8.3 KiB
Presenters
This type of class is responsible for giving the view an object which defines view-related logic/data methods. It is usually useful to extract such methods from models to presenters.
When to use a presenter?
When your view is full of logic
When your view is full of logic (if
, else
, select
on arrays, etc.), it's
time to create a presenter!
When your model has a lot of view-related logic/data methods
When your model has a lot of view-related logic/data methods, you can easily move them to a presenter.
Why are we using presenters instead of helpers?
We don't use presenters to generate complex view output that would rely on helpers.
Presenters should be used for:
- Data and logic methods that can be pulled & combined into single methods from view. This can include loops extracted from views too. A good example is https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/merge_requests/7073/diffs.
- Data and logic methods that can be pulled from models.
- Simple text output methods: it's ok if the method returns a string, but not a whole DOM element for which we'd need HAML, a view context, helpers, etc.
Why use presenters instead of model concerns?
We should strive to follow the single-responsibility principle and view-related logic/data methods are definitely not the responsibility of models!
Another reason is as follows:
Avoid using concerns and use presenters instead. Why? After all, concerns seem to be a core part of Rails and can DRY up code when shared among multiple models. Nonetheless, the main issue is that concerns don’t make the model object more cohesive. The code is just better organized. In other words, there’s no real change to the API of the model.
– https://www.toptal.com/ruby-on-rails/decoupling-rails-components
Benefits
By moving pure view-related logic/data methods from models & views to presenters, we gain the following benefits:
- rules are more explicit and centralized in the presenter => improves security
- testing is easier and faster as presenters are Plain Old Ruby Object (PORO)
- views are more readable and maintainable
- decreases the number of CE -> EE merge conflicts since code is in separate files
- moves the conflicts from views (not always obvious) to presenters (a lot easier to resolve)
What not to do with presenters?
- Don't use helpers in presenters. Presenters are not aware of the view context.
- Don't generate complex DOM elements, forms, etc. with presenters. Presenters
can return simple data like texts, and URLs using URL helpers from
Gitlab::Routing
but nothing much fancier.
Implementation
Presenter definition
If you need a presenter class that has only necessary interfaces for the view-related context,
inherit from Gitlab::View::Presenter::Simple
.
It provides a .presents
the method which allows you to define an accessor for the
presented object. It also includes common helpers like Gitlab::Routing
and
Gitlab::Allowable
.
class LabelPresenter < Gitlab::View::Presenter::Simple
presents ::Label, as: :label
def text_color
label.color.to_s
end
def to_partial_path
'projects/labels/show'
end
end
If you need a presenter class that delegates missing method calls to the presented object,
inherit from Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
.
This is more like an "extension" in the sense that the produced object is going to have
all of interfaces of the presented object AND all of the interfaces in the presenter class:
class LabelPresenter < Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
presents ::Label, as: :label
def text_color
# color is delegated to label
color.to_s
end
def to_partial_path
'projects/labels/show'
end
end
Presenter instantiation
Instantiation must be done via the Gitlab::View::Presenter::Factory
class which
detects the presenter based on the presented subject's class.
class Projects::LabelsController < Projects::ApplicationController
def edit
@label = Gitlab::View::Presenter::Factory
.new(@label, current_user: current_user)
.fabricate!
end
end
You can also include the Presentable
concern in the model:
class Label
include Presentable
end
and then in the controller:
class Projects::LabelsController < Projects::ApplicationController
def edit
@label = @label.present(current_user: current_user)
end
end
Presenter usage
%div{ class: @label.text_color }
= render partial: @label, label: @label
You can also present the model in the view:
- label = @label.present(current_user: current_user)
%div{ class: label.text_color }
= render partial: label, label: label
Validate accidental overrides
We use presenters in many places, such as Controller, Haml, GraphQL/Rest API, it's very handy to extend the core/backend logic of Active Record models, however, there is a risk that it accidentally overrides important logic.
For example, this production incident
was caused by including ActionView::Helpers::UrlHelper
in a presenter.
The tag
accesor in Ci::Build
was accidentally overridden by ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper#tag
,
and as a conseuqence, a wrong tag
value was persited into database.
Starting from GitLab 14.4, we validate the presenters (specifically all of the subclasses of Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
)
that they do not accidentally override core/backend logic. In such case, a pipeline in merge requests fails with an error message,
here is an example:
We've detected that a presetner is overriding a specific method(s) on a subject model.
There is a risk that it accidentally modifies the backend/core logic that leads to production incident.
Please follow https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/blob/master/app/presenters/README.md#validate-accidental-overrides
to resolve this error with caution.
Here are the conflict details.
- Ci::PipelinePresenter#tag is overriding Ci::Pipeline#tag. delegator_location: /devkitkat/services/rails/cache/ruby/2.7.0/gems/actionview-6.1.3.2/lib/action_view/helpers/tag_helper.rb:271 original_location: /devkitkat/services/rails/cache/ruby/2.7.0/gems/activemodel-6.1.3.2/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb:254
Here are the potential solutions:
- If the conflict happens on an instance method in the presenter:
- If you intend to override the core/backend logic, define
delegator_override <method-name>
on top of the conflicted method. This explicitly adds the method to an allowlist. - If you do NOT intend to override the core/backend logic, rename the method name in the presenter.
- If you intend to override the core/backend logic, define
- If the conflict happens on an included module in the presenter, remove the module from the presenter and find a workaround.
How to use the Gitlab::Utils::DelegatorOverride
validator
If a presenter class inhertis from Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
,
you should define what object class is presented:
class WebHookLogPresenter < Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
presents ::WebHookLog, as: :web_hook_log # This defines that the presenter presents `WebHookLog` Active Record model.
These presenters are validated not to accidentaly override the methods in the presented object. You can run the validation locally with:
bundle exec rake lint:static_verification
To add a method to an allowlist, use delegator_override
. For example:
class VulnerabilityPresenter < Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
presents ::Vulnerability, as: :vulnerability
delegator_override :description # This adds the `description` method to an allowlist that the override is intentional.
def description
vulnerability.description || finding.description
end
To add methods of a module to an allowlist, use delegator_override_with
. For example:
module Ci
class PipelinePresenter < Gitlab::View::Presenter::Delegated
include ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper
delegator_override_with ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper # TODO: Remove `ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper` inclusion as it overrides `Ci::Pipeline#tag`
Read the Validate Accidental Overrides for more information.