A reactor is a class, that much like a projector, listens for incoming events. Unlike projectors however, reactors will not get called when events are replayed. Reactors will only get called when the original event fires.
##Creating reactors
Let's create a reactor. You can perform this artisan command to create a reactor in app\Reactors
:
php artisan make:reactor BigAmountAddedReactor
##Registering reactors
By default, the package will automatically find and register all reactors found in your application.
Alternatively, you can also manually register them in the reactors
key of the event-sourcings
config file.
They can also be added to the Projectionist
. This can be done anywhere, but typically you would do this in a ServiceProvider of your own.
namespace App\Providers;
use App\Projectors\AccountBalanceProjector;
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider;
use Spatie\EventSourcing\Facades\Projectionist;
class EventSourcingServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
public function register()
{
Projectionist::addReactor(BigAmountAddedReactor::class);
Projectionist::addReactors([
AnotherReactor::class,
YetAnotherReactor::class,
]);
}
}
##Using reactors
This is the contents of a class created by the artisan command mentioned in the section above:
namespace App\Reactors;
class MyReactor
{
public function onEventHappened(EventHappended $event)
{
}
}
Just by adding a typehint of the event you want to handle makes our package call that method when the typehinted event occurs. All methods specified in your projector can also make use of method injection, so you can resolve any dependencies you need in those methods as well.
##Getting the uuid of an event
In most cases you want to have access to the event that was fired. When using aggregates your events probably won't contain the uuid associated with that event. To get to the uuid of an event simply add a parameter called $aggregateUuid
that typehinted as a string.
public function onMoneyAdded(MoneyAdded $event, string $aggregateUuid)
{
$account = Account::findByUuid($aggregateUuid);
Mail::to($account->user)->send(new MoreMoneyAddedMailable());
}
The order of the parameters giving to an event handling method like onMoneyAdded
. We'll simply pass the uuid to any arguments named $uuid
.
##Manually register event handling methods
The $handlesEvents
property is an array which has event class names as keys and method names as values. Whenever an event is fired that matches one of the keys in $handlesEvents
the corresponding method will be fired. You can name your methods however you like.
Here's an example where we listen for a MoneyAdded
event:
namespace App\Reactors;
use App\Events\MoneyAdded;
class BigAmountAddedReactor
{
protected array $handlesEvents = [
MoneyAdded::class => 'onMoneyAdded',
];
public function onMoneyAdded(MoneyAdded $event)
{
}
}
This reactor will be created using the container so you may inject any dependency you'd like. In fact, all methods present in $handlesEvent
can make use of method injection, so you can resolve any dependencies you need in those methods as well. Any variable in the method signature with the name $event
will receive the event you're listening for.
##Using default event handling method names
In the example above the events are mapped to methods on the reactor using the $handlesEvents
property.
protected array $handlesEvents = [
MoneyAdded::class => 'onMoneyAdded',
];
You can write this a little shorter. Just put the class name of an event in that array. The package will infer the method name to be called. It will assume that there is a method called on
followed by the name of the event. Here's an example:
protected array $handlesEvents = [
MoneyAdded::class,
];
##Handling a single event
You can $handleEvent
to the class name of an event. When such an event comes in we'll call the __invoke
method.
protected $handleEvent = MoneyAdded::class,
public function __invoke(MoneyAdded $event)
{
}
##Using a class as an event handler
Instead of letting a method on a reactor handle an event you can use a dedicated class.
protected array $handlesEvents = [
MoneyAdded::class => SendMoneyAddedMail::class,
];
Here's an example implementation of SendMoneyAddedMail
:
use App\Events\MoneyAdded;
class SendMoneyAddedMail
{
public function __invoke(MoneyAdded $event)
{
}
}
##Tweaking reactor order
You can add a weight property to a reactor to tweak the order reactors are run in. Reactors with a lower weight run first. When no explicit weight is provided, the weight is considered 0
.
namespace App\Reactors;
class MyReactor
{
public int $weight = 5;
}
Note that providing a weight on a queued reactor won't guarantee execution order.
##Want to know more?
Reactors and process managers (which are built on top of the core reactor principle) are thoroughly discussed in Event Sourcing in Laravel. More specifically, you want to read these chapters: