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hw-oracle-of-bacon's Introduction

The Oracle of Bacon

The goals of this assignment are as follows:

  1. Give you more exposure to RSpec and to more advanced and idiomatic Ruby programming

  2. Introduce you to important technologies and libraries used in service-oriented architecture, including parsing XML using XPath expressions and calling RESTful APIs of a remote service

  3. Get you accustomed to reading both RSpec code and Ruby app code.

Generally useful documentation pointers, in addition to those specific to this assignment scattered throughout the handout:

Nokogiri docs: http://nokogiri.org/

Docs for Ruby libraries Net::HTTP, URI, CGI: http://ruby-doc.org/stdlib-1.9.3

Background: The Oracle of Bacon

The Oracle of Bacon is a fanciful website maintained by Patrick Reynolds. You enter the names of two actors (if you leave either one blank, it defaults to Kevin Bacon) and it computes the number of links or degrees of separation ("Bacon number") between the two actors, using information from the Internet Movie Database (IMDb). A "link" is a movie that two actors have worked on together. For example, Sir Laurence Olivier has a Bacon number of 2:

 Laurence Olivier \_ Dracula (1979)
                  /
  Frank Langella  \_ Frost/Nixon (2008)
                  /         
      Kevin Bacon    

You can read this as: "Laurence Olivier starred in Dracula with Frank Langella; Frank Langella starred in Frost/Nixon with Kevin Bacon."

The website also has a RESTful XML API that returns raw XML documents rather than complete Web pages. We will use this API in this assignment.

We've provided a code skeleton and a reasonable (but not exhaustive) set of specs for this assignment. The assignment has 4 parts; each part has its own specs in a describe group. Initially, all specs are marked :pending => true so you don't get a rash of failing tests when you start the assignment; when you start work on any one part of the assignment, remove the pending option from the describe block, watch the group of tests fail, and then start writing the code to make them pass. (This is a crude version of the Test-Driven Development methodology we embrace later in the course; in the full version of TDD, you will write your own tests one at a time, watching each one fail and then creating the code to make it pass.)

Part 0: Background (no submission needed)

You can experiment with the XML API at this test page, but you will need to provide an API key. The key provided for using the API in this course is in the picture below, to avoid having it indexed by search engines:

Image of API key

Assign this value to the @api_key attribute in initialize before starting the rest of the assignment.

Please respect the Oracle's maintainers by not using this key for any purpose other than doing this assignment.

A minimal RESTful query URI for OOB must include the API key (parameter p), the actor from which to start search (parameter a), and optionally the actor to connect to (optional parameter b; defaults to Kevin Bacon if omitted). If there is more than one way to connect two actors together, the Oracle of Bacon returns one chosen randomly, so the responses you get may differ from those in this handout.

Remember that special characters in URIs must be escaped and that one such special character is a space, which may be replaced by + in a URI. Thus valid queries might be (if you replace my_key with the valid API key above):

http://oracleofbacon.org/cgi-bin/xml?p=my_key&a=Kevin+Bacon&b=Laurence+Olivier

which connects Laurence Olivier with Kevin Bacon, or

http://oracleofbacon.org/cgi-bin/xml?p=my_key&a=Carrie+Fisher+(I)&b=Ian+McKellen

which connects Carrie Fisher (I) with Ian McKellen.

  • Visually inspect the XML returned for each of the above queries. You can view it by typing the URIs into a browser, or better, by using a command-line tool such as curl. What kinds of XML elements are present in the response? What is their hierarchical structure?

If there are multiple matches for an actor name, you'll get a list of similar names so you can resubmit your query with an exact match. For example, try doing a query connecting Anthony Perkins to anyone.

  • Visually inspect the XML returned. How are the element types different from those for a normal response?

Finally, if you submit a request whose URI does not include a valid API key, you'll get a third type of response, informing you that the access was unauthorized.

  • Visually inspect the XML returned. How does it differ from the previous two responses?

In the rest of this assignment you'll create a Ruby wrapper library to make it easier to use the Oracle of Bacon. With our new library, we'd be able to run the above three examples as follows (again replacing my_api_key with the valid key given previously).

oob = OracleOfBacon.new('my_api_key')

# connect Laurence Olivier to Kevin Bacon
oob.from = 'Laurence Olivier'
oob.find_connections
oob.response.type      # => :graph
oob.response.data      # => ['Kevin Bacon', 'The Big Picture (1989)', 'Eddie Albert (I)', 'Carrie (1952)', 'Laurence Olivier']

# connect Carrie Fisher (I) to Ian McKellen
oob.from = 'Carrie Fisher (I)'
oob.to = 'Ian McKellen'
oob.find_connections
oob.response.data      # => ['Ian McKellen', 'Doogal (2006)', ...etc]

# with multiple matches
oob.to = 'Anthony Perkins'
oob.find_connections
oob.response.type      # => :spellcheck
oob.response.data      # => ['Anthony Perkins (I)', ...33 more variations of the name]
# with bad key
oob = OracleOfBacon.new('known_bad_key')
oob.find_connections
oob.response.type      # => :error
oob.response.data      # => 'Unauthorized access'

Part 1: Valid instance object

Before even attempting to find connections, an OracleOfBacon object must have at least one of from or to specified (if one is missing, it's assumed to be Kevin Bacon), and a nonblank API key (although we won't be able to tell if it's valid until we try hitting the service).

We use the ActiveModel::Validations module that is part of Rails to streamline our validity checks. It is a module that mixes in validity-checking methods for object attributes and gives our object an instance method valid? that checks all the constraints and returns true or false. We've included validity checks for the presence of non-blank From, To, and APIKey attributes in an OracleOfBacon instance.

  1. In the root directory of this homework (the one containing lib and spec subdirectories), start autotest. It will look for tests in spec and for your code in lib/oracle_of_bacon.rb. If autotest appears to do nothing: Check that you are running it in the code's root directory (the one that has lib and spec as subdirectories) and that the .rspec file exists in this root directory.

  2. Delete ,:pending => true from the describe 'instance' block, which should immediately cause that set of tests to fail red. Visually inspect the failing specs to get a feel for how they are written. Don't worry if you don't understand everything that's going on; the goal is to get you accustomed to reading code and seeing common idioms.

  3. Define the constructor for OracleOfBacon so that both From and To initially default to Kevin Bacon, rather than being blank. This should cause a subset of the validity specs to pass green.

  4. Since it makes no sense to connect an actor to herself, we should also validate that the From and To fields aren't the same. When the "common case" validations like validates_presence_of aren't enough to do this, we use, validate, which takes a symbol naming a method that can perform a desired validation (line 20 of oracle_of_bacon.rb). Fill in the method body for from_does_not_equal_to to check that the user is not trying to connect an actor to herself. The convention used in the Validations module is that if a validation check fails, the error information should be recorded in the errors object. Check the documentation for ActiveModel::Validation and ActiveModel::Errors at api.rubyonrails.org to learn how to record your own error message "From cannot be the same as To", which the spec (test) expects to be generated in this case.

When you've done the above steps correctly, all the specs in describe 'instance' should pass green.

Part 2: Parsing XML responses

We define a separate class, OracleOfBacon::Response, to hold a response from the service. This class exposes the type and data attributes to the caller, as the examples above showed. "Nesting" one class definition inside another is often done when the nested class (Response) is rarely used separately from the enclosing class (OracleOfBacon).

In our case, successful response to OOB queries return XML markup, which we will parse using the Nokogiri library. As we saw above, there are three response types (graph, spellcheck, error), but we'll use the same techniques on all three.

Although Nokogiri is hugely powerful, there are just two Nokogiri calls you need to know to parse this simple example.

  1. The constructor Nokogiri::XML takes a string (or, as is idiomatic Ruby, an open file descriptor or stream descriptor), parses its contents as XML, and returns a Nokogiri::XML::Document representing the parsed tree.

  2. The instance method #xpath on a Nokogiri XML document or node returns a collection of all nodes in that subtree matching the given XPath selector. Just as CSS selectors identify particular elements in an HTML document, XPath is an amazingly powerful syntax for identifying collections of elements in an XML document. Some mastery of XPath is a valuable tool in any SaaS developer's toolbox, but we will restrict ourselves to two very simple XPath expressions:

    /foo Matches an element ... at the root of this subtree //foo Matches an element ... anywhere in this subtree

Hence, the XPath expression /error applied to an error response matches the outermost <error> element (which, remember, includes all of its child elements); /link applied to a successful response matches the enclosing <link> element; and //actor applied to a successful response returns a collection (quacks like an Array) of all the <actor> elements at or below the document's root.

(If you want to experiment interactively with XPath to learn more about it, the XPathTester site lets you paste a blob of XML and try various XPath expressions on it to see which elements are returned.)

Point #1 above -- a constructor that makes a new object (XML document) from an existing object of a different type (string) -- is a very common Ruby idiom. We follow it by requiring the constructor for OracleOfBacon::Response to accept a blob of XML (returned by the OOB server) and turn it into an internal Response object. The conversion involves (a) determining what type of response it is (regular graph, spell check, error) and (b) parsing the XML data depending on the response type.

We've started you off with a constructor that creates the parsed XML document and with a parse_response method that handles the error case. You need to handle the other two. Read the specs under describe 'parsing XML response' and match them up with the requirements below:

  • For a normal graph, the data attribute of the Response object should be an array that alternates actor names and movie names, as the code block example above showed, and the type value should be :graph.

  • For a spell check, the data should be a simple array of all the possible spelling variants and type should be :spellcheck.

  • For readability, we suggest you define parse_graph_response and parse_spellcheck_response methods and call them as needed from the constructor.

  • You should also handle a response that doesn't match any of the three types, by giving it a response type of :unknown and a data field consisting of the string unknown response type.

When you complete the above four steps, all the specs in describe 'parsing XML response' should pass green.

Helpful hints for parsing XML and converting node text into arrays:

  • The text method on a Nokogiri::XML::Node returns the actual text content of that node. That is, if node == <actor>Carrie Fisher</actor>, then node.text == "Carrie Fisher".

  • zip interleaves the element of its receiver with those of its argument, using nil to pad if the first array is longer than the second; that is, [:a,:b,:c].zip([1,2])==[[:a,1],[:b,2],[:c,nil]]

  • flatten takes an array that includes arbitrarily nested arrays and flattens them into a single array with no nested arrays, that is, [[:a,1],[:b,2],[:c,nil]].flatten==[:a,1,:b,2,:c,nil]

  • compact removes nil elements from a collection, that is, [:a,1,:c,nil].compact==[:a,1,:c]

Questions for self-reflection:

  • Our Response object manipulates an internal variable @doc. Why didn't we expose it with attr_reader :doc?

  • What does the keyword private do (right after the constructor) and why did we use it here?

(Hint: Both questions concern matters of style and modularity, not correctness. That is, the code would work either way.)

Part 3. Constructing the URI

We know what the URI has to look like, but the URI rules (warning: they are boring to read) stipulate that special characters in URIs such as # or spaces must be 'escaped'. Happily, Ruby's standard library provides CGI.escape(string) to help us do this.

  • Fill in the method make_uri_from_arguments that uses the @from, @to, and @api_key attributes of an OracleOfBacon instance and assigns a properly-escaped URI to the @uri attribute.
    The specs verify that the URI contains no illegal characters and that it contains all the components in the arguments.

At the end of this part, the specs under describe 'constructing URI' should pass green.

Part 4: Connecting to the service

And now the moment we've all been waiting for: connecting to the actual Oracle Of Bacon service!!!

Except we're not going to do that. Given that you're re-running tests every time you change the code, it would be inconsiderate (and for some sites, in violation of the terms of use of the API key) to hit the site every time you do so. Instead, we will use FakeWeb, which we'll learn more about later in the course, to fake a "canned" response by intercepting calls to Ruby's Net::HTTP library.

(Of course, this is only true when running tests. Your real code will really talk to OOB.)

Since we've already tested that the various types of XML responses are handled properly by the constructor of OracleOfBacon::Response, all we are testing here is the service connection itself, in find_connections. If successful, it should try to hand off the received blob of XML to the constructor for Response. If there's a network problem-- unfortunately, Ruby's HTTP library can raise many kinds of exceptions-- we convert any of them into a generic OracleOfBacon::NetworkError and re-raise that.

  • Modify find_connections to handle both the successful response case and the network exception case. This should cause the specs under describe 'service connection' to pass.

Question for reflection:

  • As we'll learn later in the course, the .xml files under spec that contain the "canned" responses are sometimes called fixtures. How would you create these yourself when you're developing tests for your own RESTful service library? (Hint: the command-line utility curl may be useful.)

You're done!

Believe it or not, you're done. You can try firing up an irb interpreter and exercising the library by saying load 'oracle_of_bacon.rb' and trying the examples in the code block in the Background section of this handout!

For fun, you can add a draw_graph method that does the following: if the result type is :graph, it draws something like this using ASCII characters ---

 Actor 1 \_ Movie 1
         /
 Actor 2 \_ Movie 2
         /         
 Actor 3 

---and if the result type is anything else (including nil when there is no result yet), it prints an error.

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