DavidBadura / Valinor

PHP library that helps to map any input into a strongly-typed value object structure.

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Valinor • PHP object mapper with strong type support

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Valinor is a PHP library that helps to map any input into a strongly-typed value object structure.

The conversion can handle native PHP types as well as other well-known advanced type annotations like array shapes, generics and more.

Why?

There are many benefits of using value objects instead of plain arrays and scalar values in a modern codebase, among which:

  1. Data and behaviour encapsulation — locks an object's behaviour inside its class, preventing it from being scattered across the codebase.
  2. Data validation — guarantees the valid state of an object.
  3. Immutability — ensures the state of an object cannot be changed during runtime.

When mapping any source to an object structure, this library will ensure that all input values are properly converted to match the types of the nodes — class properties or method parameters. Any value that cannot be converted to the correct type will trigger an error and prevent the mapping from completing.

These checks guarantee that if the mapping succeeds, the object structure is perfectly valid, hence there is no need for further validation nor type conversion: the objects are ready to be used.

Static analysis

A strongly-typed codebase allows the usage of static analysis tools like PHPStan and Psalm that can identify issues in a codebase without running it.

Moreover, static analysis can help during a refactoring of a codebase with tools like an IDE or Rector.

Usage

Installation

composer require cuyz/valinor

Example

An application must handle the data coming from an external API; the response has a JSON format and describes a thread and its answers. The validity of this input is unsure, besides manipulating a raw JSON string is laborious and inefficient.

{
    "id": 1337,
    "content": "Do you like potatoes?",
    "date": "1957-07-23 13:37:42",
    "answers": [
        {
            "user": "Ella F.",
            "message": "I like potatoes",
            "date": "1957-07-31 15:28:12"
        },
        {
            "user": "Louis A.",
            "message": "And I like tomatoes",
            "date": "1957-08-13 09:05:24"
        }
    ]
}

The application must be certain that it can handle this data correctly; wrapping the input in a value object will help.


A schema representing the needed structure must be provided, using classes.

final class Thread
{
    public function __construct(
        public readonly int $id,
        public readonly string $content,
        public readonly DateTimeInterface $date,
        /** @var Answer[] */
        public readonly array $answers, 
    ) {}
}

final class Answer
{
    public function __construct(
        public readonly string $user,
        public readonly string $message,
        public readonly DateTimeInterface $date,
    ) {}
}

Then a mapper is used to hydrate a source into these objects.

public function getThread(int $id): Thread
{
    $rawJson = $this->client->request("https://example.com/thread/$id");

    try {   
        return (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
            ->mapper()
            ->map(
                Thread::class,
                new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\JsonSource($rawJson)
            );
    } catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
        // Do something…
    }
}

Mapping advanced types

Although it is recommended to map an input to a value object, in some cases mapping to another type can be easier/more flexible.

It is for instance possible to map to an array of objects:

try {
    $objects = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
        ->mapper()
        ->map(
            'array<' . SomeClass::class . '>',
            [/* … */]
        );
} catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
    // Do something…
}

For simple use-cases, an array shape can be used:

try {
    $array = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
        ->mapper()
        ->map(
            'array{foo: string, bar: int}',
            [/* … */]
        );
    
    echo $array['foo'];
    echo $array['bar'] * 2;
} catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
    // Do something…
}

Validation

The source given to a mapper can never be trusted, this is actually the very goal of this library: transforming an unstructured input to a well-defined object structure. If the mapper cannot guess how to cast a certain value, it means that it is not able to guarantee the validity of the desired object thus it will fail.

Any issue encountered during the mapping will add an error to an upstream exception of type \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError. It is therefore always recommended wrapping the mapping function call with a try/catch statement and handle the error properly.

More specific validation should be done in the constructor of the value object, by throwing an exception if something is wrong with the given data. A good practice would be to use lightweight validation tools like Webmozart Assert.

When the mapping fails, the exception gives access to the root node. This recursive object allows retrieving all needed information through the whole mapping tree: path, values, types and messages, including the issues that caused the exception.

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(private string $someValue)
    {
        Assert::startsWith($someValue, 'foo_');
    }
}

try {
   (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
        ->mapper()
        ->map(
            SomeClass::class,
            ['someValue' => 'bar_baz']
        );
} catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
    // Get flatten list of all messages through the whole nodes tree
    $node = $error->node();
    $messages = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\MessagesFlattener($node);
    
    // If only errors are wanted, they can be filtered
    $errorMessages = $messages->errors();

    // Should print something similar to:
    // > Expected a value to start with "foo_". Got: "bar_baz"
    foreach ($errorsMessages as $message) {
        echo $message;
    }
}

Message customization

The content of a message can be changed to fit custom use cases; it can contain placeholders that will be replaced with useful information.

The placeholders below are always available; even more may be used depending on the original message.

Placeholder Description
{message_code} the code of the message
{node_name} name of the node to which the message is bound
{node_path} path of the node to which the message is bound
{node_type} type of the node to which the message is bound
{original_value} the source value that was given to the node
{original_message} the original message before being customized

Usage:

try {
    (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
        ->mapper()
        ->map(SomeClass::class, [/* … */]);
} catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
    $node = $error->node();
    $messages = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\MessagesFlattener($node);

    foreach ($messages as $message) {
        if ($message->code() === 'some_code') {
            $message = $message->withBody('new message / {original_message}');
        }

        echo $message;
    }
}

The messages are formatted using the ICU library, enabling the placeholders to use advanced syntax to perform proper translations, for instance currency support.

try {
    (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())->mapper()->map('int<0, 100>', 1337);
} catch (\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\MappingError $error) {
    $message = $error->node()->messages()[0];

    if (is_numeric($message->value())) {
        $message = $message->withBody(
            'Invalid amount {original_value, number, currency}'
        );    
    } 

    // Invalid amount: $1,337.00
    echo $message->withLocale('en_US');
    
    // Invalid amount: £1,337.00
    echo $message->withLocale('en_GB');
    
    // Invalid amount: 1 337,00 €
    echo $message->withLocale('fr_FR');
}

See ICU documentation for more information on available syntax.

Warning If the intl extension is not installed, a shim will be available to replace the placeholders, but it won't handle advanced syntax as described above.

Deeper message customization / translation

For deeper message changes, formatters can be used — for instance to translate content.

Translation

The formatter TranslationMessageFormatter can be used to translate the content of messages.

The library provides a list of all messages that can be returned; this list can be filled or modified with custom translations.

\CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\TranslationMessageFormatter::default()
    // Create/override a single entry…
    ->withTranslation('fr', 'some custom message', 'un message personnalisé')
    // …or several entries.
    ->withTranslations([
        'some custom message' => [
            'en' => 'Some custom message',
            'fr' => 'Un message personnalisé',
            'es' => 'Un mensaje personalizado',
        ], 
        'some other message' => [
            // …
        ], 
    ])
    ->format($message);

Replacement map

The formatter MessageMapFormatter can be used to provide a list of messages replacements. It can be instantiated with an array where each key represents either:

  • The code of the message to be replaced
  • The body of the message to be replaced
  • The class name of the message to be replaced

If none of those is found, the content of the message will stay unchanged unless a default one is given to the class.

If one of these keys is found, the array entry will be used to replace the content of the message. This entry can be either a plain text or a callable that takes the message as a parameter and returns a string; it is for instance advised to use a callable in cases where a custom translation service is used — to avoid useless greedy operations.

In any case, the content can contain placeholders as described above.

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\MessageMapFormatter([
    // Will match if the given message has this exact code
    'some_code' => 'New content / code: {message_code}',

    // Will match if the given message has this exact content
    'Some message content' => 'New content / previous: {original_message}',

    // Will match if the given message is an instance of `SomeError`
    SomeError::class => 'New content / value: {original_value}',

    // A callback can be used to get access to the message instance
    OtherError::class => function (NodeMessage $message): string {
        if ($message->path() === 'foo.bar') {
            return 'Some custom message';
        }

        return $message->body();
    },

    // For greedy operation, it is advised to use a lazy-callback
    'foo' => fn () => $this->customTranslator->translate('foo.bar'),
]))
    ->defaultsTo('some default message')
    // …or…
    ->defaultsTo(fn () => $this->customTranslator->translate('default_message'))
    ->format($message);

Several formatters

It is possible to join several formatters into one formatter by using the AggregateMessageFormatter. This instance can then easily be injected in a service that will handle messages.

The formatters will be called in the same order they are given to the aggregate.

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\AggregateMessageFormatter(
    new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\LocaleMessageFormatter('fr'),
    new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\MessageMapFormatter([
        // …
    ],
    \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Tree\Message\Formatter\TranslationMessageFormatter::default(),
))->format($message)

Source

Any source can be given to the mapper, be it an array, some json, yaml or even a file:

$mapper = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())->mapper();

$mapper->map(
    SomeClass::class,
    \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::array($someData)
);

$mapper->map(
    SomeClass::class,
    \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::json($jsonString)
);

$mapper->map(
    SomeClass::class,
    \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::yaml($yamlString)
);

$mapper->map(
    SomeClass::class,
    // File containing valid Json or Yaml content and with valid extension
    \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::file(
        new SplFileObject('path/to/my/file.json')
    )
);

Modifiers

Sometimes the source is not in the same format and/or organised in the same way as a value object. Modifiers can be used to change a source before the mapping occurs.

Camel case keys

This modifier recursively forces all keys to be in camelCase format.

final class SomeClass
{
    public readonly string $someValue;
}

$source = \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::array([
        'some_value' => 'foo',
        // …or…
        'some-value' => 'foo',
        // …or…
        'some value' => 'foo',
        // …will be replaced by `['someValue' => 'foo']`
   ])
   ->camelCaseKeys();

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(SomeClass::class, $source);
Path mapping

This modifier can be used to change paths in the source data using a dot notation.

The mapping is done using an associative array of path mappings. This array must have the source path as key and the target path as value.

The source path uses the dot notation (eg A.B.C) and can contain one * for array paths (eg A.B.*.C).

final class Country
{
    /** @var City[] */
    public readonly array $cities;
}

final class City
{
    public readonly string $name;
}

$source = \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::array([
        'towns' => [
            ['label' => 'Ankh Morpork'],
            ['label' => 'Minas Tirith'],
        ],
    ])
    ->map([
        'towns' => 'cities',
        'towns.*.label' => 'name',
   ]);

// After modification this is what the source will look like:
[
    'cities' => [
        ['name' => 'Ankh Morpork'],
        ['name' => 'Minas Tirith'],
    ],
];

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(Country::class, $source);

Custom source

The source is just an iterable, so it's easy to create a custom one. It can even be combined with the provided builder.

final class AcmeSource implements IteratorAggregate
{
    private iterable $source;
    
    public function __construct(iterable $source)
    {
        $this->source = $this->doSomething($source);
    }
    
    private function doSomething(iterable $source): iterable
    {
        // Do something with $source
        
        return $source;
    }
    
    public function getIterator()
    {
        yield from $this->source;
    }
}

$source = \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Source::iterable(
        new AcmeSource(['value' => 'foo'])
    )->camelCaseKeys();

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(SomeClass::class, $source);

Construction strategy

During the mapping, instances of objects are recursively created and hydrated with transformed values. Construction strategies will determine what values are needed and how an object is built.

Native constructor

If a constructor exists and is public, its arguments will determine which values are needed from the input.

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        public readonly string $foo,
        public readonly int $bar,
    ) {}
}

Custom constructor

An object may have custom ways of being created, in such cases these constructors need to be registered to the mapper to be used. A constructor is a callable that can be either:

  1. A named constructor, also known as a static factory method
  2. The method of a service — for instance a repository
  3. A "callable object" — a class that declares an __invoke method
  4. Any other callable — including anonymous functions

In any case, the return type of the callable will be resolved by the mapper to know when to use it. Any argument can be provided and will automatically be mapped using the given source. These arguments can then be used to instantiate the object in the desired way.

Registering any constructor will disable the native constructor — the __construct method — of the targeted class. If for some reason it still needs to be handled as well, the name of the class must be given to the registration method.

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->registerConstructor(
        // Allow the native constructor to be used
        Color::class,

        // Register a named constructor
        Color::fromHex(...),
        // …or for PHP < 8.1:
        [Color::class, 'fromHex'],

        /**
         * An anonymous function can also be used, for instance when the desired
         * object is an external dependency that cannot be modified.
         * 
         * @param 'red'|'green'|'blue' $color
         * @param 'dark'|'light' $darkness
         */
        function (string $color, string $darkness): Color {
            $main = $darkness === 'dark' ? 128 : 255;
            $other = $darkness === 'dark' ? 0 : 128;
 
            return new Color(
                $color === 'red' ? $main : $other,
                $color === 'green' ? $main : $other,
                $color === 'blue' ? $main : $other,
            );
        }
    )
    ->mapper()
    ->map(Color::class, [/* … */]);

final class Color
{
    /**
     * @param int<0, 255> $red
     * @param int<0, 255> $green
     * @param int<0, 255> $blue
     */
    public function __construct(
        public readonly int $red,
        public readonly int $green,
        public readonly int $blue
    ) {}

    /**
     * @param non-empty-string $hex
     */
    public static function fromHex(string $hex): self
    {
        if (strlen($hex) !== 6) {
            throw new DomainException('Must be 6 characters long');
        }

        /** @var int<0, 255> $red */
        $red = hexdec(substr($hex, 0, 2));
        /** @var int<0, 255> $green */
        $green = hexdec(substr($hex, 2, 2));
        /** @var int<0, 255> $blue */
        $blue = hexdec(substr($hex, 4, 2));

        return new self($red, $green, $blue);
    }
}

Properties

If no constructor is registered, properties will determine which values are needed from the input.

final class SomeClass
{
    public readonly string $foo;

    public readonly int $bar;
}

Inferring interfaces

When the mapper meets an interface, it needs to understand which implementation (a class that implements this interface) will be used — this information must be provided in the mapper builder, using the method infer().

The callback given to this method must return the name of a class that implements the interface. Any arguments can be required by the callback; they will be mapped properly using the given source.

$mapper = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->infer(UuidInterface::class, fn () => MyUuid::class)
    ->infer(SomeInterface::class, fn (string $type) => match($type) {
        'first' => FirstImplementation::class,
        'second' => SecondImplementation::class,
        default => throw new DomainException("Unhandled type `$type`.")
    })->mapper();

// Will return an instance of `FirstImplementation`
$mapper->map(SomeInterface::class, [
    'type' => 'first',
    'uuid' => 'a6868d61-acba-406d-bcff-30ecd8c0ceb6',
    'someString' => 'foo',
]);

// Will return an instance of `SecondImplementation`
$mapper->map(SomeInterface::class, [
    'type' => 'second',
    'uuid' => 'a6868d61-acba-406d-bcff-30ecd8c0ceb6',
    'someInt' => 42,
]);

interface SomeInterface {}

final class FirstImplementation implements SomeInterface
{
    public readonly UuidInterface $uuid;

    public readonly string $someString;
}

final class SecondImplementation implements SomeInterface
{
    public readonly UuidInterface $uuid;

    public readonly int $someInt;
}

Modifiers

Sometimes the source is not in the same format and/or organised in the same way as a value object. Modifiers can be used to change a source before the mapping occurs.

Camel case keys

This modifier recursively forces all keys to be in camelCase format.

final class SomeClass
{
    public readonly string $someValue;
}

$source = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Mapper\Source\Modifier\CamelCaseKeys([
    'some_value' => 'foo',
    // …or…
    'some-value' => 'foo',
    // …or…
    'some value' => 'foo',
    // …will be replaced by `['someValue' => 'foo']`
]);

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(SomeClass::class, $source);

Handled types

To prevent conflicts or duplication of the type annotations, this library tries to handle most of the type annotations that are accepted by PHPStan and Psalm.

Scalar

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        private bool $boolean,

        private float $float,

        private int $integer,

        /** @var positive-int */
        private int $positiveInteger,

        /** @var negative-int */
        private int $negativeInteger,

        /** @var int<-42, 1337> */
        private int $integerRange,

        /** @var int<min, 0> */
        private int $integerRangeWithMinRange,

        /** @var int<0, max> */
        private int $integerRangeWithMaxRange,

        private string $string,
        
        /** @var non-empty-string */
        private string $nonEmptyString,

        /** @var class-string */
        private string $classString,

        /** @var class-string<SomeInterface> */
        private string $classStringOfAnInterface,
    ) {}
}

Object

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        private SomeClass $class,

        private DateTimeInterface $interface,

        /** @var SomeInterface&AnotherInterface */
        private object $intersection,

        /** @var SomeCollection<SomeClass> */
        private SomeCollection $classWithGeneric,
    ) {}
}

/**
 * @template T of object 
 */
final class SomeCollection
{
    public function __construct(
        /** @var array<T> */
        private array $objects,
    ) {}
}

Array & lists

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        /** @var string[] */
        private array $simpleArray,

        /** @var array<string> */
        private array $arrayOfStrings,

        /** @var array<string, SomeClass> */
        private array $arrayOfClassWithStringKeys,

        /** @var array<int, SomeClass> */
        private array $arrayOfClassWithIntegerKeys,

        /** @var non-empty-array<string> */
        private array $nonEmptyArrayOfStrings,

        /** @var non-empty-array<string, SomeClass> */
        private array $nonEmptyArrayWithStringKeys,
        
        /** @var list<string> */
        private array $listOfStrings,
        
        /** @var non-empty-list<string> */
        private array $nonEmptyListOfStrings,

        /** @var array{foo: string, bar: int} */
        private array $shapedArray,

        /** @var array{foo: string, bar?: int} */
        private array $shapedArrayWithOptionalElement,

        /** @var array{string, bar: int} */
        private array $shapedArrayWithUndefinedKey,
    ) {}
}

Union

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        private int|string $simpleUnion,
        
        /** @var class-string<SomeInterface|AnotherInterface> */
        private string $unionOfClassString,
        
        /** @var array<SomeInterface|AnotherInterface> */
        private array $unionInsideArray,
        
        /** @var int|true */
        private int|bool $unionWithLiteralTrueType;
        
        /** @var int|false */
        private int|bool $unionWithLiteralFalseType;
        
        /** @var 404.42|1337.42 */
        private float $unionOfFloatValues,
        
        /** @var 42|1337 */
        private int $unionOfIntegerValues,
        
        /** @var 'foo'|'bar' */
        private string $unionOfStringValues,
    ) {}
}

Performance & caching

This library needs to parse a lot of information in order to handle all provided features. Therefore, it is strongly advised to activate the cache to reduce heavy workload between runtimes, especially when the application runs in a production environment.

The library provides a cache implementation out of the box, which saves cache entries into the file system.

Note It is also possible to use any PSR-16 compliant implementation, as long as it is capable of caching the entries handled by the library.

When the application runs in a development environment, the cache implementation should be decorated with FileWatchingCache, which will watch the files of the application and invalidate cache entries when a PHP file is modified by a developer — preventing the library not behaving as expected when the signature of a property or a method changes.

$cache = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Cache\FileSystemCache('path/to/cache-directory');

if ($isApplicationInDevelopmentEnvironment) {
    $cache = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Cache\FileWatchingCache($cache);
}

(new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->withCache($cache)
    ->mapper()
    ->map(SomeClass::class, [/* … */]);

Warming up cache

The cache can be warmed up, for instance in a pipeline during the build and deployment of the application.

Note The cache has to be registered first, otherwise the warmup will end up being useless.

$cache = new \CuyZ\Valinor\Cache\FileSystemCache('path/to/cache-dir');

$mapperBuilder = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())->withCache($cache);

// During the build:
$mapperBuilder->warmup(SomeClass::class, SomeOtherClass::class);

// In the application:
$mapper->mapper()->map(SomeClass::class, [/* … */]);

Static analysis

To help static analysis of a codebase using this library, an extension for PHPStan and a plugin for Psalm are provided. They enable these tools to better understand the behaviour of the mapper.

Considering at least one of those tools are installed on a project, below are examples of the kind of errors that would be reported.

Mapping to an array of classes

final class SomeClass
{
    public function __construct(
        public readonly string $foo,
        public readonly int $bar,
    ) {}
}

$objects = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(
        'array<' . SomeClass::class . '>',
        [/* … */]
    );

foreach ($objects as $object) {
    // ✅
    echo $object->foo;
    
    // ✅
    echo $object->bar * 2;
    
    // ❌ Cannot perform operation between `string` and `int`
    echo $object->foo * $object->bar;
    
    // ❌ Property `SomeClass::$fiz` is not defined
    echo $object->fiz;
} 

Mapping to a shaped array

$array = (new \CuyZ\Valinor\MapperBuilder())
    ->mapper()
    ->map(
        'array{foo: string, bar: int}',
        [/* … */]
    );

// ✅
echo $array['foo'];

// ❌ Expected `string` but got `int`
echo strtolower($array['bar']);

// ❌ Cannot perform operation between `string` and `int`
echo $array['foo'] * $array['bar'];

// ❌ Offset `fiz` does not exist on array
echo $array['fiz']; 

To activate this feature, the configuration must be updated for the installed tool(s):

PHPStan

includes:
    - vendor/cuyz/valinor/qa/PHPStan/valinor-phpstan-configuration.php

Psalm

<plugins>
    <plugin filename="vendor/cuyz/valinor/qa/Psalm/Plugin/TreeMapperPsalmPlugin.php"/>
</plugins>

About

PHP library that helps to map any input into a strongly-typed value object structure.

License:MIT License


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