A minimal finite state machine with a straightforward and intuitive syntax. You can quickly model states and transitions and register callbacks to watch for triggered transitions.
- plain object state machine
- easy custom object integration
- natural DSL for declaring events, callbacks and exception handlers
- callbacks for state and event changes
- ability to check reachable state(s)
- ability to check for terminal state(s)
- transition guard conditions
- dynamic choice pseudostates
- thread safe
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "finite_machine"
Then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install finite_machine
- 1. Usage
- 2. API
- 3. States and Transitions
- 4. Callbacks
- 5. Error Handling
- 6. Stand-alone
- 7. Integration
- 8. Tips
Here is a very simple example of a state machine:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
event :stop, :green => :red
on_before(:ready) { |event| ... }
on_exit(:yellow) { |event| ... }
on_enter(:green) { |event| ... }
on_after(:stop) { |event| ... }
endBy calling the new method on FiniteMachine, you gain access to a powerful DSL for expressing transitions and registering callbacks.
Having declared the states and transitions, you can check current state:
fm.current # => :redAnd then trigger transitions using the trigger:
fm.trigger(:ready)Or you can use direct method calls:
fm.readyRead States and Transitions and Callbacks sections for more details.
Alternatively, you can construct the state machine like a regular object using the same DSL methods. Similar machine could be reimplemented as follows:
fm = FiniteMachine.new(initial: :red)
fm.event(:ready, :red => :yellow)
fm.event(:go, :yellow => :green)
fm.event(:stop, :green => :red)
fm.on_before(:ready) { |event| ... }
fm.on_exit(:yellow) { |event| ... }
fm.on_enter(:green) { |event| ... }
fm.on_after(:stop) { |event| ... }In most cases you will want to create an instance of FiniteMachine class using the new method. At the bare minimum you need specify the transition events inside a block using the event helper:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
endAlternatively, you can skip block definition and instead call DSL methods directly on the state machine instance:
fm = FiniteMachine.new
fm.initial(:green)
fm.event(:slow, :green => :yellow)
fm.event(:stop, :yellow => :red)
fm.event(:ready,:red => :yellow)
fm.event(:go, :yellow => :green)As a guiding rule, any method exposed via DSL is available as a regular method call on the state machine instance.
To create a reusable definition for a state machine use define method. By calling define you're creating an anonymous class that can act as a factory for state machines. For example, below we create a TrafficLights class that contains our state machine definition:
TrafficLights = FiniteMachine.define do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
endThen we can create however many instance of above class:
lights_fm_a = TrafficLights.new
lights_fm_b = TrafficLights.newEach instance will start in consistent state:
lights_fm_a.current # => :green
lights_fm_b.current # => :greenWe can then trigger event for one instance and not the other:
lights_fm_a.slow
lights_fm_a.current # => :yellow
lights_fm_b.current # => :greenThe FiniteMachine allows you to query the current state by calling the current method.
fm.current # => :redThere are number of ways to provide the initial state in FiniteMachine depending on your requirements.
By default the FiniteMachine will be in the :none state and you will need to provide an explicit event to transition out of this state.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
event :init, :none => :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
end
fm.current # => :none
fm.init # => true
fm.current # => :greenIf you specify initial state using the initial helper, then the state machine will be created already in that state and an implicit init event will be created for you and automatically triggered upon the state machine initialization.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green # fires init event that transitions from :none to :green state
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
end
fm.current # => :greenOr by passing named argument :initial like so:
fm = FiniteMachine.new(initial: :green) do
...
endIf you want to defer setting the initial state, pass the :defer option to the initial helper. By default FiniteMachine will create init event that will allow to transition from :none state to the new state.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green, defer: true # Defer calling :init event
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
end
fm.current # => :none
fm.init # execute initial transition
fm.current # => :greenIf your target object already has init method or one of the events names redefines init, you can use different name by passing :event option to initial helper.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green, event: :start, defer: true # Rename event from :init to :start
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
end
fm.current # => :none
fm.start # => call the renamed event
fm.current # => :greenBy default the initial does not trigger any callbacks. If you need to fire callbacks and any event associated actions on initial transition, pass the silent option set to false like so:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green, silent: false # callbacks are triggered
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
endTo specify a final state FiniteMachine uses the terminal method.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
terminal :red
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
event :go, :red => :green
endWhen the terminal state has been specified, you can use terminated? method on the state machine instance to verify if the terminal state has been reached or not.
fm.terminated? # => false
fm.slow # => true
fm.terminated? # => false
fm.stop # => true
fm.terminated? # => trueThe terminal can accept more than one state.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :open
terminal :close, :canceled
event :resolve, :open => :close
event :decline, :open => :canceled
endAnd the terminal state can be checked using terminated?:
fm.decline
fm.terminated? # => trueTo verify whether or not a state machine is in a given state, FiniteMachine uses is? method. It returns true if the machine is found to be in the given state, or false otherwise.
fm.is?(:red) # => true
fm.is?(:yellow) # => falseMoreover, you can use helper methods to check for current state using the state name itself like so
fm.red? # => true
fm.yellow? # => falseTransition events can be fired by calling the trigger method with the event name and remaining arguments as data. The return value is either true or false depending whether the transition succeeded or not:
fm.trigger(:ready) # => true
fm.trigger(:ready, "one", "two", "three") # => trueBy default, the FiniteMachine automatically converts all the transition event names into methods:
fm.ready # => true
fm.ready("one", "two", "three") # => truePlease see States and Transitions for in-depth treatment of firing transitions.
By default, all event names will be converted by FiniteMachine into method names. This also means that you won't be able to use event names such as :fail or :trigger as these are already defined on the machine instance. In situations when you wish to use any event name for your event names use :auto_methods keyword to disable automatic methods generation. For example, to define :fail event:
fm = FiniteMachine.new(auto_methods: false) do
initial :green
event :fail, :green => :red
endAnd then you can use trigger to fire the event:
fm.trigger(:fail)
fm.current # => :redTo verify whether or not an event can be fired, FiniteMachine provides can? or cannot? methods. can? checks if FiniteMachine can fire a given event, returning true, otherwise, it will return false. The cannot? is simply the inverse of can?.
fm.can?(:ready) # => true
fm.can?(:go) # => false
fm.cannot?(:ready) # => false
fm.cannot?(:go) # => trueThe can? and cannot? helper methods take into account the :if and :unless conditions applied to events. The set of values that :if or :unless condition takes as block parameter can be passed in directly via can? and cannot? methods' arguments, after the name of the event. For instance,
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red, if: ->(_, param) { :breaks == param }
end
fm.can?(:slow) # => true
fm.can?(:stop) # => false
fm.slow # => true
fm.can?(:stop, :breaks) # => true
fm.can?(:stop, :no_breaks) # => falseIf you need to execute some external code in the context of the current state machine, pass that object as a first argument to new method.
Assuming we have a simple Engine class that holds an internal state whether the car's engine is on or off:
class Engine
def initialize
@engine = false
end
def turn_on
@engine = true
end
def turn_off
@engine = false
end
def engine_on?
@engine
end
endAnd given an instance of Engine class:
engine = Engine.newYou can provide a context to a state machine by passing it as a first argument to a new call. You can then reference this context inside the callbacks by calling the target helper:
fm = FiniteMachine.new(engine) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, unless: "engine_on?"
event :stop, :one => :neutral
on_before_start { |event| target.turn_on }
on_after_stop { |event| target.turn_off }
endFor more complex example see Integration section.
If you wish to better express the intention behind the context object, in particular when calling actions in callbacks, you can use the :alias_target option:
engine = Engine.new
fm = FiniteMachine.new(engine, alias_target: :engine) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, unless: "engine_on?"
event :stop, :none => :neutral, if: "engine_on?"
on_before_start { |event| engine.turn_on }
on_after_stop { |event| engine.turn_off }
endAlternatively, you can use the alias_target helper method:
engine = Engine.new
Car = FiniteMachine.define do
alias_target :engine
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, if: "engine_on?"
event :stop, :none => :neutral, if: "engine_on?"
on_before_start { |event| engine.turn_on }
on_after_stop { |event| engine.turn_off }
endThen to link Car definition with Engine instance, pass the Engine instance as a first argument:
car = Car.new(engine)Triggering start event will change Engine instance state from false to true:
engine.engine_on? # => false
car.start
car.current # => :one
engine.engine_on? # => trueIn order to set the machine to a given state and thus skip triggering callbacks use the restore! method:
fm.restore!(:neutral)This method may be suitable when used testing your state machine or in restoring the state from datastore.
You can use the states method to return an array of all the states for a given state machine.
fm.states # => [:none, :green, :yellow, :red]To find out all the event names supported by the state machine issue events method:
fm.events # => [:init, :ready, :go, :stop]The FiniteMachine DSL exposes the event helper to define possible state transitions.
The event helper accepts as a first argument the transition's name which will later be used to create
method on the FiniteMachine instance. As a second argument the event accepts an arbitrary number of states either
in the form of :from and :to hash keys or by using the state names themselves as key value pairs.
event :start, from: :neutral, to: :first
# or
event :start, :neutral => :firstOnce specified, the FiniteMachine will create custom methods for transitioning between each state. The following methods trigger transitions for the example state machine.
- ready
- go
- stop
You can always opt out from automatic method generation by using :auto_methods option.
In order to transition to the next reachable state, simply call the event's name on the FiniteMachine instance. If the transition succeeds the true value is returned, otherwise false.
fm.ready # => true
fm.current # => :yellowIf you prefer you can also use trigger method to fire any event by its name:
fm.trigger(:ready) # => trueFurthermore, you can pass additional parameters with the method call that will be available in the triggered callback as well as used by any present guarding conditions.
fm.go("Piotr!") # => true
fm.current # => :greenBy default FiniteMachine will swallow all exceptions when and return false on failure. If you prefer to be notified when illegal transition occurs see Dangerous transitions.
When you declare event, for instance ready, the FiniteMachine will provide a dangerous version with a bang ready!. In the case when you attempt to perform illegal transition or FiniteMachine throws internal error, the state machine will propagate the errors. You can use handlers to decide how to handle errors on case by case basis see 6. Error Handling
fm.ready! # => raises FiniteMachine::InvalidStateErrorIf you prefer you can also use trigger! method to fire event:
fm.trigger!(:ready)If an event transitions from multiple states to the same state then all the states can be grouped into an array. Alternatively, you can create separate events under the same name for each transition that needs combining.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one
event :shift, :one => :two
event :shift, :two => :three
event :shift, :three => :four
event :slow, [:one, :two, :three] => :one
endThe FiniteMachine offers few ways to transition out of any state. This is particularly useful when the machine already defines many states.
You can use any_state as the name for a given state, for instance:
event :run, from: any_state, to: :green
# or
event :run, any_state => :greenAlternatively, you can skip the any_state call and just specify to state:
event :run, to: :greenAll the above run event definitions will always transition the state machine into :green state.
Another way to specify state transitions under single event name is to group all your state transitions into a single hash like so:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :initial
event :bump, :initial => :low,
:low => :medium,
:medium => :high
endThe same can be more naturally rewritten also as:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :initial
event :bump, :initial => :low
event :bump, :low => :medium
event :bump, :medium => :high
endThe FiniteMachine allows to selectively silence events and thus prevent any callbacks from firing. Using the silent option passed to event definition like so:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :yellow
event :go :yellow => :green, silent: true
event :stop, :green => :red
end
fm.go # no callbacks
fm.stop # callbacks are firedTo help debug your state machine, FiniteMachine provides :log_transitions option.
FiniteMachine.new(log_transitions: true) do
...
endEach event takes an optional :if and :unless options which act as a predicate for the transition. The :if and :unless can take a symbol, a string, a Proc or an array. Use :if option when you want to specify when the transition should happen. If you want to specify when the transition should not happen then use :unless option.
You can associate the :if and :unless options with a Proc object that will get called right before transition happens. Proc object gives you ability to write inline condition instead of separate method.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow, if: -> { return false }
end
fm.slow # doesn't transition to :yellow state
fm.current # => :greenCondition by default receives the current context, which is the current state machine instance, followed by extra arguments.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :go, :red => :green,
if: ->(context, a) { context.current == a }
end
fm.go(:yellow) # doesn't transition
fm.go # raises ArgumentErrorNote If you specify condition with a given number of arguments then you need to call an event with the exact number of arguments, otherwise you will get ArgumentError. Thus in above scenario to prevent errors specify condition like so:
if: ->(context, *args) { ... }Provided your FiniteMachine is associated with another object through target helper. Then the target object together with event arguments will be passed to the :if or :unless condition scope.
class Engine
def initialize
@engine = false
end
def turn_on
@engine = true
end
def turn_off
@engine = false
end
def engine_on?
@engine
end
end
engine = Engine.new
engine.turn_on
car = FiniteMachine.new(engine) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, if: ->(target, state) do
state ? target.engine_on : target.engine_off
end
end
fm.start(false)
fm.current # => :neutral
engine.engine_on? # => false
fm.start(true)
fm.current # => :one
engine.engine_on? # => trueWhen the one-liner conditions are not enough for your needs, you can perform conditional logic inside the callbacks. See 4.9 Cancelling callbacks
You can also use a symbol corresponding to the name of a method that will get called right before transition happens.
fm = FiniteMachine.new(engine) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, if: :engine_on?
endFinally, it's possible to use string that will be evaluated using eval and needs to contain valid Ruby code. It should only be used when the string represents a short condition.
fm = FiniteMachine.new(engine) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one, if: "engine_on?"
endWhen multiple conditions define whether or not a transition should happen, an Array can be used. Furthermore, you can apply both :if and :unless to the same transition.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow,
if: [ -> { return true }, -> { return true} ],
unless: -> { return true }
event :stop, :yellow => :red
endThe transition only runs when all the :if conditions and none of the unless conditions are evaluated to true.
Choice pseudostate allows you to implement conditional branch. The conditions of an event's transitions are evaluated in order to select only one outgoing transition.
You can implement the conditional branch as ordinary events grouped under the same name and use familiar :if/:unless conditions:
fm = FiniteMachine.define do
initial :green
event :next, :green => :yellow, if: -> { false }
event :next, :green => :red, if: -> { true }
end
fm.current # => :green
fm.next
fm.current # => :redThe same conditional logic can be implemented using much shorter and more descriptive style using choice method:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :next, from: :green do
choice :yellow, if: -> { false }
choice :red, if: -> { true }
end
end
fm.current # => :green
fm.next
fm.current # => :redJust as with event conditions you can make conditional logic dynamic and dependent on parameters passed in:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :next, from: :green do
choice :yellow, if: ->(context, a) { a < 1 }
choice :red, if: ->(context, a) { a > 1 }
default :red
end
end
fm.current # => :green
fm.next(0)
fm.current # => :yellowIf more than one of the conditions evaluates to true, a first matching one is chosen. If none of the conditions evaluate to true, then the default state is matched. However if default state is not present and non of the conditions match, no transition is performed. To avoid such situation always specify default choice.
Similarly to event definitions, you can specify the event to transition from a group of states:
FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :next, from: [:yellow, :red] do
choice :pink, if: -> { false }
choice :green
end
endOr from any state using the :any state name like so:
FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :next, from: :any do
choice :pink, if: -> { false }
choice :green
end
endYou can register a callback to listen for state transitions and events triggered, and based on these perform custom actions. There are five callbacks available in FiniteMachine:
on_before- triggered before any transitionon_exit- triggered when leaving any stateon_transition- triggered during any transitionon_enter- triggered when entering any stateon_after- triggered after any transition
Use the state or event name as a first parameter to the callback helper followed by block with event argument and a list arguments that you expect to receive like so:
on_enter(:green) { |event, a, b, c| ... }When you subscribe to the :green state change, the callback will be called whenever someone triggers event that transitions in or out of that state. The same will happen on subscription to event ready, namely, the callback will be called each time the state transition method is triggered regardless of the states it transitions from or to.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
event :stop, :green => :red
on_before :ready do |event, time1, time2, time3|
puts "#{time1} #{time2} #{time3} Go!" }
end
on_before :go do |event, name|
puts "Going fast #{name}"
end
on_before(:stop) { |event| ... }
end
fm.ready(1, 2, 3)
fm.go("Piotr!")Note Regardless of how the state is entered or exited, all the associated callbacks will be executed. This provides means for guaranteed initialization and cleanup.
The on_enter callback is executed before given state change is fired. By passing state name you can narrow down the listener to only watch out for enter state changes. Otherwise, all enter state changes will be watched.
The on_transition callback is executed when given state change happens. By passing state name you can narrow down the listener to only watch out for transition state changes. Otherwise, all transition state changes will be watched.
The on_exit callback is executed after a given state change happens. By passing state name you can narrow down the listener to only watch out for exit state changes. Otherwise, all exit state changes will be watched.
The on_before callback is executed before a given event happens. By default it will listen out for all events, you can also listen out for specific events by passing event's name.
This callback is executed after a given event happened. By default it will listen out for all events, you can also listen out for specific events by passing event's name.
FiniteMachine allows you to listen on initial state change or when the event is fired first time by using the following 5 types of callbacks:
once_on_enteronce_on_transitiononce_on_exitonce_beforeonce_after
Assuming we have the following event specified:
event :go, :red => :yellowThen by calling go event the following callbacks sequence will be executed:
on_before- generic callback beforeanyeventon_before :go- callback before thegoeventon_exit- generic callback for exit fromanystateon_exit :red- callback for the:redstate exiton_transition- callback for transition fromanystate toanystateon_transition :yellow- callback for the:redto:yellowtransitionon_enter- generic callback for entry toanystateon_enter :yellow- callback for the:yellowstate entryon_after- generic callback afteranyeventon_after :go- callback after thegoevent
All callbacks as a first argument yielded to a block receive the TransitionEvent object with the following attributes:
name- the event name`from- the state transitioning from`to- the state transitioning to`
followed by the rest of arguments that were passed to the event method.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
on_before_ready do |event, time|
puts "lights switching from #{event.from} to #{event.to} in #{time} seconds"
end
end
fm.ready(3)
# => "lights switching from red to yellow in 3 seconds"You can define any number of the same kind of callback. These callbacks will be executed in the order they are specified.
Given the following state machine instance:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
on_enter(:yellow) { puts "this is run first" }
on_enter(:yellow) { puts "then this is run" }
endTriggerring the :slow event results in:
fm.slow
# => "this is run first"
# => "then this is run"Callbacks can also be specified as full method calls separated with underscores:
fm = FiniteMachine.define do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
event :stop, :green => :red
on_before_ready { |event| ... }
on_before_go { |event| ... }
on_before_stop { |event| ... }
endGiven a class Car:
class Car
attr_accessor :reverse_lights
def turn_reverse_lights_off
@reverse_lights = false
end
def turn_reverse_lights_on
@reverse_lights = true
end
endWe can easily manipulate state for an instance of a Car class:
car = Car.newBy defining finite machine using the instance:
fm = FiniteMachine.new(car) do
initial :neutral
event :forward, [:reverse, :neutral] => :one
event :back, [:neutral, :one] => :reverse
on_enter_reverse { |event| target.turn_reverse_lights_on }
on_exit_reverse { |event| target.turn_reverse_lights_off }
endNote that you can also fire events from callbacks.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :neutral
event :forward, [:reverse, :neutral] => :one
event :back, [:neutral, :one] => :reverse
on_enter_reverse { |event| forward("Piotr!") }
on_exit_reverse { |event, name| puts "Go #{name}" }
endThen triggerring :back event gives:
fm.back # => Go Piotr!For more complex example see Integration section.
A simple way to prevent transitions is to use 3 Conditional transitions.
There are times when you want to cancel transition in a callback. For example, you have logic which allows transition to happen only under certain complex conditions. Using cancel_event inside the on_(enter|transition|exit) or on_(before|after) callbacks will stop all the callbacks from firing and prevent current transition from happening.
For example, the following state machine cancels any event leaving :red state:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
event :stop, :green => :red
on_exit :red do |event|
...
cancel_event
end
endThen firing :ready event will not transition out of the current :red state:
fm.current # => :red
fm.ready
fm.current # => :redBy default all callbacks are run synchronously. In order to add a callback that runs asynchronously, you need to pass second :async argument like so:
on_enter(:green, :async) do |event| ... end
# or
on_enter_green(:async) { |event| }This will ensure that when the callback is fired it will run in separate thread outside of the main execution thread.
When defining callbacks you are not limited to the FiniteMachine block definition. After creating an instance, you can register callbacks the same way as before by calling on and supplying the type of notification and state/event you are interested in.
For example, given the following state machine:
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :red
event :ready, :red => :yellow
event :go, :yellow => :green
event :stop, :green => :red
endWe can add callbacks as follows:
fm.on_enter(:yellow) { |event| ... }
# or
fm.en_enter_yellow { |event| ... }By default, the FiniteMachine will throw an exception whenever the machine is in invalid state or fails to transition.
FiniteMachine::TransitionErrorFiniteMachine::InvalidStateErrorFiniteMachine::InvalidCallbackError
You can attach specific error handler using the 'handle' with the name of the error as a first argument and a callback to be executed when the error happens. The handle receives a list of exception class or exception class names, and an option :with with a name of the method or a Proc object to be called to handle the error. As an alternative, you can pass a block.
fm = FiniteMachine.new do
initial :green, event: :start
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
handle FiniteMachine::InvalidStateError do |exception|
# run some custom logging
raise exception
end
handle FiniteMachine::TransitionError, with: -> { |exception| ... }
endYou can pass an external context as a first argument to the FiniteMachine initialization that will be available as context in the handler block or :with value. For example, the log_error method is made available when :with option key is used:
class Logger
def log_error(exception)
puts "Exception : #{exception.message}"
end
end
fm = FiniteMachine.new(logger) do
initial :green
event :slow, :green => :yellow
event :stop, :yellow => :red
handle "InvalidStateError", with: :log_error
endFiniteMachine allows you to separate your state machine from the target class so that you can keep your concerns broken in small maintainable pieces.
You can turn a class into a FiniteMachine by simply subclassing FiniteMachine::Definition. As a rule of thumb, every single public method of the FiniteMachine is available inside your class:
class Engine < FiniteMachine::Definition
initial :neutral
event :forward, [:reverse, :neutral] => :one
event :shift, :one => :two
event :back, [:neutral, :one] => :reverse
on_enter :reverse do |event|
target.turn_reverse_lights_on
end
on_exit :reverse do |event|
target.turn_reverse_lights_off
end
handle FiniteMachine::InvalidStateError do |exception|
...
end
endThe next step is to instantiate your state machine and use a custom class instance to load specific context.
For example, having the following Car class:
class Car
def turn_reverse_lights_off
@reverse_lights = false
end
def turn_reverse_lights_on
@reverse_lights = true
end
def reverse_lights?
@reverse_lights ||= false
end
endThus, to associate Engine to Car do:
car = Car.new
engine = Engine.new(car)
car.reverse_lignts? # => false
engine.back
car.reverse_lights? # => trueAlternatively, create method inside the Car that will do the integration like so:
class Car
... # as above
def engine
@engine ||= Engine.new(self)
end
endYou can create more specialised versions of a generic definition by using inheritance. Assuming a generic state machine definition:
class GenericStateMachine < FiniteMachine::Definition
initial :red
event :start, :red => :green
on_enter { |event| ... }
endYou can easily create a more specific definition that adds new events and more specific callbacks to the mix.
class SpecificStateMachine < GenericStateMachine
event :stop, :green => :yellow
on_enter(:yellow) { |event| ... }
endFinally to use the specific state machine definition do:
specific_fsm = SpecificStateMachine.newSince FiniteMachine is an object in its own right, it leaves integration with other systems up to you. In contrast to other Ruby libraries, it does not extend from models (i.e. ActiveRecord) to transform them into a state machine or require mixing into existing classes.
In order to use FiniteMachine with an object, you need to define a method that will construct the state machine. You can implement the state machine using the new DSL or create a separate object that can be instantiated. To complete integration you will need to specify target context to allow state machine to communicate with the other methods inside the class like so:
class Car
def turn_reverse_lights_off
@reverse_lights = false
end
def turn_reverse_lights_on
@reverse_lights = true
end
def reverse_lights_on?
@reverse_lights || false
end
def gears
@gears ||= FiniteMachine.new(self) do
initial :neutral
event :start, :neutral => :one
event :shift, :one => :two
event :shift, :two => :one
event :back, [:neutral, :one] => :reverse
on_enter :reverse do |event|
target.turn_reverse_lights_on
end
on_exit :reverse do |event|
target.turn_reverse_lights_off
end
on_transition do |event|
puts "shifted from #{event.from} to #{event.to}"
end
end
end
endHaving written the class, you can use it as follows:
car = Car.new
car.gears.current # => :neutral
car.reverse_lights_on? # => false
car.gears.start # => "shifted from neutral to one"
car.gears.back # => "shifted from one to reverse"
car.gears.current # => :reverse
car.reverse_lights_on? # => trueIn order to integrate FiniteMachine with ActiveRecord simply add a method with state machine definition. You can also define the state machine in separate module to aid reusability. Once the state machine is defined use the target helper to reference the current class. Having defined target you call ActiveRecord methods inside the callbacks to persist the state.
You can use the restore! method to specify which state the FiniteMachine should be put back into as follows:
class Account < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :state, presence: true
before_validation :set_initial_state, on: :create
def set_initial_state
self.state = manage.current
end
after_find :restore_state
after_initialize :restore_state
def restore_state
manage.restore!(state.to_sym) if state.present?
end
def manage
@manage ||= FiniteMachine.new(self) do
initial :unapproved
event :enqueue, :unapproved => :pending
event :authorize, :pending => :access
on_enter do |event|
target.state = event.to
end
end
end
end
account = Account.new
account.state # => :unapproved
account.manage.enqueue
account.state # => :pending
account.manage.authorize
account.state # => :accessPlease note that you do not need to call target.save inside callback, it is enough to just set the state. It is much more preferable to let the ActiveRecord object to persist when it makes sense for the application and thus keep the state machine focused on managing the state transitions.
When using FiniteMachine with ActiveRecord it advisable to trigger state changes inside transactions to ensure integrity of the database. Given Account example from section 7.2 one can run event in transaction in the following way:
ActiveRecord::Base.transaction do
account.manage.enqueue
endIf the transition fails it will raise TransitionError which will cause the transaction to rollback.
Please check the ORM of your choice if it supports database transactions.
Creating a standalone FiniteMachine brings a number of benefits, one of them being easier testing. This is especially true if the state machine is extremely complex itself. Ideally, you would test the machine in isolation and then integrate it with other objects or ORMs.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create new Pull Request
Everyone interacting in the FiniteMachine project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.
Copyright (c) 2014 Piotr Murach. See LICENSE for further details.
