Osm Admin: Stopping The Project
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
I stopped working on the Osm Admin project, for financial reasons. Did it hurt? A lot. Was it necessary? Unfortunately, yes. This post is a short retrospection on this matter.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
I stopped working on the Osm Admin project, for financial reasons. Did it hurt? A lot. Was it necessary? Unfortunately, yes. This post is a short retrospection on this matter.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
I waited for this day too long. Today, I've tried out GitPod, and made it work for a project based on Osm Admin.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
Today, I reiterated on what's left in this iteration, and finished the side menu view, and created a trivial home page for the admin area.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
After getting the main branch all-green (tests pass, CLI and UI works as expected), I decided that from now on, I'll keep it always green, and use feature branches for all major development.
Then, I started implementing the main menu of the admin area.
2 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
Yesterday, I created a template for new projects powered by Osm Admin.
This way, you can create and publish a project in minutes, just follow the README
. Yay!
2 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
Yesterday, I tested the instructions for installing Osm Admin locally as a contributor.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
Yesterday:
git push
.2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
Yesterday started as usual, planning new iteration, and then BAM! - one folk - Saif - joined the project. It made me correct the course a bit, and take care of potential contributors:
README
explains what the project is about, and how to get started as a contributor;2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
Yay! After implementing invalid data conversion, I finished the iteration #18 dedicated to diff-based migrations!
2 years ago ∙ 4 minutes read
I must say, it's a bit disturbing to implement the same thing for the third time. Still, the goal is to get it finished, and have it sustainable.
After the effort, the code has become su much easier to read!
2 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
I continued working on property diff algorithm that plans all the migration details.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
Yesterday, I finished implementing data conversion for int
and string
property types.
Then, I started refactoring it.
2 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
Last time, I pushed through string
property migrations and created a migration log.
Today, I continued solving data conversion issues.
2 years ago ∙ 4 minutes read
string
property migrations.2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
Yesterday, I finished writing int
property migrations. True, testing it is still a todo.
The major part of the code (type change, nullability and other attribute handling) will be reused in other property types.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
I refactored Property::migrate()
using additional Migration
classes. It's so much more convenient to compare property definition versions and generate migration SQLs!
New code structure already handles property explicitness changes.
2 years ago ∙ 7 minutes read
After enumerating what kind of changes can happen to a property, I started implementing the most hard one - changing property type.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
The Query::bulkUpdate()
method is implemented in the TDD way.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
After 3 days of intensive work, I've got dot syntax working!
Along the way, I refactored the query internals once again, which reminds me a heuristics saying that you've got to implement something three times to get it right :)
New query implementation uses the concept of formulas - SQL-like expressions used for selecting, filtering and sorting data. Currently, formulas are quite limited, but with time, they should be a really powerful feature.
2 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
I decided to support selecting, filtering and ordering by properties of a related object using dot syntax: product.price
, parent.level
. This syntax will automatically join the table that stored related objects.
I realized that implementing joins requires a better query model than my current naive wrapper around Laravel query. This article describes the new query model.
2 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
This article is about running SELECT and INSERT queries on data objects stored in the database.
In short, use the query()
function. It runs on top of Laravel Query\Builder
. It handles the mapping of data class properties onto table columns, and initiates the computation of indexed properties.
Currently, you can only SELECT and INSERT, other operations are coming soon.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
Today, I implemented computation of indexed properties during insert. The implementation dictated some changes in indexed property definitions compare to the initial design, and how indexers are reflected into the data schema.
Also, I implemented a table query class working on the top of Laravel Query\Builder
. More about it next time, for now I'll review how indexed properties are computed during INSERT operation.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
I had two weeks full of meaningful, productive work. I started with sketching Osm Admin grid and form pages, and implemented a very basic, but working home page, and success/error messages. To enable that, Osm Framework now have extensible Blade templates, and a nice JavaScript solution for capturing user input into a modal dialog box, or into some picker component.
Then, I undertook a major refactoring of Osm Admin, including moving lots of pieces of code to their new places, stabilizing the underlying object model, rewriting database migrations and sketching future effort on data indexing. During this effort, I implemented generic object hydration and reflection over named subtypes.
I've already shared most of this information on Twitter, so if you are reading this, consider following me on Twitter and getting daily updates.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
It's often needed to compute, or index, data in database tables based on data in other tables.
This article is the first sketch of a consistent indexing solution.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
I've finished refactoring how Osm Admin stores data objects in the database. Also, in order to support multi-website, multi-vendor, multi-language applications, I've introduced the concept of scopes.
Most reasoning from the first version is still valid, so let's take a fresh look of what's changed.
2 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
I developed dehydrate()/hydrate()
functions for a very practical need - storing the data class schema:
This article describes the information stored in the schema, and unit tests that I prepared in order to be sure that schema classes are property hydrated.
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
I had two very productive weeks. #buildinpublic works wonders.
Most effort went into my new project, Osm Admin. I sketched how data classes look like, generated database tables from class attributes, and started working on the Admin UI. It's very fulfilling to see how an abstract idea gains shape.
3 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
As described in Migrations, most data objects of the same class will be stored in a database table.
But what about subclasses? In an e-commerce application, bags, dresses, and digital products, collectively known as subclasses, are all products stored in products
table, and they may have bad-specific, dress-specific or digital product specific properties that should also be stored there.
This article describes how subclasses are defined and stored in Osm Admin.
3 years ago ∙ 1 minute read
Different data classes have repeating structural patterns. For example, most data classes stored in database tables have the auto-incremented id
property. Use PHP traits to effectively introduce the same properties to different data classes over and over again.
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
I partly implemented data schema migration. It takes data class definitions, and incrementally creates or alters underlying database tables.
The article below describes how schema migration works, and what's not implemented yet, but most probably will be.
Note. This topic is continued in the new article.
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
This website got a completely new look. There are new blog posts diving into core Osm Framework features. Osm Framework itself offers more convenient page layout, website-wide header, footer and <head>
, customizable error pages. The themes support theme-specific CSS styles and JS scripts not bound to any module. New projects come with a handy bin/install.sh
script that simplifies installation on Linux. From now on, run osmh
without any parameters.
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
From now on, this website is deployed on push, and by the way, you can easily play with the website copy locally. In the Osm framework, new Osm_Project
application allows reflecting over modules and classes regardless to which application they belong. New experimental project is aimed at quick creation of the Admin UI.
2021 ∙ September ∙ osm.software Website
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
After pushing changes to GitHub, osm.software website is updated without any additional manual action. On push, GitHub executes the deployment script on the production server. Most changes are done to content only, and in this case, the deployment script only updates the search index. Otherwise, with the website being on maintenance, it additionally updates Composer and Node dependencies, builds JS and CSS assets, and runs the database migrations.
2021 ∙ June ∙ osm.software Website
3 years ago ∙ 9 minutes read
Readers of osm.software blog can search the blog for a specific phrase, and narrow down listed articles using multi-select layered navigation. Let's see how it works under the hood.
3 years ago ∙ 2 minutes read
osmcommerce.com (now osm.software) blog got multi-select layered navigation, category management, FontAwesome icons, Tailwind CSS Typography. Osm Core allows debugging accidental assignments of the computed properties.
2021 ∙ May ∙ osm.software Website
3 years ago ∙ 3 minutes read
This article explains how to write and publish blog posts.