Service Design Specification
ebaycclone-watchlistcart-service documentation
-Version:1.0.22
Scope
This document provides a structured architectural overview of the
watchlistCart
microservice, detailing its configuration, data model,
authorization logic, business rules, and API design. It has been
automatically generated based on the service definition within
Mindbricks, ensuring that the information reflects the source of
truth used during code generation and deployment.
The document is intended to serve multiple audiences:
- Service architects can use it to validate design decisions and ensure alignment with broader architectural goals.
- Developers and maintainers will find it useful for understanding the structure and behavior of the service, facilitating easier debugging, feature extension, and integration with other systems.
- Stakeholders and reviewers can use it to gain a clear understanding of the service's capabilities and domain logic.
Note for Frontend Developers: While this document is valuable for understanding business logic and data interactions, please refer to the Service API Documentation for endpoint-level specifications and integration details.
Note for Backend Developers: Since the code for this service is automatically generated by Mindbricks, you typically won't need to implement or modify it manually. However, this document is especially valuable when you're building other services—whether within Mindbricks or externally—that need to interact with or depend on this service. It provides a clear reference to the service's data contracts, business rules, and API structure, helping ensure compatibility and correct integration.
WatchlistCart
Service Settings
Edit
Handles user watchlists (with custom folders) and shopping cart preparation for checkout, strictly enforcing only fixed-price products in carts, supporting item moves/bulk operations, and robust default/folder logic..
Service Overview
This service is configured to listen for HTTP requests on port
3003, serving both the main API interface and default administrative
endpoints.
The following routes are available by default:
-
API Test Interface (API Face):
/ -
Swagger Documentation:
/swagger -
Postman Collection Download:
/getPostmanCollection -
Health Checks:
/healthand/admin/health -
Current Session Info:
/currentuser -
Favicon:
/favicon.ico
The service uses a PostgreSQL database for data
storage, with the database name set to
ebaycclone-watchlistcart-service.
This service is accessible via the following environment-specific URLs:
-
Preview:
https://ebaycclone.prw.mindbricks.com/watchlistcart-api -
Staging:
https://ebaycclone-stage.mindbricks.co/watchlistcart-api -
Production:
https://ebaycclone.mindbricks.co/watchlistcart-api
Authentication & Security
- Login Required: Yes
This service requires user authentication for access. It supports both JWT and RSA-based authentication mechanisms, ensuring secure user sessions and data integrity. If a crud route also is configured to require login, it will check a valid JWT token in the request query/header/bearer/cookie. If the token is valid, it will extract the user information from the token and make the fetched session data available in the request context.
Service Data Objects
The service uses a PostgreSQL database for data
storage, with the database name set to
ebaycclone-watchlistcart-service.
Data deletion is managed using a
soft delete strategy. Instead of removing records
from the database, they are flagged as inactive by setting the
isActive
field to
false.
| Object Name | Description | Public Access |
|---|---|---|
watchlistItem
|
Item in a user’s watchlist, optionally in a named folder; references product and user. | accessPrivate |
cartItem
|
Single product pending checkout in a user’s cart. Only fixed-price products permitted; quantity supported for multi-unit purchases (if allowed). | accessPrivate |
watchlistList
|
A named folder/list in a user’s watchlist. Default list exists for all users. Custom lists may be created and deleted. | accessPrivate |
watchlistItem Data Object
Object Overview
Description: Item in a user’s watchlist, optionally in a named folder; references product and user.
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.
Composite Indexes
- uniqueWatchlistPerUserProductList: [userId, productId, listId] This composite index is defined to optimize query performance for complex queries involving multiple fields.
The index also defines a conflict resolution strategy for duplicate key violations.
When a new record would violate this composite index, the following action will be taken:
On Duplicate:
throwError
An error will be thrown, preventing the insertion of conflicting data.
Properties Schema
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
userId
|
ID | Yes | Owner of the watchlist item. |
addedAt
|
Date | Yes | Timestamp watchlist item created. |
productId
|
ID | Yes | Referenced product in the watchlist. |
listId
|
ID | No | Owning watchlistList; null if in default watchlist. |
- 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.
- userId: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
- addedAt: new Date()
- productId: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
Constant Properties
userId
addedAt
productId
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
userId
addedAt
productId
listId
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.
Database Indexing
userId
productId
listId
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.
Relation Properties
userId
productId
listId
Mindbricks supports relations between data objects, allowing you to define how objects are linked together. You can define relations in the data object properties, which will be used to create foreign key constraints in the database. For complex joins operations, Mindbricks supportsa BFF pattern, where you can view dynamic and static views based on Elastic Search Indexes. Use db level relations for simple one-to-one or one-to-many relationships, and use BFF views for complex joins that require multiple data objects to be joined together.
-
userId: ID Relation to
user.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: Yes
-
productId: ID Relation to
productListingProduct.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: Yes
-
listId: ID Relation to
watchlistList.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: No
Session Data Properties
userId
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.
-
userId: 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.
cartItem Data Object
Object Overview
Description: Single product pending checkout in a user’s cart. Only fixed-price products permitted; quantity supported for multi-unit purchases (if allowed).
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.
Composite Indexes
- uniqueCartPerUserProduct: [userId, productId] This composite index is defined to optimize query performance for complex queries involving multiple fields.
The index also defines a conflict resolution strategy for duplicate key violations.
When a new record would violate this composite index, the following action will be taken:
On Duplicate:
throwError
An error will be thrown, preventing the insertion of conflicting data.
Properties Schema
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
addedAt
|
Date | Yes | Timestamp added to cart. |
userId
|
ID | Yes | Cart owner. |
quantity
|
Integer | Yes | How many units (if product allows). |
productId
|
ID | Yes | Product being checked out. |
- 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.
- addedAt: new Date()
- userId: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
- quantity: 1
- productId: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
Constant Properties
addedAt
userId
productId
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
addedAt
userId
quantity
productId
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.
Database Indexing
userId
productId
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.
Relation Properties
userId
productId
Mindbricks supports relations between data objects, allowing you to define how objects are linked together. You can define relations in the data object properties, which will be used to create foreign key constraints in the database. For complex joins operations, Mindbricks supportsa BFF pattern, where you can view dynamic and static views based on Elastic Search Indexes. Use db level relations for simple one-to-one or one-to-many relationships, and use BFF views for complex joins that require multiple data objects to be joined together.
-
userId: ID Relation to
user.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: Yes
-
productId: ID Relation to
productListingProduct.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: Yes
Session Data Properties
userId
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.
-
userId: 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.
watchlistList Data Object
Object Overview
Description: A named folder/list in a user’s watchlist. Default list exists for all users. Custom lists may be created and deleted.
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.
Composite Indexes
- uniqueWatchlistListPerUserAndName: [userId, name] This composite index is defined to optimize query performance for complex queries involving multiple fields.
The index also defines a conflict resolution strategy for duplicate key violations.
When a new record would violate this composite index, the following action will be taken:
On Duplicate:
throwError
An error will be thrown, preventing the insertion of conflicting data.
Properties Schema
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
name
|
String | Yes | Custom folder or list name. 'Default' is reserved (non-deletable for each user). |
itemCount
|
Integer | Yes | Number of (non-deleted) items in the list/folder. |
userId
|
ID | Yes | Owner of the watchlist list/folder. |
- 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.
- name: 'default'
- userId: '00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000'
Always Create with Default Values
Some of the default values are set to be always used when creating a new object, even if the property value is provided in the request body. It ensures that the property is always initialized with a default value when the object is created.
-
itemCount: Will be created with value
0
Constant Properties
itemCount
userId
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
name
itemCount
userId
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
name
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
name
userId
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.
Relation Properties
userId
Mindbricks supports relations between data objects, allowing you to define how objects are linked together. You can define relations in the data object properties, which will be used to create foreign key constraints in the database. For complex joins operations, Mindbricks supportsa BFF pattern, where you can view dynamic and static views based on Elastic Search Indexes. Use db level relations for simple one-to-one or one-to-many relationships, and use BFF views for complex joins that require multiple data objects to be joined together.
-
userId: ID Relation to
user.id
The target object is a parent object, meaning that the relation is a one-to-many relationship from target to this object.
On Delete: Set Null Required: Yes
Session Data Properties
userId
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.
-
userId: 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
name
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.
-
name: String has a filter named
name
Business Logic
watchlistCart has got 13 Business APIs to manage its internal and crud logic. For the details of each business API refer to its chapter.
Edge Controllers
No edge controllers defined for this service.
Service Library
Functions
validateReservedDefaultListName.js
module.exports = function() { return this.name.trim().toLowerCase() !== 'default'; }
Hook Functions
No hook functions defined.
Edge Functions
No edge functions defined.
Templates
No templates defined.
Assets
No assets defined.
Public Assets
No public assets defined.
Event Emission
Integration Patterns
Deployment Considerations
Environment Configuration
-
HTTP Port:
3003 - Database Type: MongoDB
- Global Soft Delete: Enabled
Implementation Guidelines
Development Workflow
- Data Model Implementation: Generate database schema from data object definitions
- CRUD Route Generation: Implement auto-generated routes with custom logic
- Custom Logic Integration: Implement hook functions and edge functions
- Authentication Integration: Configure with project-level authentication
- Testing: Unit and integration testing for all components
Code Generation Expectations
- Database Schema: Auto-generated from data objects and relationships
- API Routes: REST endpoints with customizable behavior
- Validation Logic: Input validation from property definitions
- Access Control: Authentication and authorization middleware
Custom Code Integration Points
- Hook Functions: Lifecycle-specific custom logic
- Edge Functions: Full request/response control
- Library Functions: Reusable business logic
- Templates: Dynamic content rendering
Testing Strategy
Unit Testing
- Test all custom library functions
- Test validation logic and business rules
- Test hook function implementations
Integration Testing
- Test API endpoints with authentication scenarios
- Test database operations and transactions
- Test external integrations
- Test event emission and Kafka integration
Performance Testing
- Load test high-traffic endpoints
- Test caching effectiveness
- Monitor database query performance
- Test scalability under load
Appendices
Data Type Reference
| Type | Description | Storage |
|---|---|---|
| ID | Unique identifier | UUID (SQL) / ObjectID (NoSQL) |
| String | Short text (≤255 chars) | VARCHAR |
| Text | Long-form text | TEXT |
| Integer | 32-bit whole numbers | INT |
| Boolean | True/false values | BOOLEAN |
| Double | 64-bit floating point | DOUBLE |
| Float | 32-bit floating point | FLOAT |
| Short | 16-bit integers | SMALLINT |
| Object | JSON object | JSONB (PostgreSQL) / Object (MongoDB) |
| Date | ISO 8601 timestamp | TIMESTAMP |
| Enum | Fixed numeric values | SMALLINT with lookup |
Enum Value Mappings
Request Locations
-
0: Bearer token in Authorization header -
1: Cookie value -
2: Custom HTTP header -
3: Query parameter -
4: Request body property -
5: URL path parameter -
6: Session data -
7: Root request object
HTTP Methods
-
0: GET -
1: POST -
2: PUT -
3: PATCH -
4: DELETE
Edge Function Signature
async function edgeFunction(request) {
// Custom request processing
// Return response object or throw error
return {
data: {},
status: 200,
message: "Success"
};
}
This document was generated from the service architecture definition and should be kept in sync with implementation changes.