NAME

Metabase::Fact - base class for Metabase Facts

VERSION

version 0.025

SYNOPSIS

# defining the fact class
package MyFact;
use Metabase::Fact::Hash;
our @ISA = qw/Metabase::Fact::Hash/;

# using the fact class
my $fact = TestReport->new(
  resource   => 'RJBS/Metabase-Fact-0.001.tar.gz',
  content    => {
    status => 'FAIL',
    time   => 3029,
  },
);

$client->send_fact($fact);

DESCRIPTION

Metabase is a framework for associating content and metadata with arbitrary resources. A Metabase can be used to store test reports, reviews, coverage analysis reports, reports on static analysis of coding style, or anything else for which datatypes are constructed.

Metabase::Fact is a base class for Facts (really opinions or analyses) that can be sent to or retrieved from a Metabase repository.

Structure of a Fact object

A Fact object associates a content attribute with a resource attribute and a creator attribute.

The resource attribute must be in a URI format that can be validated via a Metabase::Resource subclass. The content attribute is an opaque scalar with subclass-specific meaning. The creator attribute is a URI with a "metabase:user" scheme and type (see Metabase::Resource::metabase).

Facts have three sets of metadata associate with them. Metadata are generally for use in indexing, searching and managing Facts.

  • core metadata describe universal properties of all Facts and are used to submit, store, manage and retrieve Facts within the Metabase framework.

  • resource metadata describe index properties derived from the resource attribute. (As these can be regenerated from the resource -- which is part of core metadata -- they are not stored with a serialized Fact.)

  • content metadata describe index properties derived from the content attribute. (As these can be regenerated from the content -- which is part of core metadata -- they are not stored with a serialized Fact.)

Each of the three metadata sets has an associated accessor: core_metadata, resource_metadata and content_metadata.

Each of the three sets also has an accessor that returns a hashref with a data type for each possible element in the set: core_metadata_types, resource_metadata_types and content_metadata_types.

Data types are loosely based on Data::RX. For example:

'//str'  -- indicates a value that should be compared stringwise
'//num'  -- indicates a value that should be compared numerically
'//bool' -- indicates a valut that is true or false

When searching on metadata, you must join the set name to the metadata element name with a period character. For example:

core.guid
core.creator
core.resource
resource.scheme
content.size
content.score

ATTRIBUTES

Unless otherwise noted, all attributes are read-only and are either provided as arguments to the constructor or are generated during construction. All attributes (except content) are also part of core metadata.

Arguments provided to new

content (required)

A reference to the actual information associated with the fact. The exact form of the content is up to each Fact class to determine.

resource (required)

The canonical resource (URI) the Fact relates to. For CPAN distributions, this would be a cpan:///distfile/... URI. (See URI::cpan.) The associated accessor returns a Metabase::Resource subclass.

creator (optional)

A Metabase::User::Profile URI that indicates the creator of the Fact. If not set during Fact creation, it will be set by the Metabase when a Fact is submitted based on the submitter Profile. The set_creator mutator may be called to set creator, but only if it is not previously set. The associated accessor returns a Metabase::Resource subclass or undef if the creator has not been set.

guid (optional)

The Fact object's Globally Unique IDentifier. This is generated automatically if not provided. Generally, users should not provide a guid argument, but it is permitted for use in special cases where a non-random guid is necessary.

Generated during construction

These attributes are generated automatically during the call to new.

type

The class name, with double-colons converted to dashes to be more URI-friendly. e.g. Metabase::Fact would be Metabase-Fact.

schema_version

The schema_version of the Fact subclass that created the object. This may or may not be the same as the current schema_version of the class if newer versions of the class have been released since the object was created.

creation_time

Fact creation time in UTC expressed in extended ISO 8601 format with a "Z" (Zulu) suffix. For example:

2010-01-10T12:34:56Z

update_time

When the fact was created, stored or otherwise updated, expressed an ISO 8601 UTC format as with creation_time. The touch method may be called at any time to update the value to the current time. This attribute generally only has local significance within a particular Metabase repository. For example, it may be used to sort Facts by when they were stored or changed in a Metabase.

valid

A boolean value indicating whether the fact is considered valid. It defaults to true. The set_valid method may be called to change the valid property, for example, to mark a fact invalid rather than deleting it. The value of valid is always normalized to return "1" for true and "0" for false.

CONSTRUCTOR

new

$fact = MyFact->new(
  resource => 'AUTHORID/Foo-Bar-1.23.tar.gz',
  content => $content_structure,
);

Constructs a new Fact. The resource and content attributes are required. No other attributes should be provided to new except creator.

CLASS METHODS

type

$type = MyFact->type;

The type accessor may also be called as a class method.

class_from_type

$class = MyFact->class_from_type( $type );

A utility function to invert the operation of the type method.

upgrade_fact

MyFact->upgrade_fact( $struct );

This method will be called when initializing a fact from a data structure that claims to be of a schema version other than the schema version reported by the loaded class's default_schema_version method. It will be passed the hashref of args being used to initialized the fact object (generally the output of as_struct from an older version), and should alter that hash in place.

default_schema_version

$version = MyFact->default_schema_version;

Defaults to 1. Subclasses should override this method if they make a backwards-incompatible change to the internals of the content attribute. Schema version numbers should be monotonically-increasing integers. The default schema version is used to set an objects schema_version attribution on creation.

PERSISTENCE METHODS

The following methods are implemented by Metabase::Fact and subclasses generally should not need to override them.

save

$fact->save($filename);

This method writes out the fact to a file in JSON format. If the file cannot be written, an exception is raised. If the save is successful, a true value is returned. Internally, it calls as_json.

load

my $fact = Metabase::Fact->load($filename);

This method loads a fact from a JSON format file and returns it. If the file cannot be read or is not valid JSON, and exception is thrown. Internally, it calls from_json.

as_json

This returns a JSON string containing the serialized object. Internally, it calls as_struct.

from_json

This method regenerates a fact from a JSON string generated by as_json. Internally, it calls from_struct.

as_struct

This returns a simple data structure that represents the fact and can be used for transmission over the wire. It serializes the content and core metadata, but not other metadata, which should be recomputed by the receiving end.

from_struct

my $fact = Metabase::Fact->from_struct( $struct );

This takes the output of the as_struct method and reconstitutes a Fact object. If the class the struct represents is not loaded, from_struct will attempt to load the class or will throw an error.

OBJECT METHODS

The following methods are implemented by Metabase::Fact and subclasses generally should not need to override them.

core_metadata

This returns a hashref containing the fact's core metadata. This includes things like the guid, creation time, described resource, and so on.

core_metadata_types

This returns a hashref of types for each core metadata element

resource_metadata

This method returns metadata describing the resource.

resource_metadata_types

This returns a hashref of types for each resource metadata element

set_creator

$fact->set_creator($profile_uri);

This method sets the creator core metadata for the core metadata for the fact. If the fact's creator is already set, an exception will be thrown.

set_valid

$fact->set_valid(0);

This method sets the valid core metadata to a boolean value.

touch

$fact->touch

This method sets the update_time core metadata for the core metadata for the fact to the current time in ISO 8601 UTC format with a trailing "Z" (Zulu) suffice.

ABSTRACT METHODS

Methods marked as required must be implemented by a Fact subclass. (The version in Metabase::Fact will die with an error if called.)

In the documentation below, the terms must, must not, should, etc. have their usual RFC 2119 meanings.

These methods MUST throw an exception if an error occurs.

content_as_bytes

required

$string = $fact->content_as_bytes;

This method MUST serialize a Fact's content as bytes in a scalar and return it. The method for serialization is up to the individual fact class to determine. Some common subclasses are available to handle serialization for common data types. See Metabase::Fact::Hash and Metabase::Fact::String.

content_from_bytes

required

$content = $fact->content_from_bytes( $string );
$content = $fact->content_from_bytes( \$string );

Given a scalar, this method MUST regenerate and return the original content data structure. It MUST accept either a string or string reference as an argument. It MUST NOT overwrite the Fact's content attribute directly.

content_metadata

optional

$content_meta = $fact->content_metadata;

If provided, this method MUST return a hash reference with content-specific indexing metadata. The key MUST be the name of the field for indexing and SHOULD provide dimensions to differentiate one set of content from another. Values MUST be simple scalars, not references.

Here is a hypothetical example of content_metadata for an image fact:

sub content_metadata {
  my $self = shift;
  return {
    width   => _compute_width  ( $self->content ),
    height  => _compute_height ( $self->content ),
    caption => _extract_caption( $self->content ),
  }
}

Field names should be valid perl identifiers, consisting of alphanumeric characters or underscores. Hyphens and periods are allowed, but are not recommended.

content_metadata_types

optional

my $typemap = $fact->content_metadata_types;

This method is used to identify the datatypes of keys in the data structure provided by content_metadata. If provided, it MUST return a hash reference. It SHOULD contain a key for every key that could appear in the data structure generated by content_metadata and provide a value corresponding to a datatype for each key. It MAY contain keys that do not always appear in the result of content_metadata.

Data types are loosely based on Data::RX. Type SHOULD be one of the following:

'//str' -- indicates a value that should be compared stringwise
'//num' -- indicates a value that should be compared numerically
'//bool' -- indicates a boolean value where "1" is true and "0" is false

Here is a hypothetical example of content_metadata_types for an image fact:

sub content_metadata_types {
  return {
    width   => '//num',
    height  => '//num',
    caption => '//str',
  }
}

Consumers of content_metadata_types SHOULD assume that any content_metadata key not found in the result of content_metadata_types is a '//str' resource.

validate_content

required

eval { $fact->validate_content };

This method SHOULD check for the validity of content within the Fact. It MUST throw an exception if the fact content is invalid. (The return value is ignored.)

validate_resource

optional

eval { $fact->validate_resource };

This method SHOULD check whether the resource type is relevant for the Fact subclass. It SHOULD use Metabase::Resource to create a resource object and evaluate the resource object scheme and type. It MUST throw an exception if the resource type is invalid. Otherwise, it MUST return a valid Metabase::Resource subclass. For example:

sub validate_resource {
  my ($self) = @_;
  # Metabase::Resource->new dies if invalid
  my $obj = Metabase::Resource->new($self->resource);
  if ($obj->scheme eq 'cpan' && $obj->type eq 'distfile') {
    return $obj;
  }
  else {
    my $fact_type = $self->type;
    Carp::confess("'$resource' does not apply to '$fact_type'");
  }
}

The default validate_resource accepts any resource that can initialize a Metabase::Resource object.

BUGS

Please report any bugs or feature using the CPAN Request Tracker. Bugs can be submitted through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=Metabase-Fact

When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.

SUPPORT

Bugs / Feature Requests

Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at https://github.com/dagolden/Metabase-Fact/issues. You will be notified automatically of any progress on your issue.

Source Code

This is open source software. The code repository is available for public review and contribution under the terms of the license.

https://github.com/dagolden/Metabase-Fact

git clone https://github.com/dagolden/Metabase-Fact.git

AUTHORS

  • David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>

  • Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>

  • H.Merijn Brand <hmbrand@cpan.org>

CONTRIBUTORS

  • David Steinbrunner <dsteinbrunner@pobox.com>

  • Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>

  • Nathan Gary Glenn <nglenn@cpan.org>

  • Randy Stauner <rwstauner@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by David Golden.

This is free software, licensed under:

The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004