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Jolene Langlinais
Jolene Langlinais

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Asynchronous with Redux Sagas

Sophisticated Side Effect Flow Management and Testing

Building an app with React can get a bit confusing when data is being shared among components and different states lead to too much complexity and difficulty. Redux is a lightweight state management tool which can be used with any JavaScript framework or library to maintain a consistent and predictable state container. By keeping the state of an application in a single global store rather than at the component level, each individual component can access any state it needs at any time regardless of the shape of the component tree, as long as it is connected to the store via Redux.

The predictable nature of Redux comes from the immutable state which never changes, as well as pure function reducers. Because reducers are functional, a commonly used middleware to handle side effect logic and asynchronous calls is redux-thunk. A Thunk allows action creators to return a function instead of an action.

While I will be assuming you have a basic understanding of React and Redux, this will be a guide into a different kind of Redux middleware for handling side effects: Redux Sagas

Skip to the walkthrough with sample code here

Why Redux Saga?

So long as the same action is passed to the reducer, we can be sure the store will be updated in the same way every time. Sagas, similar to normal reducers, are functions which listen for dispatched actions, perform side effects, and return their own actions back to the normal reducer. Because Sagas intercept actions with side effects and handle them, Redux reducers remain pure.

Redux Saga utilizes ES6 generator functions for this. Generators allow for synchronously written asynchronous code. A generator will automatically pause — or yield — at each asynchronous call until it completes before continuing. This paradigm allows for much simpler and more readable code by centralizing asynchronous logic for more manageable and sophisticated async flows.

Saga generator functions remind me a bit of async/await, with some minor changes such as yield and put(). Some of the differences provide powerful benefits, such as takeLatest() ensuring that only the latest fetch call runs to completion despite having dispatched multiple simultaneous fetch actions. However, asynchronous calls which would normally be directly inside an action creator in a thunk will have a clear separation in Redux Sagas.

Beyond code organization and attributes, testing becomes much easier. A Saga merely yields a description of what to call, thus saving the need for mocking data for every test.

Redux Saga becomes most useful when API or other asynchronous calls are being made with complex flows in which calls depend on the next.

Pros:

+ More readable code
+ Good for handling complex scenarios
+ Test cases become simple without necessity to mock the async behavior

Cons:

- Brings in more complexity to the code
- Additional dependency
- A lot of concepts to learn

Conclusion:

→ Suited for complex async parts of the application that requires complex unit test cases

A quick note on Thunks:

Given that Redux Saga seeks to orchestrate complex asynchronous operations with Redux, it is an alternative to Thunks. However, Sagas provide more functionality. Thunks work well for simple use cases, but may not be the best choice for more complicated scenarios.

Thunks add a layer of indirection for more flexibility, and pass dispatch functions to the function the action creator returns. This allows the component to be agnostic towards asking for a synchronous or asynchronous action.

Pros:

+ Simple code to maintain

Cons:

- Struggles at handling complex scenarios
- Async behavior needs mocking for test cases

Conclusion:

→ Suited for small, straight forward async parts of the application

Generators

Denoted with an *, generators make use of the yield keyword to pause the function. While async/await can be transpiled into generators, the reverse cannot be done. Moreover, Sagas’ takeLatest() behavior and generator function cancellation are more attributes provided by Redux Saga.

When a generator function is invoked, it returns an iterator object. Each subsequent next() method call will execute the generator until the next yield statement and pause.

function* testGenerator() {
  const first = yield 'first yield value';
  const second = yield 'second yield value';
  return 'third returned value';
}

const test = testGenerator();

console.log(test.next()); // { value: 'first yield value', done: false }
console.log(test.next()); // { value: 'second yield value', done: false }
console.log(test.next()); // { value: 'third returned value', done: true }
console.log(test.next()); // { value: undefined, done: true }
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Walkthrough:

To guide through this concept, I will be referencing a codebase for the web app used by an open source software project I contribute to here:

Accord Project (AP)
AP Github
Template Studio repository

The project currently being built is a redesign of the Template Studio. Details are mostly unimportant, suffice it to say that the part I will be going through makes an API call to gather an array of templates, and displays them in a component. This redesign will consist of many interlocking React components, all housed in one app and controlled by the Redux store. Because this began complex and will only continue to be more-so, we chose to pursue Redux Saga to handle the complexity.

Unfortunately, as you may have experienced as well, there seems to be little out there as reference material. This is especially so when it comes to anything complicated.

This will be a guide to following the logic behind Redux Saga in Template Studio for Accord Project. Hopefully this will prove to be a useful resource for you.

Setup
Common Redux Saga methods (called Effects):

fork → Performs a non-blocking operation on the function passed.

take → Pauses until action received.

race → Runs effects simultaneously, then cancels them all once one finishes.

call → Runs function. If it returns a promise, pauses the Saga until resolved.

put → Dispatches an action.

select → Runs a selector function to get data from the state.

takeLatest → Executes the operation, returns only the results of the last call.

takeEvery → Will return results for all the calls triggered.


The overall structure of the application’s flow of data will look akin to this:

Redux Saga Flow Diagram

To begin, we set up the main render of the app, and applying a store to the Provider given by react-redux :

import React from 'react';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
import { Provider } from 'react-redux';

import MainApp from './containers/App';
import store from './store';

render(
  <Provider store={store}>
    <MainApp />
  </Provider>,
  document.querySelector('#root')
);
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Store

Pulling in the createSagaMiddleware method from Redux Saga, we create sagaMiddleware and run it on our rootSaga, which we will see below. Moreover, we combine all of our reducers and include this in the store upon creation.

Similar to the reducers, Sagas will be registered with a rootSaga. Having the middleware use the rootSaga allows actions being dispatched to be successful.

import { combineReducers, createStore, applyMiddleware } from 'redux';
import createSagaMiddleware from 'redux-saga';
import logger from 'redux-logger';

import templatesReducer from './reducers/templatesReducer';
...
import contractReducer from './reducers/contractReducer';
import rootSaga from './sagas/rootSaga';

const sagaMiddleware = createSagaMiddleware();
const middlewares = [sagaMiddleware];

if (process.env.NODE_ENV === 'development') {
  middlewares.push(logger);
}

const rootReducer = combineReducers({
  templatesState: templatesReducer,
  ...
  contractState: contractReducer,
});

const store = createStore(
  rootReducer,
  applyMiddleware(...middlewares),
);
sagaMiddleware.run(rootSaga);

export default store;
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Sagas

Sagas work in the background and sagaMiddleware controls them. Being generator functions, Sagas have control over every single step of the function. We yield objects to sagaMiddleware which tell it what to do with given arguments, which it will execute and resume upon completion, thus appearing to operate synchronously.

Sagas are broken down to the root, watchers, and workers. All other Sagas you write are consolidated into root.

→ Root

All Sagas will be registered with a root Saga. Combined in an all() function, they are allowed to all start at the same time each time.

import { all } from 'redux-saga/effects';
import { templatesSaga } from './templatesSaga';
import { modelSaga } from './modelSaga';
import { logicSaga } from './logicSaga';
import { sampleSaga } from './sampleSaga';

/**
 * saga to yield all others
 */
export default function* rootSaga() {
  yield all([...templatesSaga, ...modelSaga, ...logicSaga, ...sampleSaga]);
}
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→ Watcher

Allowing the Saga to know when to start, this generator function watches for actions (similar to reducers) and calls worker Sagas to do an API call. This function is on Line 62 below:

import { TemplateLibrary, Template } from '@accordproject/cicero-core';
import { version as ciceroVersion } from '@accordproject/cicero-core/package.json';
import { takeLatest, put, select, takeEvery } from 'redux-saga/effects';

import * as actions from '../actions/templatesActions';
import * as selectors from '../selectors/templatesSelectors';

/**
 * worker saga
 * saga to populate store with templates
 */
export function* pushTemplatesToStore() {
  try {
    const templateLibrary = new TemplateLibrary();
    const templateIndex = yield templateLibrary.getTemplateIndex({
      latestVersion: false,
      ciceroVersion,
    });
    const templateIndexArray = Object.values(templateIndex);
    yield put(actions.getTemplatesSuccess(templateIndexArray));
  } catch (err) {
    yield put(actions.getTemplatesError(err));
  }
}

/**
 * worker saga
 * saga which puts a mock template onto the array
 * of templates in the store
 */
export function* addNewTemplateToStore() {
  const newTemplate = {
    uri: `${Date.now()}`,
    name: 'Temporary New Template',
    version: '1.0.0',
    description:
      'This is mock data to showcase an action to add a new template.',
  };
  yield put(actions.addNewTemplateSuccess(newTemplate));
}

/**
 * worker saga
 * saga which checks if template is in the store
 * and loads the template if it is not
 */
export function* addTemplateObjectToStore(action) {
  const templateObjects = yield select(selectors.templateObjects);

  if (!templateObjects || !templateObjects[action.uri]) {
    try {
      const templateObj = yield Template.fromUrl(action.uri);
      yield put(actions.loadTemplateObjectSuccess(action.uri, templateObj));
    } catch (err) {
      yield put(actions.loadTemplateObjectError(err));
    }
  }
}

/**
 * watcher saga
 */
export const templatesSaga = [
  takeLatest('GET_AP_TEMPLATES', pushTemplatesToStore),
  takeLatest('ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE', addNewTemplateToStore),
  takeEvery('LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT', addTemplateObjectToStore),
];
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Similar to takeLatest(), takeEvery() allows multiple instances of Sagas to run simultaneously. These are both built on take(), which is synchronous.

→ Worker

This Saga (Lines 14, 31, and 46 above) will perform a side effect. Once data loads, the put() method is used to dispatch another action. This does not directly dispatch, but rather creates an effect description that tells Redux Saga to dispatch it. Because put() expects an action for an argument, it serves as an action creator. We modularized these actions out, though, as you will see below.

Reducer

Similar to actions, reducers are the same for Redux Saga. This is simply a function that takes state and action as arguments, and returns the next state of the app. While an action only describes what happened, a reducer describes how the application’s state changes.

const initialState = {
  templatesAP: [],
  templateObjs: {},
  error: null,
};

const GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED = 'GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED';
const AP_TEMPLATES_ERROR = 'AP_TEMPLATES_ERROR';
const ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE_SUCCEEDED = 'ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE_SUCCEEDED';
const LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_SUCCEEDED = 'LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_SUCCEEDED';
const LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_ERROR = 'LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_ERROR';

const reducer = (state = initialState, action) => {
  switch (action.type) {
    case GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED:
      return { ...state, templatesAP: action.templates };
    case ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE_SUCCEEDED:
      return { ...state, templatesAP: [...state.templatesAP, action.template] };
    case AP_TEMPLATES_ERROR:
      return { ...state, error: action.error };
    case LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_SUCCEEDED:
      return {
        ...state,
        templateObjs: {
          ...state.templateObjs,
          [action.uri]: action.templateObj,
        },
      };
    case LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_ERROR:
      return { ...state, error: action.error };
    default:
      return state;
  }
};

export default reducer;
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Component

Moving into the component, we have a straightforward approach to setting up state and dispatching to result in cleaner code.

import React from 'react';
import PropTypes from 'prop-types';
import styled from 'styled-components';
import { connect } from 'react-redux';
import { TemplateLibrary } from '@accordproject/cicero-ui';

import {
  getTemplatesAction,
  addNewTemplateAction,
} from '../../actions/templatesActions';

const TLWrapper = styled.div`
  ...;
`;
const mockAddToCont = input => {
  console.log('addToCont: ', input);
};
const mockImport = () => {
  console.log('import');
};
const mockUpload = () => {
  console.log('upload');
};

export class LibraryComponent extends React.PureComponent {
  componentDidMount() {
    this.props.fetchAPTemplates();
  }

  render() {
    return (
      <TLWrapper>
        <TemplateLibrary
          templates={this.props.templates}
          upload={mockUpload}
          import={mockImport}
          addTemp={this.props.addNewTemplate}
          addToCont={mockAddToCont}
        />
      </TLWrapper>
    );
  }
}

LibraryComponent.propTypes = {
  templates: PropTypes.array.isRequired,
  addNewTemplate: PropTypes.func.isRequired,
  fetchAPTemplates: PropTypes.func.isRequired,
};

const mapStateToProps = state => ({
  templates: state.templatesState.templatesAP,
});

const mapDispatchToProps = dispatch => ({
  fetchAPTemplates: () => dispatch(getTemplatesAction()),
  addNewTemplate: () => dispatch(addNewTemplateAction()),
});

export default connect(
  mapStateToProps,
  mapDispatchToProps
)(LibraryComponent);
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Action Creator

Dispatched to the store for handling, actions are objects containing a description of an event. Because actions are made by action creator functions, the one dispatching the action does not need to know the exact structure.

With Sagas, actions are slightly different. Three actions happen for each API call. Beginning the action, successful response, and error response. While this pattern does not change, the location of each call may.

Beginning an action starts within the component, which may add necessary info for making the call. Worker Sagas will be dispatching success and error actions.

export const getTemplatesAction = () => ({
  type: 'GET_AP_TEMPLATES',
});

export const getTemplatesSuccess = templateIndexArray => ({
  type: 'GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED',
  templates: templateIndexArray,
});

export const getTemplatesError = error => ({
  type: 'AP_TEMPLATES_ERROR',
  error,
});

export const addNewTemplateAction = () => ({
  type: 'ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE',
});

export const addNewTemplateSuccess = template => ({
  type: 'ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE_SUCCEEDED',
  template,
});

export const loadTemplateObjectAction = uri => ({
  type: 'LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT',
  uri,
});

export const loadTemplateObjectSuccess = (uri, templateObj) => ({
  type: 'LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_SUCCEEDED',
  uri,
  templateObj,
});

export const loadTemplateObjectError = error => ({
  type: 'LOAD_TEMPLATE_OBJECT_ERROR',
  error,
});
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Recap

  1. (TemplateLibrary.js) When the LibraryComponent mounts, an action (getTemplatesAction) is dispatched
  2. (templatesActions.js) As we can see, getTemplatesAction dispatches an object with a type: ‘GET_AP_TEMPLATES’.
  3. (templatesSaga.js) The watcher will pick up on the action of type ‘GET_AP_TEMPLATES’ and call pushTemplatesToStore.
  4. (templatesSaga.js) When pushTemplatesToStore is called, a few things happen. We yield an API call made by the TemplateLibrary imported from @accordproject/cicero-core and put it in an array. From there, getTemplatesSuccess is called with the array of templates as an argument.
  5. (templatesReducer.js) This action (GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED) ends up in the reducer, updating the state with the templates array which was attached to the action.
  6. (TemplateLibrary.js) Because this component is subscribed to the store and has props *prop*agated to it, the templates array is now applied to this component through props.

Tests

Approaching testing for Redux Saga may be intimidating. A general rule for efficiency in Redux Sagas is to ensure Sagas are doing as little as possible and to move any complex logic out into a separate regular function. A couple approaches I would recommend pursuing:

Unit Tests

This approach steps through yield effects individually with the next() method. A test may inspect the yielded effect and compare it to an expected effect with next().value. While this is straightforward, it leads to brittle tests. This is due to the tests being coupled so tightly with the implementation and order of effects. Refactoring code will likely break tests.

A helper function called recordSaga is used to start a given saga outside the middleware with an action. The options object (dispatch and getState)is used to define behavior of side effects. dispatch fulfills put effects, and dispatched accumulates all the actions in a list and returns it after the Saga finishes.

import { runSaga } from 'redux-saga';

/**
 * saga to test independently
 */
export async function recordSaga(saga, initialAction, state) {
  const dispatched = [];
  await runSaga(
    {
      dispatch: action => dispatched.push(action),
      getState: () => state,
    },
    saga,
    initialAction
  ).toPromise();

  return dispatched;
}
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Utilizing recordSaga allows us to view the type of the dispatched action in a given test case.

import { TemplateLibrary } from '@accordproject/cicero-core';
import { addNewTemplateToStore, pushTemplatesToStore } from '../templatesSaga';
import { recordSaga } from '../../utilities/test/sagaTest';

const mockedTemplateIndex = [
  {
    ciceroVersion: '^0.12.0',
    description:
      'This clause allows the receiver of goods to inspect them for a given time period after delivery.',
    name: 'acceptance-of-delivery',
    type: 1,
    uri:
      'ap://acceptance-of-delivery@0.11.0#311de48109cce10e6b2e33ef183ccce121886d0b76754d649d5054d1084f93cd',
    url:
      'https://templates.accordproject.org/archives/acceptance-of-delivery@0.11.0.cta',
    version: '0.11.0',
  },
];

jest.mock('@accordproject/cicero-core', () => ({
  TemplateLibrary: jest.fn(),
}));

beforeEach(() => {
  jest.resetModules();
});

describe('pushTemplatesToStore', () => {
  it('should dispatch the action getTemplatesSuccess', async () => {
    TemplateLibrary.mockImplementation(() => ({
      getTemplateIndex: () => Promise.resolve(mockedTemplateIndex),
    }));
    const dispatched = await recordSaga(pushTemplatesToStore);
    expect(dispatched[0].type).toEqual('GET_AP_TEMPLATES_SUCEEDED');
  });

  it('should dispatch an error if templates fetch fails', async () => {
    TemplateLibrary.mockImplementation(() => ({
      getTemplateIndex: () =>
        Promise.reject(new Error('Unable to recieve templates')),
    }));
    const dispatched = await recordSaga(pushTemplatesToStore);
    expect(dispatched[0].type).toContain('AP_TEMPLATES_ERROR');
  });
});

describe('addNewTemplateToStore', () => {
  it('should dispatch the action addNewTemplateSuccess', async () => {
    const dispatched = await recordSaga(addNewTemplateToStore);
    expect(dispatched[0].type).toEqual('ADD_NEW_TEMPLATE_SUCCEEDED');
  });
});
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Integration Tests

This approach tests the effects you’re interested in. In this, you will execute the Saga until the end, mocking effects along the way. Because this is not run in isolation, results are more secure. Now refactoring should not break the tests nearly as easily. To make this process easier, we utilize the module by Jeremy Fairbank - redux-saga-test-plan , which helps to make assertions in the effects generated by Sagas.

This module contains expectSaga which returns an API for asserting that a Saga yields certain effects. It takes the generator function as an argument, along with additional arguments to pass to the generator. While expectSaga runs on runSaga, which we used in sagaTest, it provides a bit easier usage. This also means that expectSaga is asynchronous.

After calling expectSaga with assertions, start the Saga with run(). This returns a Promise which can then be used with a testing framework. We use Jest. If all assertions pass, the Promise will resolve.

import { select } from 'redux-saga/effects';
import { expectSaga } from 'redux-saga-test-plan';
import { ModelManager } from 'composer-concerto';
import { updateModelManagerSuccess } from '../../actions/modelActions';
import { updateModelFileOnStore, validateModelFiles } from '../modelSaga';

describe('validateModelFiles', () => {
  it('should complete successful update to model manager', async () => {
    const modelFiles = {
      'test.cto': `
                /**
                 * This is a comment
                 */

                namespace test

                asset Vehicle identified by vin {
                  o String vin default="unknown"
                }

                // this is another comment
                participant Person identified by ssn {
                  o String name
                  o String ssn
                  o DateTime dob
                  --> Vehicle vehicle
                }`,
    };
    const state = {
      modelState: {
        modelFiles,
      },
    };
    const modelManager = new ModelManager();
    Object.keys(modelFiles).forEach(fileName => {
      modelManager.addModelFile(modelFiles[fileName], fileName, true);
    });
    modelManager.updateExternalModels();
    modelManager.validateModelFiles();

    return expectSaga(validateModelFiles)
      .withState(state)
      .put(updateModelManagerSuccess(modelManager))
      .run();
  });
});
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Conclusion

Redux Saga is amazing. They provide a very clean way of performing asynchronous calls in Redux, and encourages clear, modularized code. While it is possible to accomplish the same feat without it, this will prove quite difficult and I feel it is worth the time to learn.

Feel free to contact me with any questions or feedback.

Top comments (5)

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chrisachard profile image
Chris Achard

Nice overview of sagas!

When using them on real world projects, I've sometimes found it a bit confusing to reason about the fact that sagas can be "long running" - so a saga may be waiting for an event for a long time, and then fire later - and it would sometimes be a bit tricky to really track down what happened.

Any advice / tips for handling that? Thanks!

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irmerk profile image
Jolene Langlinais

Thank you!

Are you referring to data you are fetching inside a generator function? If so, are you yielding it?

If you're yielding, you can take advantage of the next method. The generator function is acting as an iterator, and you can return the next element in a sequence by invoking next() on the invoked generator (generator().next()). Since this iteration and sort of internal state that the generator maintains, you can stop at any point to see what the state is.

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chrisachard profile image
Chris Achard

Ah, perhaps using 'next()' was part of the puzzle I was missing. Thanks! I'm going to go and check that out.

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irmerk profile image
Jolene Langlinais

Great! Yes, and here's a resource I found helpful on the subject by Rajesh Babu.

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simbo1905 profile image
Simon Massey

Very clearly written. Can you please add a sequence diagram for the main workflow? umletino is what I tend to use. Thanks!