Simple dependency injection, based on KotlinSerialization
Go to file
2020-02-15 12:15:42 +06:00
gradle/wrapper updates 2019-11-22 10:11:31 +06:00
src refactor renames 2020-02-13 20:56:03 +06:00
.gitignore init 2019-11-19 18:16:59 +06:00
build.gradle decrease number of expected functions 2020-02-13 12:56:04 +06:00
CHANGELOG.md fix changelog 2020-02-15 12:15:42 +06:00
gradle.properties update publish scripts 2020-01-19 14:07:11 +06:00
gradlew init 2019-11-19 18:16:59 +06:00
gradlew.bat init 2019-11-19 18:16:59 +06:00
LICENSE Initial commit 2019-11-19 09:24:10 +00:00
maven.publish.gradle update publish scripts 2020-01-19 14:07:11 +06:00
mpp_publish_config.json update publish scripts 2020-01-19 14:07:11 +06:00
publish.gradle update publish scripts 2020-01-19 14:07:11 +06:00
README.md update readme 2020-01-19 14:51:22 +06:00
settings.gradle updates 2019-11-22 10:11:31 +06:00

SDI

It is simple (in comparison with other systems) DI, which aim to be compatible and predictable.

Platforms support

  • JVM
  • JS
  • Native

Required environment

To use this library you will need two things:

  • Json serializer
  • Json config

Unfortunately, currently not supported other formats (due to issue in Kotlinx.serialization)

Format of config

Full examples of usage you can find in tests. In two words, there are a few rules for constructing of config:

  • Config root is an Json Object
  • Config root names will be used as dependency names
  • In the config dependency names can be used everywhere
  • In places, where dependency will be injected, must be used @ContextualSerializer annotation or @Serializer(ContextSerializer::class)

Examples

Lets imagine, that we have several interfaces and classes:

package com.example

// ... //

interface ControllerAPI {
    fun showUp()
}
interface ServiceAPI {
    val names: List<String>
}

@Serializable
class Controller(@ContextualSerialization val service: ServiceAPI) : ControllerAPI {
    override fun showUp() {
        println("Inited with name \"${service.names}\"")
    }
}
@Serializable
class BusinessService(override val names: List<String>) : ServiceAPI

Here there is common way to create all of this directly:

val service = BusinessService(listOf("One", "Two"))
val controller = Controller(service)

And with config for this library:

{
  "service": [
    "com.example.BusinessService",
    {
      "names": ["One", "Two"]
    }
  ],
  "controller": [
    "com.example.Controller",
    {
      "service": "service"
    }
  ]
}

List example you can find in this test. Besides, usually you can create objects inside of places where expected something like dependency injection directly. In this case config will look like:

{
  "controller": [
    "com.example.Controller",
    {
      "service": [
        "com.example.BusinessService",
        {
          "names": ["One", "Two"]
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

More expanded example you can find in suitable test.