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ZIO ZLayers In Combination

The new ZLayer feature of ZIO 1.0.0-RC18+ is a great improvement on the earlier module pattern, making the addition of new services much quicker and easier. However, when used in practice I found it took a little while to get the hang of the idiom.

So below is an annotated sample of the final version of my test code which explores a number of combinations. Many thanks to Adam Fraser for help in getting this nice and streamlined.

The services are deliberate pretty simple, so hopefully it will be clear enough for a quick read.

I’m assuming you’ve a basic idea of ZIO test and also have read the main page on modules at

The code is all run from zio tests and is a single file.

Here’s the top bit:

import zio._
import zio.test._
import zio.random.Random
import Assertion._

object LayerTests extends DefaultRunnableSpec {

  type Names = Has[Names.Service]
  type Teams = Has[Teams.Service]
  type History = Has[History.Service]

  val firstNames = Vector( "Ed", "Jane", "Joe", "Linda", "Sue", "Tim", "Tom")

Names

So now we get to our first Service - Names

  type Names = Has[Names.Service]

  object Names {
    trait Service {
      def randomName: UIO[String]
    }

    case class NamesImpl(random: Random.Service) extends Names.Service {
      println(s"created namesImpl")
      def randomName = 
        random.nextInt(firstNames.size).map(firstNames(_))
    }

    val live: ZLayer[Random, Nothing, Names] =
      ZLayer.fromService(NamesImpl)
  }

  package object names {
    def randomName = ZIO.accessM[Names](_.get.randomName)
  }

This follows the typical module pattern.

The live uses ZLayer.fromService - which is defined as:

  def fromService[A: Tagged, B: Tagged](f: A => B): ZLayer[Has[A], Nothing, Has[B]

Ignoring the Tagged (it’s required for the whole Has/Layers stuff to work) you can see it takes a function f: A => B - which in this case is simply the case class constructor for NamesImpl.

As you can see Names requires the zio environmental Random to function.

Here’s a test:

def namesTest = testM("names test") {
    for {
      name <- names.randomName
    }  yield {
      assert(firstNames.contains(name))(equalTo(true))
    }
  }

This uses the ZIO.accessM to pull the Names from the environment. the _.get extracts the Service.

To make this work we provide the Names to the test like so:

    suite("needs Names")(
       namesTest
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live),

provideCustomLayer adds the Names layer to the existing environment

Teams

The point about Teams is to test dependencies between modules that we’ve created.

  object Teams {
    trait Service {
      def pickTeam(size: Int): UIO[Set[String]]
    }

    case class TeamsImpl(names: Names.Service) extends Service {
      def pickTeam(size: Int) = 
        ZIO.collectAll(0.until(size).map { _ => names.randomName}).map(_.toSet ) // yeah I know team could have < size!      
    }

    val live: ZLayer[Names, Nothing, Teams] =
      ZLayer.fromService(TeamsImpl)

  }

Teams will pick a team from the available names, making size selections.

Following Module usage patterns, although pickTeam needs a Names to function, we don’t put it in as a ZIO[Names, Nothing, Set[String]] - instead we hold a reference in the TeamsImpl

Our first test is straight-forward

  def justTeamsTest = testM("small team test") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeam(1)
    }  yield {
      assert(team.size)(equalTo(1))
    }
  }

To run this we need to give it a Teams layer:

    suite("needs just Team")(
      justTeamsTest
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live >>> Teams.live),

So what’s the “»>”?

This is the vertical composition. It show that we need a Names layer which needs a Teams layer.

However, running this, there’s a slight problem.

created namesImpl
created namesImpl
[32m+[0m individually
  [32m+[0m needs just Team
    [32m+[0m small team test
[36mRan 1 test in 225 ms: 1 succeeded, 0 ignored, 0 failed[0m

Looking back to the definition of NamesImpl

    case class NamesImpl(random: Random.Service) extends Names.Service {
      println(s"created namesImpl")
      def randomName = 
        random.nextInt(firstNames.size).map(firstNames(_))
    }

So our NamesImpl is being created twice. What does that mean if our service is holding some application-unique system resource? Well actually, it turns out that the problem isn’t with the Layers mechanism at all - the layers are memoized and not created multiple times in the dependency graph. It’s actually an artifact of the test environment.

Changing our test suite to:

    suite("needs just Team")(
      justTeamsTest
    ).provideCustomLayerShared(Names.live >>> Teams.live),

fixes the problem - meaning the layer only gets created once within the test

The justTeamsTest requires just teams. But what if I wanted access to Teams and Names?

  def inMyTeam = testM("combines names and teams") {
    for {
      name <- names.randomName
      team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      _ = if (team.contains(name)) println("one of mine")
        else println("not mine")
    } yield assertCompletes
  }

To make this work we need to provide both - which is achieved by the following:

       suite("needs Names and Teams")(
       inMyTeam
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live)),

Here we are using the ++ combinator to create a Names with Teams layer. Note the operator precedence and extra brackets around

(Names.live >>> Teams.live)

It caught me out first time round, since the compiler will otherwise not do the right thing.

History

History is just a bit more complicated.

    object History {
    
    trait Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]): Boolean
    }

    case class HistoryImpl(lastYearsWinners: Set[String]) extends Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = lastYearsWinners == team
    }
    
    val live: ZLayer[Teams, Nothing, History] = ZLayer.fromServiceM { teams => 
      teams.pickTeam(5).map(nt => HistoryImpl(nt))
    }
    
  }

The constructor HistoryImpl requires a Set of names. But the only way to get one of those is to extract it from Teams. And that requires a ZIO - so we use ZLayer.fromServiceM to give us what we need.

The test follows the same pattern as before:

  def wonLastYear = testM("won last year") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeams(5)
      ly <- history.wonLastYear(team)
    } yield assertCompletes
  }

    suite("needs History and Teams")(
      wonLastYear
    ).provideCustomLayerShared((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live >>> History.live))

And that’s it.

Throwable Errors

The above code all assumes you’re returning ZLayer[R, Nothing, T] - in other words the construction of the environment service has Nothing type. But if it’s doing something like reading from a file or a database, then very likely it will be ZLayer[R, Throwable, T] - because that sort of thing often involves precisely the sort of external effect that will throw an exception. So imagine Names construction had a throwable error. For your tests, the way to get round it is like this:

  val live: ZLayer[Random, Throwable, Names] = ???

then at the end of the test

.provideCustomLayer(Names.live).mapError(TestFailure.test)

The mapError turns the throwable into a test failure - which is what you want - it might tell you that the test file didn’t exist or something like.

More ZEnv Cases

The “standard” environment items include clock and random. In out Names, we used Random. But what if we also want one of these items further “down” our dependencies. For this purpose I’ve created a second version of History - History2 - and this needs Clock to create an instance.

  object History2 {
    
    trait Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]): Boolean
    }

    case class History2Impl(lastYearsWinners: Set[String], lastYear: Long) extends Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = lastYearsWinners == team
    }
    
    val live: ZLayer[Clock with Teams, Nothing, History2] = ZLayer.fromEffect { 
      for {
        someTime <- ZIO.accessM[Clock](_.get.nanoTime)        
        team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      } yield History2Impl(team, someTime)
    }
    
  }

It’s not a very useful example - but the important part is that the line

        someTime <- ZIO.accessM[Clock](_.get.nanoTime)        

forces us to provide a clock in the right place.

Now the .provideCustomLayer can add our layer to layer stack and it magically pushes the Random into Names. But it will not do that for the clock, which is required further down, in History2. So the following code does NOT compile:

  def wonLastYear2 = testM("won last year") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      _ <- history2.wonLastYear(team)
    } yield assertCompletes
  }

// ...
    suite("needs History2 and Teams")(
      wonLastYear2
    ).provideCustomLayerShared((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live >>> History2.live)),

Instead, you need to provide the History2.live with a clock explicitly, which is done as follows:

    suite("needs History2 and Teams")(
      wonLastYear2
    ).provideCustomLayerShared((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ Clock.any) >>> History2.live))

The Clock.any is a function that gets whatever clock is available from further up. In this case it will be the Test clock, because we have not tried to use Clock.live.

Source

Full source code (excluding the throwable stuff) below:

import zio._
import zio.test._
import zio.random.Random
import Assertion._

import zio._
import zio.test._
import zio.random.Random
import zio.clock.Clock
import Assertion._

object LayerTests extends DefaultRunnableSpec {

  type Names = Has[Names.Service]
  type Teams = Has[Teams.Service]
  type History = Has[History.Service]
  type History2 = Has[History2.Service]

  val firstNames = Vector( "Ed", "Jane", "Joe", "Linda", "Sue", "Tim", "Tom")

  object Names {
    trait Service {
      def randomName: UIO[String]
    }

    case class NamesImpl(random: Random.Service) extends Names.Service {
      println(s"created namesImpl")
      def randomName = 
        random.nextInt(firstNames.size).map(firstNames(_))
    }

    val live: ZLayer[Random, Nothing, Names] =
      ZLayer.fromService(NamesImpl)
  }
  
  object Teams {
    trait Service {
      def pickTeam(size: Int): UIO[Set[String]]
    }

    case class TeamsImpl(names: Names.Service) extends Service {
      def pickTeam(size: Int) = 
        ZIO.collectAll(0.until(size).map { _ => names.randomName}).map(_.toSet ) // yeah I know team could have < size!      
    }

    val live: ZLayer[Names, Nothing, Teams] =
      ZLayer.fromService(TeamsImpl)

  }
  
 object History {
    
    trait Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]): Boolean
    }

    case class HistoryImpl(lastYearsWinners: Set[String]) extends Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = lastYearsWinners == team
    }
    
    val live: ZLayer[Teams, Nothing, History] = ZLayer.fromServiceM { teams => 
      teams.pickTeam(5).map(nt => HistoryImpl(nt))
    }
    
  }
  
  object History2 {
    
    trait Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]): Boolean
    }

    case class History2Impl(lastYearsWinners: Set[String], lastYear: Long) extends Service {
      def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = lastYearsWinners == team
    }
    
    val live: ZLayer[Clock with Teams, Nothing, History2] = ZLayer.fromEffect { 
      for {
        someTime <- ZIO.accessM[Clock](_.get.nanoTime)        
        team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      } yield History2Impl(team, someTime)
    }
    
  }
  

  def namesTest = testM("names test") {
    for {
      name <- names.randomName
    }  yield {
      assert(firstNames.contains(name))(equalTo(true))
    }
  }

  def justTeamsTest = testM("small team test") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeam(1)
    }  yield {
      assert(team.size)(equalTo(1))
    }
  }
  
  def inMyTeam = testM("combines names and teams") {
    for {
      name <- names.randomName
      team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      _ = if (team.contains(name)) println("one of mine")
        else println("not mine")
    } yield assertCompletes
  }
  
  
  def wonLastYear = testM("won last year") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      _ <- history.wonLastYear(team)
    } yield assertCompletes
  }
  
  def wonLastYear2 = testM("won last year") {
    for {
      team <- teams.pickTeam(5)
      _ <- history2.wonLastYear(team)
    } yield assertCompletes
  }


  val individually = suite("individually")(
    suite("needs Names")(
       namesTest
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live),
    suite("needs just Team")(
      justTeamsTest
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live >>> Teams.live),
     suite("needs Names and Teams")(
       inMyTeam
    ).provideCustomLayer(Names.live ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live)),
    suite("needs History and Teams")(
      wonLastYear
    ).provideCustomLayerShared((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live >>> History.live)),
    suite("needs History2 and Teams")(
      wonLastYear2
    ).provideCustomLayerShared((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (((Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ Clock.any) >>> History2.live))
  )
  
  val altogether = suite("all together")(
      suite("needs Names")(
       namesTest
    ),
    suite("needs just Team")(
      justTeamsTest
    ),
     suite("needs Names and Teams")(
       inMyTeam
    ),
    suite("needs History and Teams")(
      wonLastYear
    ),
  ).provideCustomLayerShared(Names.live ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live) ++ (Names.live >>> Teams.live >>> History.live))

  override def spec = (
    individually
  )
}

import LayerTests._

package object names {
  def randomName = ZIO.accessM[Names](_.get.randomName)
}

package object teams {
  def pickTeam(nPicks: Int) = ZIO.accessM[Teams](_.get.pickTeam(nPicks))
}
  
package object history {
  def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = ZIO.access[History](_.get.wonLastYear(team))
}

package object history2 {
  def wonLastYear(team: Set[String]) = ZIO.access[History2](_.get.wonLastYear(team))
}

If you have any more complex requirements, ask on Discord in #zio-users or check out the main zio web page and docs