity for restricting sections of the JSON
if I mix everything together
Yes exactly
But the multiple requests solve this actually
since a call to a restricted section would simply not fill that part of the JSON
I mean when assembling the JSON client side
same for POST/PUT. When POSTING back a Customer I POST each model separately
to it's endpoint
So basically any communication for GET/POST/PUT A Customer with the server always happens using mulitple calls, one for each model
the JSON get's assembled on the front
and then sends it back in the same parts it came for POST/PUT
awesome
I think this is headed somewhere
Final question
how did you learn Loopback?
Do you have any good resources for me?
Apart from the official docs?
09:59
Mostly from the official docs
Stack overflow is really helpful
hah, yeah - again million thanks
What were you using before
?
For building APIs
?
Sure ;) Want to keep posted with twitter ?
Nothing before
what's your handle?
10:01
@remibgs
Ok I have to go
see you around
Bye and good luck with loopback ;)
Don't hesistate with twitter if you have questions
Really? I owe you a truckload of beers
I'll post them on Twitter with my next question!

last day (14 days later) »