Rails 3.2 introduced ActiveRecord::Store, which offers simple single-column key-value stores.
It's a nice feature, but its accessors are limited to primitive values (e.g. String
, Integer
, etc.) and it doesn't work out of the box if you want to store structured values. (e.g. Hash
, Set
, etc.)
Here's an example.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
store :options, accessors: [ :tutorials, :preference ]
end
user = User.new
user.tutorials[:quick_start] = :visited # => NoMethodError: undefined method `[]=' for nil:NilClass
There are two ways to solve this problem - a. break down options
into multiple columns like tutorials
and preference
, or b. define an accessor method for each to initialize with an empty Hash
when accessed for the first time.
The former is bad because the TEXT (or BLOB) column type could be stored off-page when it gets big and you could hit some strange bugs and/or performance penalty. Furthermore, adding columns kills the primary purpose of having key-value store - you use this feature because you don't like migrations, right? So it's two-fold bad.
StoreField takes the latter approach. It defines accessors that initialize with an empty Hash
or Set
automatically. Now you have a single TEXT column for everything!
Changelog:
- v2.0.0: Hash-type supports
keys
option to add accessors for validation. Set-type withvalues
option now adds a validation rather than raising an exception.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile.
gem 'store_field'
Define store_field
in a model class, following the store
method.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
store :storage
store_field :tutorials
end
Now the previous example works perfectly.
user = User.new
user.tutorials[:quick_start] = :finished
When no option is given, it defaults to the first serialized column, using Hash-type. So store_field :tutorials
is equivalent to the following.
store_field :tutorials, in: :storage, type: Hash
When the keys
option is given for Hash-type, convenience accessors are automatically defined, which can be used for validation.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
store_field :tutorials, keys: [ :quick_start ]
validates :tutorials_quick_start, inclusion: { in: [ :started, :finished ], allow_nil: true }
end
user = User.new
user.tutorials_quick_start = :started
user.valid?
=> true
In addition to Hash-type, StoreField supports Set-type. To use Set-type, simply pass type: Set
option.
It turns out that Set-type is extremely useful most of the time when you think what you need is Array
.
store_field :funnel, type: Set
It defines several utility methods - set_[field]
, unset_[field]
, set_[field]?
and unset_[field]?
.
cart = Cart.new
cart.funnel # => #<Set: {}>
cart.set_funnel(:add_item)
cart.set_funnel(:checkout)
cart.set_funnel?(:checkout) # => true
cart.funnel # => #<Set: {:add_item, :checkout}>
set_[field]
and unset_[field]
return self
, so you can call save
in chain.
cart.set_funnel(:checkout).save! # => true
Also you can enumerate acceptable values for validation.
class Cart < ActiveRecord::Base
store_field :funnel, type: Set, values: [ :add_item, :checkout ]
end
cart = Cart.new
cart.set_funnel(:bogus)
cart.valid?
=> false
Set-type is a great way to store an arbitrary number of named states.
Consider you have a system that sends an alert when some criteria have been met.
if user.bandwidth_usage > 250.megabytes
Email.to user, message: 'Your data plan usage is nearing 300MB limit'
end
Depending on at what time the above code gets run (daily, hourly, etc.), email could be sent multiple times. To prevent duplicate alerts, you need to store the state in the database when one is successfully delivered.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
store :storage
store_field :delivered, type: Set
end
if user.bandwidth_usage > 250.megabytes and !user.set_delivered?(:nearing_limit)
Email.to user, message: 'Your data plan usage is nearing 300MB limit'
user.set_delivered(:nearing_limit).save
end
That way, the user won't receive the same alert again, until unset_delivered
is called when the next billing cycle starts.
ActiveRecord::Store uses YAML to serialize Ruby objects. A StoreField will be stored as follows:
---
:funnel: !ruby/object:Set
hash:
:add_item: true
:checkout: true
As you can see, the Set
class internally uses Hash
for its storage.
There is a known compatibility problem between psych
and syck
, be sure to use psych
from the beginning.
YAML::ENGINE.yamler # => "psych"
If you are using Ruby 1.9.2 or later, psych
should be used by default.
- StoreConfigurable - A zero-configuration recursive Hash for storing a tree of options.