/workflow-js

WorkflowJS is a lightweight and flexible library for building workflows and processes with NodeJS. It allows you to define processes using BPMN 2.0

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WorkflowJS

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WorkflowJS is a lightweight and flexible library for building workflows and processes with NodeJS. It allows you to define processes using BPMN 2.0.

This is a JavaScript library for building and executing workflows. It provides a simple, declarative syntax for defining processes, and offers a flexible and extensible framework for handling workflow events and activities.

Installation

npm install --save @vhidvz/wfjs

Concepts

* Concept Description Type Decorator Required
1 Process is a BPMN lane, a collection of flow objects. Class @Process Yes
2 Node is a functionality of Activity in a workflow. Method @Node Yes
3 Activity is a Flow Object or a Node of a workflow process. Param @Act() Yes
4 Context is storing the state of the machine during execution. Param @Ctx() No
5 Token has a history of the execution State, tokens are needed. Param @Sign() No
6 history is an array of the State of a flow object or node in a token. -- @Sign() No
7 State it contains the state of each node or flows object in history. -- @Sign() No
8 Data is a shared space across the execution context. Param @Data() Maybe
9 Value is an isolated space for each flow object or node. Param @Value() Maybe

Note: if you return a value in a Node the value is passed to the next available Node as a Value in a specific execution.

Getting Started

Define a BPMN Schema

To define a BPMN schema, you need to create a file with the extension .bpmn and define the schema using the BPMN 2.0 standard or use the online BPMN editor. Here's an example of a simple BPMN schema:

Simple Workflow

The full definition of the simple workflow schema .bpmn file located in this link.

Creating a Workflow Instance

To create a new workflow, you need to define a class with methods that represent the different steps of the workflow. You can use decorators to define the nodes and activities of the workflow. Here's an example of a simple workflow:

import { Act, Node, Process } from "@vhidvz/wfjs/common";
import { EventActivity } from "@vhidvz/wfjs/core";

@Process({ name: 'Simple Workflow' })
class SimpleWorkflow {
  @Node({ name: 'Start' })
  async start(@Act() activity: EventActivity) {
    activity.takeOutgoing();
  }
}

Building and Executing the Workflow

Once you have defined the workflow, you can build and execute it using the WorkflowJS library. Here's how you can do it:

import { parse, readFile, WorkflowJS } from '@vhidvz/wfjs';

(async () => {
  const workflow = WorkflowJS.build();

  const { context } = await workflow.execute({
    factory: () => new SimpleWorkflow(),
    xml: readFile('./example/simple-workflow.bpmn'),
  });

  console.debug('\nContext is:', JSON.stringify(context.serialize(), null, 2));
})()

Projects:

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - SEE the LICENSE file for details