* #25: Implemented enough of the notification system to start writing drivers. * #25: Implemented most of the Pony.fm notification driver's backend. * #25: Abstracted the logic for building lists of notification recipients. * #25: Implemented notification API endpoints for the SPA. * Front end setup for notifications * #25: Implemented notification API endpoints for the SPA.
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Developing notifications for Pony.fm
Pony.fm's notification system is designed around "drivers" for various
notification delivery methods. The types of notification one can receive
are defined in the
NotificationHandler
interface, which is implemented by every class that needs to know about
the various notification types.
Sending a notification
The Notification
facade is used to send notifications as follows:
use Notification;
// Something happens, like a newtrack getting published.
$track = new Track();
...
// The "something" is done happening! Time to send a notification.
Notification::publishedTrack($track);
This facade has a method for every notification type, drawn from the
NotificationHandler
interface.
Each of these methods accepts the data needed to build a notification
message and a list of the notification's recipients.
Adding new notification types
-
Add a method for the new notification type to the
NotificationHandler
interface. -
Implement the new methods in every class that implements the interface. Use your IDE to find these. An inexhaustive list:
-
Call the new method on the
Notification
facade from wherever the new notification gets triggered. -
Implement any necessary logic for the new notification type in the
Activity
model.
Adding new notification drivers
-
Create a new class for the driver that implements the
NotificationHandler
interface. -
Make each method from the above interface send the corresponding type of notification to everyone who is to receive it via that driver. Implement UI and API integrations as needed.
-
Modify the
RecipientFinder
class to build recipient lists for the new driver.
Architectural notes
The notification system is designed around two ideas: being as type-safe as PHP allows it to be, and doing all the processing and sending of notifications asynchronously.
To that end, the
NotificationManager
class is a thin wrapper around the SendNotifications
job. The job
calls the notification drivers asynchronously to actually send the
notifications. This job should run on a dedicated queue in production.
The NotificationHandler
interface is key to maintaining type safety - it ensures that drivers
and NotificationManager
all support every type of notification. All
classes that have logic specific to a notification type implement this
interface to ensure that all notification types are handled.
There's one exception to the use of NotificationHandler
- the
Activity
model. The logic for mapping the
data we store about an activity in the database to a notification's API
representation had to go somewhere, and using the NotificationHandler
interface here would have made this logic a lot more obtuse.