Service Design Specification - Object Design for sys_listingPayment
clonesahibinden-listing-service documentation
Document Overview
This document outlines the object design for the
sys_listingPayment model in our application. It includes
details about the model’s attributes, relationships, and any specific
validation or business logic that applies.
sys_listingPayment Data Object
Object Overview
Description: A payment storage object to store the payment life cyle of orders based on listing object. It is autocreated based on the source object's checkout config
This object represents a core data structure within the service and
acts as the blueprint for database interaction, API generation, and
business logic enforcement. It is defined using the
ObjectSettings pattern, which governs its behavior,
access control, caching strategy, and integration points with other
systems such as Stripe and Redis.
Core Configuration
-
Soft Delete: Enabled — Determines whether records
are marked inactive (
isActive = false) instead of being physically deleted. - Public Access: accessPrivate — If enabled, anonymous users may access this object’s data depending on API-level rules.
Properties Schema
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
ownerId |
ID | No | An ID value to represent owner user who created the order |
orderId |
ID | Yes | an ID value to represent the orderId which is the ID parameter of the source listing object |
paymentId |
String | Yes | A String value to represent the paymentId which is generated on the Stripe gateway. This id may represent different objects due to the payment gateway and the chosen flow type |
paymentStatus |
String | Yes | A string value to represent the payment status which belongs to the lifecyle of a Stripe payment. |
statusLiteral |
String | Yes | A string value to represent the logical payment status which belongs to the application lifecycle itself. |
redirectUrl |
String | No | A string value to represent return page of the frontend to show the result of the payment, this is used when the callback is made to server not the client. |
- Required properties are mandatory for creating objects and must be provided in the request body if no default value is set.
Default Values
Default values are automatically assigned to properties when a new object is created, if no value is provided in the request body. Since default values are applied on db level, they should be literal values, not expressions.If you want to use expressions, you can use transposed parameters in any business API to set default values dynamically.
- orderId: ‘00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000’
- paymentId: ‘default’
- paymentStatus: ‘default’
- statusLiteral: started
Constant Properties
orderId
Constant properties are defined to be immutable after creation,
meaning they cannot be updated or changed once set. They are typically
used for properties that should remain constant throughout the
object’s lifecycle. A property is set to be constant if the
Allow Update option is set to false.
Auto Update Properties
ownerId orderId paymentId
paymentStatus statusLiteral
redirectUrl
An update crud API created with the option
Auto Params enabled will automatically update these
properties with the provided values in the request body. If you want
to update any property in your own business logic not by user input,
you can set the Allow Auto Update option to false. These
properties will be added to the update API’s body parameters and can
be updated by the user if any value is provided in the request body.
Elastic Search Indexing
ownerId orderId paymentId
paymentStatus statusLiteral
redirectUrl
Properties that are indexed in Elastic Search will be searchable via the Elastic Search API. While all properties are stored in the elastic search index of the data object, only those marked for Elastic Search indexing will be available for search queries.
Database Indexing
ownerId orderId paymentId
paymentStatus statusLiteral
redirectUrl
Properties that are indexed in the database will be optimized for query performance, allowing for faster data retrieval. Make a property indexed in the database if you want to use it frequently in query filters or sorting.
Unique Properties
orderId
Unique properties are enforced to have distinct values across all
instances of the data object, preventing duplicate entries. Note that
a unique property is automatically indexed in the database so you will
not need to set the Indexed in DB option.
Secondary Key Properties
orderId
Secondary key properties are used to create an additional indexed identifiers for the data object, allowing for alternative access patterns. Different than normal indexed properties, secondary keys will act as primary keys and Mindbricks will provide automatic secondary key db utility functions to access the data object by the secondary key.
Session Data Properties
ownerId
Session data properties are used to store data that is specific to the user session, allowing for personalized experiences and temporary data storage. If a property is configured as session data, it will be automatically mapped to the related field in the user session during CRUD operations. Note that session data properties can not be mutated by the user, but only by the system.
-
ownerId: ID property will be mapped to the session
parameter
userId.
This property is also used to store the owner of the session data, allowing for ownership checks and access control.
Filter Properties
ownerId orderId paymentId
paymentStatus statusLiteral
redirectUrl
Filter properties are used to define parameters that can be used in query filters, allowing for dynamic data retrieval based on user input or predefined criteria. These properties are automatically mapped as API parameters in the listing API’s that have “Auto Params” enabled.
-
ownerId: ID has a filter named
ownerId -
orderId: ID has a filter named
orderId -
paymentId: String has a filter named
paymentId -
paymentStatus: String has a filter named
paymentStatus -
statusLiteral: String has a filter named
statusLiteral -
redirectUrl: String has a filter named
redirectUrl