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Unify smaller apps into one openedx_content app
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| 20. openedx_content as an Umbrella App of Smaller Applets | ||
| ========================================================= | ||
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| Context | ||
| ------- | ||
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| Up to this point, Learning Core has used many small apps with a narrow focus (e.g. ``components``, ``collections``, etc.) in order to make each individual app simpler to reason about. This has been useful overall, but it has made refactoring more cumbersome. For instance: | ||
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| #. Moving models between apps is tricky, requiring the use of Django's ``SeparateDatabaseAndState`` functionality to fake a deletion in one app and a creation in another without actually altering the database. It also requires doctoring the migration files for models in other repos that might have foreign key relations to the model being moved, so that they're pointing to the new ``app_label``. This will be an issue when we try to extract container-related models and logic out of publishing and into a new ``containers`` app. | ||
| #. Renaming an app is also cumbersome, because the process requires creating a new app and transitioning the models over. This came up when trying to rename the ``contents`` app to ``media``. | ||
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| There have also been minor inconveniences, like having a long list of ``INSTALLED_APPS`` to maintain in edx-platform over time, or not having these tables easily grouped together in the Django admin interface. | ||
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| Decisions | ||
| --------- | ||
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| 1. Single openedx_content App | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
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| All existing authoring apps will be merged into one Django app (``openedx_learning.app.openedx_content``). Some consequences of this decision: | ||
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| - The tables will be renamed to have the ``openedx_content`` label prefix. | ||
| - All management commands will be moved to the ``openedx_content`` app. | ||
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| 2. Logical Separation via Applets | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
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| We will continue to keep internal API boundaries between individual applets, and use the ``api.py`` modules. This is both to insulate applets from implementation changes in other applets, as well as to provide a set of APIs that third-party plugins can utilize. As before, we will use Import Linter to enforce dependency ordering. | ||
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| 3. Restructuring Specifics | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
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| In one pull request, we are going to: | ||
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| #. Rename the ``openedx_learning.apps.authoring`` package to be ``openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content``. | ||
| #. Create bare shells of the existing ``authoring`` apps (``backup_restore``, ``collections``, ``components``, ``contents``, ``publishing``, ``sections``, ``subsections``, ``units``), and move them to the ``openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat`` package. These shells will have an ``apps.py`` file and the ``migrations`` package for each existing app. This will allow for a smooth schema migration to transition the models from these individual apps to ``openedx_content``. | ||
| #. Move the actual models files and API logic for our existing authoring apps to the ``openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.applets`` package. | ||
| #. Convert the top level ``openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content`` package to be a Django app. The top level ``admin.py``, ``api.py``, and ``models.py`` modules will do wildcard imports from the corresponding modules across all applet packages. | ||
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| In terms of model migrations, all existing apps will have a final migration that uses ``SeparateDatabaseAndState`` to remove all model state, but make no actual database changes. The initial ``openedx_content`` app migration will then also use ``SeparateDatabaseAndState`` to create the model state without doing any actual database operations. The next ``openedx_content`` app migration will rename all existing database tables to use the ``openedx_content`` prefix, for uniformity. | ||
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| The ordering of these migrations is important, and existing edx-platform migrations should remain unchanged. This is important to make sure that we do not introduce ordering inconsistencies for existing installations that are upgrading. | ||
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| Therefore, the migrations will happen in the following order: | ||
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| #. All ``backcompat.*`` apps migrations except for the final ones that delete model state. This takes us up to where migrations would already be before we make any changes. | ||
| #. The ``openedx_content`` app's ``0001_intial`` migration that adds model state without changing the database. At this point, model state exists for the same models in all the old ``backcompat.*`` apps as well as the new ``openedx_content`` app. | ||
| #. edx-platform apps that had foreign keys to old ``backcompat.*`` apps models will need to be switched to point to the new ``openedx_content`` app models. This will likewise be done without a database change, because they're still pointing to the same tables and columns. | ||
| #. Now that edx-platform references have been updated, we can delete the model state from the old ``backcompat.*`` apps and rename the underlying tables (in either order). | ||
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| The tricky part is to make sure that the old ``backcompat.*`` apps models still exist when the edx-platform migrations to move over the references runs. This is problematic because the edx-platform migrations can only specify that they run *after the new openedx_content models are created*. They cannot specify that they run *before the old backcompat models are dropped*. | ||
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Contributor
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. I think I'm missing something here. None of the Platform migrations actually manipulate the database or depend on its actual state in any way. So why is the ordering so important? What happens if one runs all the Learning Core migrations first, then the platform migrations? Does Django block the
Contributor
Author
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Even though the platform migrations don't touch database state, they do alter the tracked model state. So if openedx-learning migrations all run first, then Django gives an error when trying to later run the platform migrations because as far as it's concerned, the backcompat models no longer exist (which results in an error saying that the backcompat app itself does not exist). Or to put in other words, the platform migration wants to switch a foreign key reference from If people always run CMS migrations before LMS migrations, this wouldn't be a problem. It hasn't been a problem in the past because the dependencies strictly went one way: openedx-learning could do whatever it wanted, and the openedx-platform apps would catch up later. It's different now because:
If it weren't for (2), we might be able to get away with leaving the backcompat app models around. I'm not sure about what kind of issues that might cause down the road though.
Contributor
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. OK, this is getting way too convoluted, but could we create a final migration in Alternately, just don't drop those old logical tables or another year or so.
Which one does tutor run first? If tutor runs CMS first, then I'd say it's not a huge deal, as most people won't hit the error and anyone who does can just |
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| So in order to enforce this ordering, we do the following: | ||
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| * The ``openedx_content`` migration ``0001_initial`` requires that all ``backcompat.*`` migrations except the last ones removing model state are run. | ||
| * The ``openedx_content`` migration ``0002_rename_tables_to_openedx_content`` migration requires that the edx-platform migrations changing refrences over run. This is important anyway, because we want to make sure those reference changes happen before we change any table names. | ||
| * The final ``backcompat.*`` migrations that remove model field state will list ``openedx_content`` app's ``0002_rename_tables_to_openedx_content`` as a dependency. | ||
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| A further complication is that ``openedx_learning`` will often run its migrations without edx-platform present (e.g. for CI or standalone dev purposes), so we can't force ``0002_rename_tables_to_openedx_content`` in the ``openedx_content`` app to have references to edx-platform migrations. To get around this, we dynamically inject those migration dependencies only if we detect those edx-platform apps exist in the currently loaded Django project. This injection happens in the ``apps.py`` initialization for the ``openedx_content`` app. | ||
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| The final complication is that we want these migration dependencies to be the same regardless of whether you're running edx-platform migrations with the LMS or CMS (Studio) settings, or we run the risk of getting into an inconsistent state and dropping the old models before all the edx-platform apps can run their migrations to move their references. To do this, we have to make sure that the edx-platform apps that reference Learning Core models are present in the ``INSTALLED_APPS`` for both configurations. | ||
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| 4. The Bigger Picture | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
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| This practice means that the ``openedx_content`` Django app corresponds to a Subdomain in Domain Driven Design terminology, with each applet being a Bounded Context. We call these "Applets" instead of "Bounded Contexts" because we don't want it to get confused for Django's notion of Contexts and Context Processors (or Python's notion of Context Managers). | ||
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| Open edX Learning ("Learning Core"). | ||
| """ | ||
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| __version__ = "0.30.2" | ||
| __version__ = "0.31.0" | ||
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| """ | ||
| Module for parts of the Learning Core API that exist to make it easier to use in | ||
| Django projects. | ||
| """ | ||
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| def openedx_learning_apps_to_install(): | ||
| """ | ||
| Return all app names for appending to INSTALLED_APPS. | ||
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| This function exists to better insulate edx-platform and potential plugins | ||
| over time, as we eventually plan to remove the backcompat apps. | ||
| """ | ||
| return [ | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.backup_restore", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.collections", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.components", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.contents", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.publishing", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.sections", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.subsections", | ||
| "openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content.backcompat.units", | ||
| ] |
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If we later move
openedx_learning.apps.openedx_content->openedx_core.apps.openedx_contentoropenedx_content(top level package) as discussed in the arch sync, will that be a trivial change or complex like this?Edit: See #468 which tracks this follow-up work.
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It should be trivial. The references in openedx-platform need to be updated, and in particular things like the field definitions (like this example).
But those field definitions don't mess up the migrations, because they're not really recorded in the migration table. So just updating all the references should be fine as long as the code remains the same.