Dependency injection support for fastify framework, using awilix
First install the package and awilix:
npm i fastify-awilix awilix
Next, set up the plugin:
const { fastifyAwilixPlugin } = require('fastify-awilix')
const fastify = require('fastify')
app = fastify({ logger: true })
app.register(fastifyAwilixPlugin, { disposeOnClose: true, disposeOnResponse: true })
Then, register some modules for injection:
const { diContainer } = require('fastify-awilix')
const { asClass, asFunction, Lifetime } = require('awilix')
// Code from the previous example goes here
diContainer.register({
userRepository: asClass(UserRepository, {
lifetime: Lifetime.SINGLETON,
dispose: (module) => module.dispose(),
}),
})
app.addHook('onRequest', (request, reply, done) => {
request.diScope.register({
userService: asFunction(
({ userRepository }) => { return new UserService(userRepository, request.params.countryId) }, {
lifetime: Lifetime.SCOPED,
dispose: (module) => module.dispose(),
}),
})
done()
})
Note that there is no strict requirement to use classes, it is also possible to register primitive values, using either asFunction()
, or asValue()
. Check awilix documentation for more details.
After all the modules are registered, they can be resolved with their dependencies injected from app-scoped diContainer
and request-scoped diScope
. Note that diScope
allows resolving all modules from the parent diContainer
scope:
app.post('/', async (req, res) => {
const userRepositoryForReq = req.diScope.resolve('userRepository')
const userRepositoryForApp = app.diContainer.resolve('userRepository') // This returns exact same result as the previous line
const userService = req.diScope.resolve('userService')
// Logic goes here
res.send({
status: 'OK',
})
})
disposeOnClose
- automatically invoke configured dispose
for app-level diContainer
hooks when the fastify instance is closed.
Disposal is triggered within onClose
fastify hook.
Default value is true
disposeOnResponse
- automatically invoke configured dispose
for request-level diScope
hooks after the reply is sent.
Disposal is triggered within onResponse
fastify hook.
Default value is true
All dependency modules are resolved using either the constructor injection (for asClass
) or the function argument (for asFunction
), by passing the aggregated dependencies object, where keys
of the dependencies object match keys used in registering modules:
class UserService {
constructor({ userRepository }) {
this.userRepository = userRepository
}
dispose() {
// Disposal logic goes here
}
}
class UserRepository {
constructor() {
// Constructor logic goes here
}
dispose() {
// Disposal logic goes here
}
}
diContainer.register({
userService: asClass(UserRepository, {
lifetime: Lifetime.SINGLETON,
dispose: (module) => module.dispose(),
}),
userRepository: asClass(UserRepository, {
lifetime: Lifetime.SINGLETON,
dispose: (module) => module.dispose(),
}),
})
By default fastify-awilix
is using generic empty Cradle
and RequestCradle
interfaces, it is possible extend them with your own types:
awilix
defines Cradle as a proxy, and calling getters on it will trigger a container.resolve for an according module. Read more
declare module 'fastify-awilix' {
interface Cradle {
userService: UserService
}
interface RequestCradle {
user: User
}
}
//later, type is inferred correctly
fastify.diContainer.cradle.userService
// or
app.diContainer.resolve('userService')
// request scope
request.diScope.resolve('userService')
request.diScope.resolve('user')
Find more in tests or in example from awilix documentation
If you prefer classic injection, you can use it like this:
const { fastifyAwilixPlugin } = require('fastify-awilix/classic')
const fastify = require('fastify')
app = fastify({ logger: true })
app.register(fastifyAwilixPlugin, { disposeOnClose: true, disposeOnResponse: true })
For more advanced use-cases, check the official awilix documentation