This goes with that...
Since Auto-Entity is a complete solution that manages your entities for you, including calling entity services and handling their results, your own code is a bit "out of the loop" when it comes to handling results that correlate directly to some particular initiating action.
For example, if you create an entity, you dispatch an action. When that entity has been created, another action, a success or failure result action, will be dispatched. Since these two events are now disjoint and decoupled from each other, handling a particular result for a particular initiation requires some means of correlating the two.
Auto-Entity provides a built-in mechanism for handling correlation. Every action is equipped with a correlationId
that allows result actions to be associated back to the action that initiated them. Every initiating action created by auto-entity will have a correlationId generated for it automatically, however manually providing the correlationId is also an option.
Auto-Entity will also ensure that whenever a result action, success or failure, is created that the correlationId of those actions will match the correlationId of the initiating action that started the process. This is true whether the correlationId
is created automatically or provided manually.
There are some basic patterns for correlating Auto-Entity actions using the correlationId
. The most basic is The Leap, where a custom action is used to make the little "leap" from the effect that is dispatching the initiating action, say Create
, to the effect(s) that will handle the result actions, CreateSuccess
or CreateFailure
. This action will contain at the very least, the correlationId of the initiating action.
Correlation itself simply requires checking if the correlationId
of the leap action matches the correlationId
of the result action. First, set up an effect to handle initiation:
This is really all there is to it at a basic level. There are other ways to handle this as well...you could create the correlationId
yourself and avoid having to pre-create the action. Note that the switchMap
part here, which could be exhaustMap
or concatMap
or mergeMap
as appropriate for the use case, will automatically convert the returned array into a stream, one that emits twice, first the initiating action and second the leap action.
Once you have set up your leap action, you can correlate the result action in another effect or effects. To handle success and failure separately, two effects can be created to handle the different paths. Perhaps customer creation is performed within a modal popup that must be closed on successful completion, whereas only an alert toast should be shown on failure.
The basic pattern here uses a filter
operator to ensure only the matching result for the initiation captured by the leap action is handled. If the filter passes, then whatever remaining work may be performed with the appropriate result action.