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· 4 min read
Revital Barletz

I love working with the Wing community, and one of my favorite ways to engage is by publishing good first issues which serve as approachable gateways for newcomers to get involved in developing Wing! Recently, I was looking for an issue that could serve as a friendly introduction to Wing's various layers, without being overly complex. Adding a new method to a resource seemed to be a perfect match for these criteria. I posted, as a good first issue, the implementation of the Queue.purge method, and within just 5 minutes I decided to take on the task myself. This felt like the perfect opportunity to dive into the heart of Wing's mechanics and explore how things work behind the scenes.

Getting Started

Before diving into implementation, it was crucial for me to go through the specifications of the resource I was about to work on. I found all the necessary details in the Wing spec, outlining the method's signature, return type, and arguments.

Adding Cloud-Agnostic Interfaces

To add a method to an existing resource, I needed to modify the implementation files of the resource that are located in wingsdk/src/cloud folder. The cloud folder contains cloud-agnostic code, ensuring that implementations are not tied to any specific cloud provider. Under the cloud folder, I navigated to queue.ts file that contains the cloud-agnostic implementation, added the relevant methods as well as comments and documentation using code suggestions from GitHub Copilot!

Cloud-Specific Implementations

Wing's support for multiple cloud providers means that each new method must be implemented for every supported provider. Now it's time to change folders like target-awscdk, target-sim, and others, each contain cloud-specific implementation files. I will say that target-sim is not really a cloud provider, but it is our local simulator that runs locally and allows us to code, test, and debug very fast. Let me give you an example. For cloud provider target-sim, I set the length of the messages array to zero:

public async purge(): Promise<void> {
return this.context.withTrace({
message: `Purge ().`,
activity: async () => {
this.messages.length = 0;
}
}
}

While for the tf-aws implementation, I implemented the following:

public async purge(): Promise<void> {
const command = new PurgeQueueCommand({
QueueUrl: this.queueUrl,
});
await this.client.send(command);
}

I adjusted the code in queue.inflight.ts as purge is part of the inflight API. As you can see, these implementations tailored to different cloud providers were where the real magic happened.

Ensuring Quality: Writing Tests

No new functionality is complete without testing right? So I located the appropriate provider's queue.test.ts and realized that Purge cannot be tested unless I have a way to get the number of messages in the Queue. So I went back to step #1 and added Queue.approxSize as well: For cloud provider target-sim:

 public async approxSize(): Promise<number> {
return this.context.withTrace({
message: `ApproxSize ().`,
activity: async () => {
return this.messages.length;
},
});
}

While for the tf-aws implementation:

public async approxSize(): Promise<number> {
const command = new GetQueueAttributesCommand({
QueueUrl: this.queueUrl,
AttributeNames: ["ApproximateNumberOfMessages"],
});
const data = await this.client.send(command);
return Number.parseInt(data.Attributes?.ApproximateNumberOfMessages ?? "0");
}

Seamlessly Integrating Documentation

Okay, coding and testing behind me, now to the final step which is to align the documentation with the new method. By executing the pnpm turbo build command, the build process integrated my comments into the documentation. This ensures that the documentation reflects the changes I have made and would appear in the API Reference section.

A Glimpse into the Journey

For the actual code, feel free to explore this (example)[https://github.com/winglang/wing/pull/1160]. Additionally, you can gain insights from a brief video that illustrates the changes made to the files:

We would love your feedback and suggestions on Wing Slack.

Let's connect!