Kaffy was created out of a need to have a powerfully simple, flexible, and customizable admin interface
without the need to touch the current codebase. It was inspired by django's lovely built-in admin
app and rails' powerful activeadmin
gem.
- Live Demo
- Minimum Requirements
- Installation
- Custom Configurations
- Customize the Side Menu
- Customize the Dashboard Page
- Customize the Index Pages
- Customize the Form Pages
- Custom Form Fields
- Customize the Queries
- Extensions
- Embedded Schemas and JSON Fields
- Searching Records
- Authorizing Access To Resources
- Custom Changesets
- Customizing Resource Names
- Custom Actions
- Custom Callbacks When Saving Records
- Simple Scheduled Tasks
- The Driving Points Behind Kaffy's Development
Become a sponsor through Kaffy's OpenCollective page.
Check out the simple demo here
- elixir 1.7.0
- phoenix 1.4.0
def deps do
[
{:kaffy, "~> 0.9.0"}
]
end
# in your router.ex
use Kaffy.Routes, scope: "/admin", pipe_through: [:some_plug, :authenticate]
# :scope defaults to "/admin"
# :pipe_through defaults to kaffy's [:kaffy_browser]
# when providing pipelines, they will be added after :kaffy_browser
# so the actual pipe_through for the previous line is:
# [:kaffy_browser, :some_plug, :authenticate]
# in your endpoint.ex
plug Plug.Static,
at: "/kaffy",
from: :kaffy,
gzip: false,
only: ~w(assets)
# in your config/config.exs
config :kaffy,
otp_app: :my_app,
ecto_repo: MyApp.Repo,
router: MyAppWeb.Router
Note that providing pipelines with the :pipe_through
option will add those pipelines to kaffy's :kaffy_browser
pipeline which is defined as follows:
pipeline :kaffy_browser do
plug :accepts, ["html", "json"]
plug :fetch_session
plug :fetch_flash
plug :protect_from_forgery
plug :put_secure_browser_headers
end
If you're upgrading from an earlier version to v0.9, you need to replace your :schemas
with :resources
.
If you don't specify a resources
option in your configs, Kaffy will try to auto-detect your schemas and your admin modules. Admin modules should be in the same namespace as their respective schemas in order for kaffy to detect them. For example, if you have a schema MyApp.Products.Product
, its admin module should be MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin
.
Otherwise, if you'd like to explicitly specify your schemas and their admin modules, you can do like the following:
# config.exs
config :kaffy,
admin_title: "My Awesome App",
admin_logo: "/images/logo.png",
admin_logo_mini: "/images/logo-mini.png",
hide_dashboard: false,
home_page: [kaffy: :dashboard],
ecto_repo: MyApp.Repo,
router: MyAppWeb.Router,
resources: &MyApp.Kaffy.Config.create_resources/1
# in your custom resources function
defmodule MyApp.Kaffy.Config do
def create_resources(_conn) do
[
blog: [
name: "My Blog", # a custom name for this context/section.
resources: [ # this line used to be "schemas" in pre v0.9
post: [schema: MyApp.Blog.Post, admin: MyApp.SomeModule.Anywhere.PostAdmin],
comment: [schema: MyApp.Blog.Comment],
tag: [schema: MyApp.Blog.Tag]
]
],
inventory: [
name: "Inventory",
resources: [
category: [schema: MyApp.Products.Category, admin: MyApp.Products.CategoryAdmin],
product: [schema: MyApp.Products.Product, admin: MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin]
]
]
]
end
end
Starting with Kaffy v0.9, the :resources
option can take a literal list or a function.
If a function is provided, it should take a conn and return a list of contexts and schemas like in the example above.
Passing a conn to the function provides more flexibility and customization to your resources list.
You can set the :hide_dashboard
option to true to hide the dashboard link from the side menu.
To change the home page, change the :home_page
option to one of the following:
[kaffy: :dashboard]
for the default dashboard page.[schema: ["blog", "post"]]
to make the home page the index page for thePost
schema under the 'Blog' context.[page: "my-custom-page"]
to make the custom page with the:slug
"my-custom-page" the home page. See the Custom Pages section below.
Note that, for auto-detection to work properly, schemas in different contexts should have different direct "prefix" namespaces. That is:
# auto-detection works properly with this:
MyApp.Posts.Post
MyApp.Posts.Category
MyApp.Products.Product
MyApp.Products.Category # this Category will not be confused with Posts.Category
# auto-detection will be confused with this:
# both Category schemas have the same "Schemas" prefix.
MyApp.Posts.Schemas.Post
MyApp.Posts.Schemas.Category
MyApp.Products.Schemas.Product
MyApp.Products.Schemas.Category
# To fix this, define resources manually:
resources: [
posts: [
resources: [
post: [schema: MyApp.Posts.Schemas.Post],
category: [schema: MyApp.Posts.Schemas.Category]
]
],
products: [
resources: [
product: [schema: MyApp.Products.Schemas.Product],
category: [schema: MyApp.Products.Schemas.Category]
]
]
]
Kaffy supports dashboard customizations through widgets
.
Currently, kaffy provides support for 4 types of widgets:
text
widgets. Suitable for display relatively long textual information. Candidates: a short review, a specific message for the admin, etc.tidbit
widgets. Suitable for tiny bits of information (one word, or one number). Cadidates: total sales, a specific date, system status ("Healthy", "Down"), etc.progress
widgets. Suitable for measuring progress in terms of percentages. Candidates: task progress, survey results, memory usage, etc.chart
widgets. Suitable for displaying chart data with X and Y values. Candidates: any measurable number over a period of time (e.g. sales, visits, etc).
Widgets have shared options:
:type
(required) is the type of the widget. Valid options aretext
,tidbit
,progress
, andchart
.:title
(required) is the title for the widget. What this widget is about.:content
(required) is the main content of the widget. This can be a string or a map depending on the type of widget.:order
(optional) is the displaying order of the widget. Widgets are display in order based on this value. The default value is 999.:width
(optional) is the width the widget should occupy on the page. Valid values are 1 to 12. The default for tidbits is 3 and the others 6.:percentage
(required for progress widgets) is the percentage value for the progress. This must be an integer.:icon
(optional for tidbit widgets) is the icon displayed next to the tidbit'scontent
. Any FontAwesome-valid icon is valid here. For example:thumbs-up
.
When defining a chart widget, the content must be a map with the following required keys:
:x
must be a list of values for the x-axis.:y
must be a list of numbers (integers/floats) for the y-axis.:y_title
must be a string describing:y
(e.g. USD, Transactions, Visits, etc)
To create widgets, define widgets/2
in your admin modules.
widgets/2
takes a schema and a conn
and must return a list of widget maps:
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def widgets(_schema, _conn) do
[
%{
type: "tidbit",
title: "Average Reviews",
content: "4.7 / 5.0",
icon: "thumbs-up",
order: 1,
width: 6,
},
%{
type: "progress",
title: "Pancakes",
content: "Customer Satisfaction",
percentage: 79,
order: 3,
width: 6,
},
%{
type: "chart",
title: "This week's sales",
order: 8,
width: 12,
content: %{
x: ["Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Today"],
y: [150, 230, 75, 240, 290],
y_title: "USD"
}
}
]
end
end
Kaffy will collect all widgets from all admin modules and orders them based on the :order
option if present and displays them on the dashboard page.
Kaffy provides support for adding custom links to the side navigation menu.
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def custom_links(_schema) do
[
%{name: "Source Code", url: "https://example.com/repo/issues", order: 2, location: :top, icon: "paperclip"},
%{name: "Products On Site", url: "https://example.com/products", location: :sub, target: "_blank"},
]
end
end
custom_links/1
takes a schema and should return a list of maps with the following keys:
:name
to display as the text for the link.:url
to contain the actual URL.:method
the method to use with the link.:order
to hold the displayed order of this link. All:sub
links are ordered under the schema menu item directly before the following schema.:location
can be either:sub
or:top
.:sub
means it's under the schema sub-item.:top
means it's displayed at the top of the menu below the "Dashboard" link. Links are ordered based on the:order
value. The default value is:sub
.:icon
is the icon displayed next to the link. Any FontAwesome-valid icon is valid here. For example:paperclip
.:target
to contain the target to open the link:_blank
or_self
._blank
will open the link in a new window/tab,_self
will open the link in the same window. The default value is_self
.
Kaffy allows you to add custom pages like the following:
To add custom pages, you need to define the custom_pages/2
function in your admin module:
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def custom_pages(_schema, _conn) do
[
%{
slug: "my-own-thing",
name: "Secret Place",
view: MyAppWeb.ProductView,
template: "custom_product.html",
assigns: [custom_message: "one two three"],
order: 2
}
]
end
end
The custom_pages/2
function takes a schema and a conn and must return a list of maps corresponding to pages.
The maps have the following keys:
:slug
to indicate the url of the page, e.g.,/admin/p/my-own-thing
.:name
for the name of the link on the side menu.:view
to set the view from your own app.:template
to set the custom template you want to render in Kaffy's layout.:assigns
(optional) to hold the assigns for the template. Default to an empty list.:order
is the order of the page among other pages in the side menu.
The index/1
function takes a schema and must return a keyword list of fields and their options.
If the options are nil
, Kaffy will use default values for that field.
If this function is not defined, Kaffy will return all fields with their respective values.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def popular?(p) do
if (p.popular), do: "✅", else: "❌"
end
def index(_) do
[
title: nil,
views: %{name: "Hits"},
date: %{name: "Date Added", value: fn p -> p.inserted_at end},
popular: %{name: "Popular?", value: fn p -> popular?(p) end},
]
end
end
Result
Notice that the keyword list keys don't necessarily have to be schema fields as long as you provide a :value
option.
You can also provide some basic column-based filtration by providing the :filters
option:
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def index(_) do
[
title: nil,
category_id: %{
value: fn p -> get_category!(p.category_id).name end,
filters: Enum.map(list_categories(), fn c -> {c.name, c.id} end)
},
price: %{value: fn p -> Decimal.to_string(p.price) end},
quantity: nil,
status: %{
name: "Is it available?",
value: fn p -> available?(p) end,
filters: [{"Available", "available"}, {"Sold out", "soldout"}]
},
views: nil
]
end
end
:filters
must be a list of tuples where the first element is a human-frieldy string and the second element is the actual field value used to filter the records.
Result
If you need to change the order of the records, define ordering/1
:
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def ordering(_schema) do
# order posts based on views
[desc: :views]
end
end
Kaffy treats the show and edit pages as one, the form page.
To customize the fields shown in this page, define a form_fields/1
function in your admin module.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def form_fields(_) do
[
title: nil,
status: %{choices: [{"Publish", "publish"}, {"Pending", "pending"}]},
body: %{type: :textarea, rows: 4},
views: %{create: :hidden, update: :readonly},
settings: %{label: "Post Settings"},
slug: %{help_text: "Define your own slug for the post, if empty one will be created for you using the post title."}
]
end
end
The form_fields/1
function takes a schema and should return a keyword list of fields and their options.
The keys of the list must correspond to the schema fields.
Options can be:
:label
- must be a string.:type
- can be any ecto type in addition to:file
,:textarea
, and:richtext
.:rows
- an integer to indicate the number of rows for textarea fields.:choices
- a keyword list of option and values to restrict the input values that this field can accept.:create
- can be:editable
which means it can be edited when creating a new record, or:readonly
which means this field is visible when creating a new record but cannot be edited, or:hidden
which means this field shouldn't be visible when creating a new record. It is:editable
by default.:update
- can be:editable
which means it can be edited when updating an existing record, or:readonly
which means this field is visible when updating a record but cannot be edited, or:hidden
which means this field shouldn't be visible when updating record. It is:editable
by default.:help_text
- extra "help text" to be displayed with the form field.
Result
Notice that:
- Even though the
status
field is of type:string
, it is rendered as a<select>
element with choices. - The
views
field is rendered as "readonly" because it was set as:readonly
for the update form. settings
is an embedded schema. That's why it is rendered as such.
Setting a field's type to :richtext
will render a rich text editor.
A belongs_to
association should be referenced by the field name, not the association name. For example, a schema with the following association:
schema "my_model" do
...
belongs_to :owner, App.Owners.Owner
...
end
Would define form_fields/1
like so:
def form_fields(_) do
[
...
owner_id: nil,
...
]
end
NOTE: many_to_many
associations are currently not supported.
You can create your own form fields very easily with Kaffy.
Just follow the instructions on how to create a custom type for ecto and add 2 additional functions to the module:
render_form/5
and render_index/3
.
Check the below example or a better example on the comments of this issue.
defmodule MyApp.Kaffy.URLField do
use Ecto.Type
def type, do: :string
# casting input from the form and making it "storable" inside the database column (:string)
def cast(url) when is_map(url) do
name = Map.get(url, "one")
link = Map.get(url, "two")
{:ok, ~s(<a href="#{link}">#{name}</a>)}
end
# if the input is not a string, return an error
def cast(_), do: :error
# loading the raw value from the database and turning it into a expected data type for the form
def load(data) when is_binary(data) do
[[_, link]] = Regex.scan(~r/href="(.*)"/, data)
[[_, name]] = Regex.scan(~r/>(.*)</, data)
{:ok, %{"one" => name, "two" => link}}
end
# this function should return the HTML related to rendering the customized form field.
def render_form(_conn, changeset, form, field, _options) do
[
{:safe, ~s(<div class="form-group">)},
Phoenix.HTML.Form.label(form, field, "Web URL"),
Phoenix.HTML.Form.text_input(form, field,
placeholder: "This is a custom field",
class: "form-control",
name: "#{form.name}[#{field}][one]",
id: "#{form.name}_#{field}_one",
value: get_field_value(changeset, field, "one")
),
Phoenix.HTML.Form.text_input(form, field,
placeholder: "This is a custom field",
class: "form-control",
name: "#{form.name}[#{field}][two]",
id: "#{form.name}_#{field}_two",
value: get_field_value(changeset, field, "two")
),
{:safe, ~s(</div>)}
]
end
# this is how the field should be rendered on the index page
def render_index(resource, field, _options) do
case Map.get(resource, field) do
nil ->
""
details ->
name = details["one"]
link = details["two"]
{:safe, ~s(<a href="#{link}">#{name}</a>)}
end
end
defp get_field_value(changeset, field, subfield) do
field_value = Map.get(changeset.data, field)
Map.get(field_value || %{}, subfield, "")
end
end
By default Kaffy does a simple Ecto query to retrieve records. You can customize the queries used by Kaffy by using custom_index_query
and custom_show_query
. This allows you to preload associations to display associated data on your pages, for example. Attempting to access an association without preloading it first will result in a Ecto.Association.NotLoaded
exception.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def custom_index_query(_conn, _schema, query) do
from(r in query, preload: [:tags])
end
def custom_show_query(_conn, _schema, query) do
case user_is_admin?(conn) do
true -> from(r in query, preload: [:history])
false -> query
end
end
end
The custom_index_query/3
function takes a conn, the schema, and the query to customize, and it must return a query.
It is called when fetching the resources for the index page.
The custom_show_query/3
is identifical to custom_index_query/3
, but works when fetching a single resource in the show/edit page.
It's also possible to pass opts
to the Repo operation, in this case, you just have to return a tuple instead, like below:
defmodule MyApp.Accounts.TenantAdmin do
def custom_index_query(_conn, _schema, query) do
{query, skip_tenant_id: true}
end
def custom_show_query(_conn, _schema, query) do
{query, skip_tenant_id: true}
end
end
Extensions allow you to define custom css, javascript, and html. For example, you need to use a specific javascript library or customize the look and feel of Kaffy. This is where extensions come in handy.
Extensions are elixir modules which special functions.
defmodule MyApp.Kaffy.Extension do
def stylesheets(_conn) do
[
{:safe, ~s(<link rel="stylesheet" href="/kaffy/somestyle.css" />)}
]
end
def javascripts(_conn) do
[
{:safe, ~s(<script src="https://example.com/javascript.js"></script>)}
]
end
end
There are currently 2 special functions supported in extensions: stylesheets/1
and javascripts/1
.
Both functions take a conn and must return a list of safe strings.
stylesheets/1
will add whatever you include at the end of the <head>
tag.
javascripts/1
will add whatever you include there just before the closing </body>
tag.
Once you have your extension module, you need to add it to the extensions
list in config:
config :kaffy,
# other settings
extensions: [
MyApp.Kaffy.Extension
]
You can check this issue to see an example which uses extensions with custom fields.
Kaffy has support for ecto's embedded schemas and json fields. When you define a field as a :map
, Kaffy will automatically display a textarea with a placeholder to hint that JSON content is expected. When you have an embedded schema, Kaffy will try to render each field inline with the form of the parent schema.
Kaffy provides very basic search capabilities.
Currently, only :string
and :text
fields are supported for search.
If you need to customize the list of fields to search against, define the search_fields/1
function.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def search_fields(_schema) do
[:title, :slug, :body]
end
end
Kaffy allows to search for fields across associations. The following tells kaffy to search posts by title and body and category's name and description:
# Post has a belongs_to :category association
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def search_fields(_schema) do
[
:title,
:body,
category: [:name, :description]
]
end
end
This function takes a schema and returns a list of schema fields that you want to search.
All the fields must be of type :string
or :text
.
If this function is not defined, Kaffy will return all :string
and :text
fields by default.
Kaffy supports basic authorization for individual schemas by defining authorized?/2
.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def authorized?(_schema, conn) do
MyApp.Blog.can_see_posts?(conn.assigns.user)
end
end
authorized?/2
takes a schema and a Plug.Conn
struct and should return a boolean value.
If it returns false
, the request is redirected to the dashboard with an unauthorized message.
Note that the resource is also removed from the resources list if authorized?/2
returns false.
Kaffy supports separate changesets for creating and updating schemas.
Just define create_changeset/2
and update_changeset/2
.
Both of them are passed the schema and the attributes.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def create_changeset(schema, attrs) do
# do whatever you want, must return a changeset
MyApp.Blog.Post.my_customized_changeset(schema, attrs)
end
def update_changeset(entry, attrs) do
# do whatever you want, must return a changeset
MyApp.Blog.Post.update_changeset(entry, attrs)
end
end
If either function is not defined, Kaffy will try calling Post.changeset/2
.
And if that is not defined, Ecto.Changeset.change/2
will be called.
Some names do not follow the "add an s" rule. Sometimes you just need to change some terms to your liking.
This is why singular_name/1
and plural_name/1
are there.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def singular_name(_) do
"Article"
end
def plural_name(_) do
"Terms"
end
end
Kaffy supports performing custom actions on single resources by defining the resource_actions/1
function.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.ProductAdmin
def resource_actions(_conn) do
[
publish: %{name: "Publish this product", action: fn _c, p -> restock(p) end},
soldout: %{name: "Sold out!", action: fn _c, p -> soldout(p) end}
]
end
defp restock(product) do
update_product(product, %{"status" => "available"})
end
defp soldout(product) do
case product.id == 3 do
true ->
{:error, product, "This product should never be sold out!"}
false ->
update_product(product, %{"status" => "soldout"})
end
end
Result
resource_actions/1
takes a conn
and must return a keyword list.
The keys must be atoms defining the unique action "keys".
The values are maps providing a human-friendly :name
and an :action
that is an anonymous function with arity 2 that takes a conn
and the record.
Actions must return one of the following:
{:ok, record}
indicating the action was performed successfully.{:error, changeset}
indicating there was a validation error.{:error, record, custom_error}
to communicate a custom error message to the user wherecustom_error
is a string.
Kaffy also supports actions on a group of resources. You can enable list actions by defining list_actions/1
.
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def list_actions(_conn) do
[
change_price: %{
name: "Change the price",
inputs: [
%{name: "new_price", title: "New Price", default: "3"}
],
action: fn _conn, products, params -> change_price(products, params) end
},
soldout: %{name: "Mark as soldout", action: fn _, products -> list_soldout(products) end},
restock: %{name: "Bring back", action: fn _, products -> bring_back(products) end},
not_good: %{name: "Error me out", action: fn _, _ -> {:error, "Expected error"} end}
]
end
defp change_price(products, params) do
new_price = Map.get(params, "new_price") |> Decimal.new()
Enum.map(products, fn p ->
Ecto.Changeset.change(p, %{price: new_price})
|> Bakery.Repo.update()
end)
:ok
end
end
Result
list_actions/1
takes a conn
and must return a keyword list.
The keys must be atoms defining the unique action "keys".
The values are maps providing a human-friendly :name
and an :action
that is an anonymous function with arity 2 that takes a conn
and a list of selected records.
The change_price
action is a multi-step action.
The defined :inputs
option will display a popup with a form that contains defined in this option.
:inputs
should be a list of maps. Each input must have a :name
, a :title
, and a :default
value.
After submitting the popup form, the extra values, along with the selected resources, are passed to the :action
function.
In the example above, change_price/2
will receive the selected products with a map of extra inputs, like: %{"new_price" => "3.5"}
for example.
List actions must return one of the following:
:ok
indicating the action was performed successfully.{:error, custom_error}
to communicate a custom error message to the user wherecustom_error
is a string.
Sometimes you need to execute certain actions when creating, updating, or deleting records.
Kaffy has your back.
There are a few callbacks that are called every time you create, update, or delete a record.
These callbacks are:
before_insert/2
before_update/2
before_delete/2
before_save/2
after_save/2
after_delete/2
after_update/2
after_insert/2
before_*
functions are passed the current conn
and a changeset. after_*
functions are passed the current conn
and the record itself. With the exception of before_delete/2
and after_delete/2
which are both passed the current conn
and the record itself.
before_(create|save|update)/2
must return{:ok, changeset}
to continue.before_delete/2
must return{:ok, record}
to continue.- All
after_*
functions must return{:ok, record}
to continue.
To prevent the chain from continuing and roll back any changes:
before_(create|save|update)/2
must return{:error, changeset}
.before_delete/2
must return{:error, record, "Customized error message}
.- All
after_*
functions must return{:error, record, "Customized error message"}
.
When creating a new record, the following functions are called in this order:
before_insert/2
before_save/2
- inserting the record happens here:
Repo.insert/1
after_save/2
after_insert/2
When updating an existing record, the following functions are called in this order:
before_update/2
before_save/2
- updating the record happens here:
Repo.update/1
after_save/2
after_update/2
When deleting a record, the following functions are called in this order:
before_delete/2
- deleting the record happens here:
Repo.delete/1
after_delete/2
It's important to know that all callbacks are run inside a transaction. So in case of failure, everything is rolled back even if the operation actually happened.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def before_insert(conn, changeset) do
case conn.assigns.user.username == "aesmail" do
true -> {:error, changeset} # aesmail should never create a post
false -> {:ok, changeset}
end
end
def after_insert(_conn, post) do
{:error, post, "This will prevent posts from being created"}
end
def before_delete(conn, post) do
case conn.assigns.user.role do
"admin" -> {:ok, post}
_ -> {:error, post, "Only admins can delete posts"}
end
end
end
Sometimes you may need to overwrite the way Kaffy is creating, updating, or deleting records.
You can define you own Admin function to perform those actions. This can be useful if you are creating complex records, importing files, etc...
The function that can be overwritten are:
insert/2
update/2
delete/2
insert/2
, update/2
& delete/2
functions are passed the current conn
and a changeset.
They must return {:ok, record}
to continue.
defmodule MyApp.Blog.PostAdmin do
def insert(conn, changeset) do
entry = Post.create_complex_post(conn.params)
{:ok, entry}
end
def update(conn, changeset) do
entry = Post.update_complex_post(conn.params["id"])
{:ok, entry}
end
def delete(conn, changeset) do
entry = Post.delete_complex_post(conn.params["id"])
{:ok, entry}
end
end
Kaffy supports simple scheduled tasks. Tasks are functions that are run periodically. Behind the scenes, they are put inside GenServer
s and supervised with a DynamicSupervisor
.
To create scheduled tasks, simply define a scheduled_tasks/1
function in your admin module:
defmodule MyApp.Products.ProductAdmin do
def scheduled_tasks(_) do
[
%{
name: "Cache Product Count",
initial_value: 0,
every: 15,
action: fn _v ->
count = Bakery.Products.cache_product_count()
# "count" will be passed to this function in its next run.
{:ok, count}
end
},
%{
name: "Delete Fake Products",
every: 60,
initial_value: nil,
action: fn _ ->
Bakery.Products.delete_fake_products()
{:ok, nil}
end
}
]
end
end
Once you create your scheduled tasks, a new "Tasks" menu item will show up (below the Dashboard item) listing all your tasks with some tiny bits of information about each task like the following image:
The scheduled_tasks/1
function takes a schema and must return a list of tasks.
A task is a map with the following keys:
:name
to hold a short description for the task.:initial_value
to pass to the task's action in its first run.:every
to indicate the number of seconds between each run.:action
to hold an anonymous function with arity/1.
The initial_value
is passed to the action
function in its first run.
The action
function must return one of the following values:
{:ok, value}
which indicates a successful run. Thevalue
will be passed to theaction
function in its next run.{:error, value}
which indicates a failed run. Thevalue
will be saved and passed again to theaction
function in its next run.
In case the action
function crashes, the task will be brought back up again in its initial state that is defined in the scheduled_tasks/1
function and the "Started" time will change to indicate the new starting time. This will also reset the successful and failed run counts to 0.
Note that since scheduled tasks are run with GenServer
s, they are stored and kept in memory. Having too many scheduled tasks under low memory conditions can cause an out of memory exception.
Scheduled tasks should be used for simple, non-critical operations.
A few points that encouraged the creation and development of Kaffy:
- Taking contexts into account.
- Supporting contexts makes the admin interface better organized.
- Can handle as many schemas as necessary.
- Whether we have 1 schema or 1000 schemas, the admin interface should adapt well.
- Have a visually pleasant user interface.
- This might be subjective.
- No generators or generated templates.
- I believe the less files there are the better. This also means it's easier to upgrade for users when releasing new versions. This might mean some flexibility and customizations will be lost, but it's a trade-off.
- Existing schemas/contexts shouldn't have to be modified.
- I shouldn't have to change my code in order to adapt to the package, the package should adapt to my code.
- Should be easy to use whether with a new project or with existing projects with a lot of schemas.
- Adding kaffy should be as easy for existing projects as it is for new ones.
- Highly flexible and customizable.
- Provide as many configurable options as possible.
- As few dependencies as possible.
- Currently kaffy only depends on phoenix and ecto.
- Simple authorization.
- I need to limit access for some admins to some schemas.
- Sensible, modifiable, default assumptions.
- When the package assumes something, this assumption should be sensible and modifiable when needed.