Problem Statement
In this article, we will walkthough the thought process on designing a solution for the following business use case:-
- Visitor would request for demo by submitting a form in the Joget app.
- Upon submission of the form, fields will be validated to make sure that all mandatory fields are filled up.
Upon successful validation of data, the form data will be shared with external system (i.e. CRM software) for further processing through the use plugins (i.e. JSON Tool) or Bean Shell code. More on this later on.
- The main objective is to ensure successful delivery of data with the external system.
This is an example on how the form would look like.
Figure 1
The only external factor that may be outside of the Joget platform's control would be the external integration with the CRM software. We will walkthrough a few scenarios on how best to design for this business use case with UI/UX kept in mind.
Designing Solution
We will design the app and discuss where best to invoke the external API.
Preparing the Form and Userview
- We will start with desiging the form itself. The form itself is quite simple, with just 3 fields and all of them made mandatroy.
Figure 2 - In the userview, we are making use of the Form Menu and link it to the form we have just designed.
Figure 3 - Do not forget to create a CRUD menu too so that we can browse through all the submissions easily using Generate CRUD.
Figure 4 - At this point of time, there's no integration yet with the external CRM.
What Happens on Form Submission?
When end user hits on the Submit button, the following will take place.
- Form Validation - Joget would iterate through each and every form element and invoking the validator (if configured).
Figure 5
If all validations pass, then it will move to the next step, else, end user will be redirected back to the same form with validation errors displayed like what is shown in the screenshot below.
Figure 6 - Form Store - Since validations have passed, Joget will now proceed to the next step, form data will be passed to the store binder.
Figure 7
By default, the load/store binder is Workflow Form Binder where it will load and store form data into the table name declared in the form properties. In this case, the table name is "demo_request". - Since we are using Workflow Form Binder, this would also mean that we are saving the form data locally in Joget's database.
With what we have learned so far, this can be presented using the following diagram.
Figure 8
Invoke Restful API Call
There are many ways to do it. Here's a list.
Method 1 - JSON Tool
The easiest, no-code approach is to make use of JSON Tool plugin itself. The JSON Tool itself is a Process Tool & Post Form Submission Processing Plugin. This means that we can invoke it from within a process flow or from submission of form.
Method 2 - Bean Shell Code
We can also write Bean Shell code. Here's a quick sample code to make http get call.
Bean Shell code to make restful API calls sampleimport org.apache.http.HttpResponse; import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpGet; import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpRequestBase; import org.apache.http.impl.client.CloseableHttpClient; import org.apache.http.impl.client.HttpClients; import java.io.IOException; import org.joget.commons.util.LogUtil; try{ String jsonUrl = "http://localhost:8080/jw/web/json/workflow/assignment/list/count?packageId=crm"; String name = "header1"; String value = "value1"; CloseableHttpClient client = null; CloseableHttpClient client = HttpClients.createDefault(); HttpRequestBase request = null; request = new HttpGet(jsonUrl); request.setHeader(name, value); HttpResponse response = client.execute(request); } catch (Exception ex) { LogUtil.error(getClass().getName(), ex, ""); } finally { try { if (request != null) { request.releaseConnection(); } if (client != null) { client.close(); } } catch (IOException ex) { LogUtil.error(getClass().getName(), ex, ""); } }
We can execute this piece of code from various plugin types giving us the flexibility on where/when we want to invoke it. The only disadvantage compared to the former is that we need to maintain the custom coding ourselves instead of configuring through a plugin. These are the plugin types relevant to our solution to call the code from:-
Method 3 - JSON Tool from Bean Shell Code
We can only combine the both methods together by triggering the JSON process tool plugin in a beanshell code too. Here's a quick sample code written to be used in Bean Shell for Process Tool. Note that each plugin type would inject different variables for the Bean Shell code to consume.
import java.util.Map; import java.util.HashMap; import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest; import org.joget.apps.app.model.AppDefinition; import org.joget.apps.app.service.AppPluginUtil; import org.joget.apps.app.service.AppUtil; import org.joget.plugin.base.ApplicationPlugin; import org.joget.plugin.base.Plugin; import org.joget.plugin.base.PluginManager; import org.joget.plugin.property.model.PropertyEditable; import org.joget.workflow.model.WorkflowAssignment; public Object execute(AppDefinition appDef, HttpServletRequest request, WorkflowAssignment workflowAssignment) { String jsonUrl = "http://localhost:8080/jw/web/json/workflow/assignment/list/count?packageId=crm"; //Reuse Email Tool to send separated email to a list of users; Plugin plugin = pluginManager.getPlugin("org.joget.apps.app.lib.JsonTool"); ApplicationPlugin jsonTool = (ApplicationPlugin) plugin; Map propertiesMap = new HashMap(); propertiesMap.put("pluginManager", pluginManager); propertiesMap.put("appDef", appDef); propertiesMap.put("request", request); propertiesMap.put("workflowAssignment", workflowAssignment); //configure json tool plugin propertiesMap.put("jsonUrl", jsonUrl); propertiesMap.put("requestType", ""); //empty is for GET call propertiesMap.put("multirowBaseObject", ""); propertiesMap.put("debugMode", ""); propertiesMap.put("formDefId", "request"); propertiesMap.put("headers", new Object[]{}); List fieldMappings = new ArrayList(); Map fieldMapping = new HashMap(); fieldMapping.put("jsonObjectName", "total"); fieldMapping.put("field", "day"); fieldMappings.add(fieldMapping); //repeat this code to add more row // fieldMapping = new HashMap(); // fieldMapping.put("jsonObjectName", "jsonAttrName"); // fieldMapping.put("field", "formFieldId"); // fieldMappings.add(fieldMapping); propertiesMap.put("fieldMapping", fieldMappings.toArray()); //set properties and execute the tool ((PropertyEditable) jsonTool).setProperties(propertiesMap); jsonTool.execute(propertiesMap); return null; } //call execute method with injected variable return execute(appDef, request, workflowAssignment);
Possible Integration Points to Invoke Restful API Call
Point 1 - Post Form Submission Processing
By using Post Form Submission Processing in Form, and "Method 1 JSON Call" earlier, this is the easiest and quickest method. This allows us to invoke any Process Tool & Post Form Submission Processing Plugin. JSON Tool is one such candidate.
Figure 9
Point 1 - Post Form Submission Processing + Method 1 - JSON Call | |
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