This project checks if the dependency flow between the layers of the Hexagonal architecture defined for this project was respected.
It can be easily installed via pip: pip install hexagonal-py
There are two ways to configure hexagonal-py
:
- Using
pyproject.toml
(recommended) - Using
hexagonal_config.py
, which is expected to be on your main source folder.
It's necessary to define your hexagonal layers and their order. Given for example, the project structure below:
pyproject.toml (Optinal)
. src
├── __init__.py
├── hexagonal_config.py (Optional)
├── domain
│ ├── __init__.py
│ ├── __pycache__
│ └── person.py
├── infrastructure
│ ├── __init__.py
│ └── person_mysql_repository.py
├── main.py
├── services
│ ├── __init__.py
│ └── person_repository.py
└── usecases
├── __init__.py
└── create_person_usecase.py
.tests
General aspects:
- Existing layers:
domain
,infrastructure
,services
,usecases
. - Which should respect the following dependency flow:
infrastructure
->usecases
->services
->domain
- Exclude
tests
from checks
If you are using pyproject.toml
, you would have this:
[tool.hexagonalpy]
excluded_dirs = ['/tests']
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.1]
name = 'Domain'
directories_groups = [['/domain']]
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.2]
name = 'Services'
directories_groups = [['/services']]
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.3]
name = 'Use Cases'
directories_groups = [['/usecases']]
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.4]
name = 'Infrastructure'
directories_groups = [['/infrastructure']]
If you are using hexagonal_config.py
:
from hexagonal.hexagonal_config import hexagonal_config
hexagonal_config.add_inner_layer_with_dirs(layer_name='infrastructure', directories=['/infrastructure'])
hexagonal_config.add_inner_layer_with_dirs(layer_name='use_cases', directories=['/use_cases'])
hexagonal_config.add_inner_layer_with_dirs(layer_name='services', directories=['/services'])
hexagonal_config.add_inner_layer_with_dirs(layer_name='domain', directories=['/domain'])
hexagonal_config.excluded_dirs = ['/tests']
-
excluded_dirs
List of directories that you want to exclude from thehexagonal-py
validation.
Syntax:excluded_dirs = ['/tests', '/another_folder', '/another_folder2']
-
Layers
List of layers you defined in your project. There are 3 aspects you need to fill in for a layer:layer order
,name
,directories_groups
.
2.1. Layer order: The number of the layers tells the order of the dependency flow between them.
Where the most inner layer is 1
and the most outer layer is the greater number. Example:
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.1] # Layer 1, as it's the most inner layer, and it can't point to any other layer but all the
# other layers can point to it.
name = 'domain'
directories_groups = [['/domain']]
2.2. Name: The readable name of the layer, that will be used for documentation, internal messages etc.
2.3. Directories_groups: It's a list of a list. You can specify which folders belong to the given layer, and you can also
define that some folders can't point to other folders inside the same layer. For instance, the MySql
and Postgres
components belongs to Infrastructure Layer
but can't refer to each other.
[tool.hexagonalpy.layer.4]
name = 'Infrastructure'
directories_groups = [['/Infrastructure/MySql'],['Infrastructure/Postgres']]
This command generate a visual diagram show the composition of your hexagonal layers.
To generate the Hexagonal Diagram of the project, it's necessary to have Graphviz installed in the machine.
For Mac you can brew install graphviz
.
For other, check the documentation https://graphviz.org/download/.
hexagonal diagram --project_path ./ --source_path ./src
This checks if the correct flow of the dependencies -from outer to inner layer- was respected.
hexagonal check --project_path ./ --source_path ./src