20 – Chain of Responsibility

Previously in the series, I have analysed a structural design pattern that introduced a concept of a “shared object” which could be used in multiple contexts simultaneously, hence reducing the memory usage of your code — Flyweight. This time I would li…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Mangirdas Kazlauskas ?

Previously in the series, I have analysed a structural design pattern that introduced a concept of a “shared object” which could be used in multiple contexts simultaneously, hence reducing the memory usage of your code — Flyweight. This time I would like to represent a behavioural design pattern, which enables loose coupling between the sender of a request and its receiver, also adding a possibility for the same request to be handled by multiple handlers — it is the Chain of Responsibility.

Table of Contents

  • What is the Chain of Responsibility design pattern?
  • Analysis
  • Implementation
  • Your Contribution

What is the Chain of Responsibility design pattern?

A Chain Of People Responsible For Freedom

Chain of Responsibility (CoR), also known as Chain of Command, is a behavioural design pattern, which intention in the GoF book is described like this:

Avoid coupling the sender of a request to its receiver by giving more than one object a chance to handle the request. Chain the receiving objects and pass the request along the chain until an object handles it.

TL;DR: the Chain of Responsibility design pattern is an ordered list of message handlers that know how to do two things — process a specific type of message or pass the message along to the next message handler.

First of all, the Chain of Responsibility design pattern is behavioural which means that its primary purpose is to rework the basic workflow (behaviour) and split it into several separate parts or stand-alone objects (recall Command or State design patterns as examples). Let’s say you have some kind of workflow defined in your code where each step should be executed sequentially. It works and everything is fine until…

  • Some additional steps should be introduced. Ok, not a big deal, just add them.
  • Some of these steps are optional based on the request. Well, let’s add some conditional blocks, nothing extraordinary.
  • Oops, we forgot validation… Hmm, the code starts bloating somehow.
  • A wild feature request appears: the order of the steps is different based on the request. Please, stahp…

Well, I hope you get the idea that this code could easily become a mess (not to mention the violation of the Open-Closed Principle — the letter O in SOLID principles). What the CoR pattern suggests is to split each step into a separate component — handler — and later link these handlers into a chain. Each handler contains a reference to the next one, hence once the request is received it is processed by the handler and passed to the next one along the chain until the workflow is finished. As a result, we still have the same sequential code execution, but now each step is separated, additional steps could be added without changing the existing code. But wait, there is more!

The Chain of Responsibility pattern allows reordering, adding or removing handlers in the chain at run-time — how cool is that, right? Also, each handler could be implemented in a way that it could decide whether to pass the request further down the chain or not.

Lots of great ideas already mentioned here, so let’s just jump right in by analysing the CoR design pattern and its implementation in more detail!

Analysis

The general structure of the Chain of Responsibility design pattern looks like this:

Chain of Responsibility Class Diagram

  • Handler — defines an interface for handling requests. This interface is optional when all the handlers extend the BaseHandler class — then having a single abstract method for handling requests should be enough;
  • BaseHandler — an abstract class that contains the boilerplate code that’s common to all the handler classes and maintains a reference to the next handler object on the chain. Also, the class may implement the default handling behaviour e.g. it can pass the request to the next handler if there is one;
  • ConcreteHandlers — contain the actual code for processing the request. Upon receiving a request, the handler could either handle it or pass it along the chain. Usually, handlers are immutable once they are initialised;
  • Client — composes the chain(s) of handlers and later initiates the request to a ConcreteHandler object on the chain.

Applicability

The Chain of Responsibility design pattern should be used when the system is expected to process different kinds of requests in various ways, but neither the request types nor the handling sequence is defined at compile-time. The pattern enables linking several handlers into one chain and allowing the client to pass requests along that chain. As a result, each handler will receive the request and process it and/or pass it further. Also, to resolve the unknown handling sequence problem, handlers could provide setters for a reference field of the successor inside the handler classes — you will be able to add, delete or reorder handlers at run-time, hence changing the handling sequence of a request.

Furthermore, the CoR pattern should be used when a single request must be handled by multiple handlers, usually in a particular order. In this case, the chain could be defined at compile-time and all requests will get through the chain exactly as planned. If the execution order is irrelevant, just roll the dice and build the chain in random order — all handlers would still receive the request and handle it.

Finally, one thing to remember — the receipt isn’t guaranteed. Since CoR introduces the loose coupling between sender and receiver, and the request could be handled by any handler in the chain, there is no guarantee that it will be actually handled. In cases when the request must be processed by at least one handler, you must ensure that the chain is configured properly, for instance, by adding some kind of a monitor handler at the end of the chain that notifies about unhandled requests and/or executes some specific logic.

Implementation

Let's Get The Party Started

We will use the Chain of Responsibility design pattern to implement a custom logging workflow in the application.

Let’s say that we want 3 different log levels based on their importance:

  • Debug — only needed in the local environment for development purposes;
  • Info — we want to see those logs locally, but also they should be stored and visible in the external logging service when the application is deployed;
  • Error — those logs must be visible locally and external logging service, but also we want to notify our development team by sending an e-mail when such log appears.

In this case, our request is a log message with its content and log level. Our handlers — debug, info and error loggers with their custom logic. To implement the wanted workflow, we could link the loggers in the following order: Debug -> Info -> Error. If the logger’s log level is lower or equal to the one defined in the message, the message should be logged. And that’s basically it, really, it’s that simple!

A picture is worth a thousand words, so let’s check the class diagram first and then implement the pattern.

Class diagram

The class diagram below shows the implementation of the Chain of Responsibility design pattern:

Chain of Responsibility Implementation Class Diagram

The LogLevel is an enumerator class defining possible log levels — Debug, Info and Error.

LogMessage class is used to store information about the log message: its log level and the message text. It also provides a public getFormattedMessage() method to format the log entry as a Widget object (for that, a private helper method getLogEntryColor() and a getter logLevelString are used).

LoggerBase is an abstract class that is used as a base class for all the specific loggers:

  • logMessage() — logs message using the log() method and passes the request along the chain;
  • logDebug() — logs the message with a log level of Debug;
  • logInfo() — logs the message with a log level of Info;
  • logError() — logs the message with a log level of Error;
  • log() — an abstract method to log the message (must be implemented by a specific logger).

Also, the LoggerBase contains a reference to the next logger (nextLogger) and logger’s log level (logLevel).

DebugLogger, InfoLogger and ErrorLogger are concrete logger classes that extend the LoggerBase class and implement the abstract log() method. InfoLogger uses the ExternalLoggingService to log messages, ErrorLogger — the MailService.

All the specific loggers use or inject the LogBloc class to mock the actual logging and provide log entries to the UI.

LogBloc stores a list of logs and exposes them through the stream — outLogStream. Also, it defines the log() method to add a new log to the list and notify outLogStream subscribers with an updated log entries list.

ChainOfResponsibilityExample creates a chain of loggers and uses public methods defined in LoggerBase to log messages. It also initialises and contains the LogBloc instance to store log entries and later show them in the UI.

LogLevel

A special kind of class — enumeration — to define different log levels. Also, there is a LogLevelExtensions defined where the operator <= is overridden to compare whether one log level is lower or equal to the other.

log_level.dart

LogMessage

A simple class to store information about the log entry: log level and message. Also, this class defines a private getter logLevelString to return the text representation of a specific log level and a private method getLogEntryColor() to return the log entry colour based on the log level. The getFormattedMessage() method returns the formatted log entry as a Text widget which is used in the UI.

log_message.dart

LogBloc

A Business Logic component (BLoC) class to store log messages and provide them to the UI through a public stream. New log entries are added to the logs list via the log() method while all the logs could be accessed through the public outLogStream.

log_bloc.dart

ExternalLoggingService

A simple class that represents the actual external logging service. Instead of sending the log message to some kind of 3rd party logging service (which, in fact, could be called in the logMessage() method), it just logs the message to UI through the LogBloc.

external_logging_service.dart

MailService

A simple class that represents the actual mail logging service. Instead of sending the log message as an email to the user, it just logs the message to UI through the LogBloc.

mail_service.dart

LoggerBase

An abstract class for the base logger implementation. It stores the log level and a reference (successor) to the next logger in the chain. Also, the class implements a common logMessage() method that logs the message if its log level is lower than the current logger’s and then forwards the message to the successor (if there is one). The abstract log() method must be implemented by specific loggers extending the LoggerBase class.

logger_base.dart

Concrete loggers

  • DebugLogger — a specific implementation of the logger that sets the log level to Debug and simply logs the message to UI through the LogBloc.

debug_logger.dart

  • InfoLogger — a specific implementation of the logger that sets the log level to Info and uses the ExternalLoggingService to log the message.

info_logger.dart

  • ErrorLogger — a specific implementation of the logger that sets the log level to Error and uses the MailService to log the message.

error_logger.dart

Example

First of all, a markdown file is prepared and provided as a pattern’s description:

Chain of Responsibility Markdown

The ChainOfResponsibilityExample widget initialises and contains the loggers’ chain object (see the initState() method). Also, for demonstration purposes, the LogBloc object is initialised there, too, and used to send logs and retrieve a list of them through the stream — outLogStream.

chain_of_responsibility_example.dart

By creating a chain of loggers, the client — ChainOfResponsibilityExample widget — does not care about the details on which specific logger should handle the log entry, it just passes (logs) the message to a chain of loggers. This way, the sender (client) and receiver (logger) are decoupled, the loggers’ chain itself could be built at run-time in any order or structure e.g. you can skip the Debug logger for non-local environments and only use the Info -> Error chain.

Chain of Responsibility Example

As you can see in the example, debug level logs are only handled by the debug logger, info — by debug and info level handlers and error logs are handled by all three loggers.

All of the code changes for the Chain of Responsibility design pattern and its example implementation could be found here.

Your Contribution

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This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Mangirdas Kazlauskas ?


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