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7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
d99b9d1d6b feat: Enhancements to MessageQueue Module with Decorators (#5657)
### Overview

This PR introduces significant enhancements to the MessageQueue module
by integrating `@Processor`, `@Process`, and `@InjectMessageQueue`
decorators. These changes streamline the process of defining and
managing queue processors and job handlers, and also allow for
request-scoped handlers, improving compatibility with services that rely
on scoped providers like TwentyORM repositories.

### Key Features

1. **Decorator-based Job Handling**: Use `@Processor` and `@Process`
decorators to define job handlers declaratively.
2. **Request Scope Support**: Job handlers can be scoped per request,
enhancing integration with request-scoped services.

### Usage

#### Defining Processors and Job Handlers

The `@Processor` decorator is used to define a class that processes jobs
for a specific queue. The `@Process` decorator is applied to methods
within this class to define specific job handlers.

##### Example 1: Specific Job Handlers

```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';

@Processor('taskQueue')
export class TaskProcessor {

  @Process('taskA')
  async handleTaskA(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
    console.log(`Handling task A with data:`, job.data);
    // Logic for task A
  }

  @Process('taskB')
  async handleTaskB(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
    console.log(`Handling task B with data:`, job.data);
    // Logic for task B
  }
}
```

In the example above, `TaskProcessor` is responsible for processing jobs
in the `taskQueue`. The `handleTaskA` method will only be called for
jobs with the name `taskA`, while `handleTaskB` will be called for
`taskB` jobs.

##### Example 2: General Job Handler

```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';

@Processor('generalQueue')
export class GeneralProcessor {

  @Process()
  async handleAnyJob(job: { id: string, name: string, data: any }) {
    console.log(`Handling job ${job.name} with data:`, job.data);
    // Logic for any job
  }
}
```

In this example, `GeneralProcessor` handles all jobs in the
`generalQueue`, regardless of the job name. The `handleAnyJob` method
will be invoked for every job added to the `generalQueue`.

#### Adding Jobs to a Queue

You can use the `@InjectMessageQueue` decorator to inject a queue into a
service and add jobs to it.

##### Example:

```typescript
import { Injectable } from '@nestjs/common';
import { InjectMessageQueue, MessageQueue } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';

@Injectable()
export class TaskService {
  constructor(
    @InjectMessageQueue('taskQueue') private readonly taskQueue: MessageQueue,
  ) {}

  async addTaskA(data: any) {
    await this.taskQueue.add('taskA', data);
  }

  async addTaskB(data: any) {
    await this.taskQueue.add('taskB', data);
  }
}
```

In this example, `TaskService` adds jobs to the `taskQueue`. The
`addTaskA` and `addTaskB` methods add jobs named `taskA` and `taskB`,
respectively, to the queue.

#### Using Scoped Job Handlers

To utilize request-scoped job handlers, specify the scope in the
`@Processor` decorator. This is particularly useful for services that
use scoped repositories like those in TwentyORM.

##### Example:

```typescript
import { Processor, Process, InjectMessageQueue, Scope } from 'src/engine/integrations/message-queue';

@Processor({ name: 'scopedQueue', scope: Scope.REQUEST })
export class ScopedTaskProcessor {

  @Process('scopedTask')
  async handleScopedTask(job: { id: string, data: any }) {
    console.log(`Handling scoped task with data:`, job.data);
    // Logic for scoped task, which might use request-scoped services
  }
}
```

Here, the `ScopedTaskProcessor` is associated with `scopedQueue` and
operates with request scope. This setup is essential when the job
handler relies on services that need to be instantiated per request,
such as scoped repositories.

### Migration Notes

- **Decorators**: Refactor job handlers to use `@Processor` and
`@Process` decorators.
- **Request Scope**: Utilize the scope option in `@Processor` if your
job handlers depend on request-scoped services.

Fix #5628

---------

Co-authored-by: Weiko <corentin@twenty.com>
2024-06-17 09:49:37 +02:00
2f52e0fdb6 5505 forgot password feature broken (#5602)
- add missing `excludedOperations` in
`packages/twenty-server/src/engine/middlewares/graphql-hydrate-request-from-token.middleware.ts`
- update generated graphql file
- Add missing redirection to index after password update
2024-05-27 15:13:11 +02:00
ea5a7ba70e feat: add renew token query for apollo client (chrome-extension) (#5200)
fixes - #5203
2024-05-16 10:21:16 +02:00
1d9cd234ea Fix white screen on token expire (#5271)
While using middleware (executed pre-graphql) for graphql endpoint, we
need to swallow exception and return errors with a 200. Otherwise it's
not a valid graphql response
2024-05-03 15:35:49 +02:00
30ffe0160e Fix token validation on graphql IntrospectionQuery (#5255)
## Context
We recently introduced a change that now throws a 401 if the token is
invalid or expired.
The first implementation is using an allow list and 'IntrospectionQuery'
was missing so the playground was broken.

The check has been updated and we now only check the excludedOperations
list if a token is not present. This is because some operations can be
both used as loggedIn and loggedOut so we want to validate the token for
those sometimes (and set the workspace, user, cache version, etc). Still
not a very clean solution imho.
2024-05-03 10:30:47 +02:00
9a116b08a4 User workspace middleware throws 401 if token is invalid (#5245)
## Context
Currently, this middleware validates the token and stores the user,
workspace and cacheversion in the request object.
It only does so when a token is provided and ignores the middleware
logic if not. If the token is invalid or expired, the exception is
swallowed.

This PR removes the try/catch and adds an allowlist to skip the token
validation for operations executed while not signed-in.
I don't know a better way to do that with Nestjs. We can't easily add
the middleware per resolver without refactoring the flexible schema
engine so I'm doing it the other way around.

Fixes https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/issues/5224
2024-05-02 12:54:01 +02:00
306ef1df9c feat: schema version header check (#4563)
closes https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/issues/4479

tried to catch the error inside various places including
https://github.com/twentyhq/twenty/blob/main/packages/twenty-server/src/engine/integrations/exception-handler/exception-handler.service.ts
but it seems like the error never reaches the GraphQL module 😮

any idea where we could intercept such an error `Cannot query field`?

---------

Co-authored-by: Jérémy Magrin <jeremy.magrin@gmail.com>
2024-04-04 09:52:45 +02:00