ActiveRecord::Store but with typed attributes.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'activerecord-typedstore'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install activerecord-typedstore
It works exactly like ActiveRecord::Store documentation but you can declare the type of your attributes.
Attributes definition is similar to activerecord's migrations:
class Shop < ActiveRecord::Base
typed_store :settings do |s|
s.boolean :public, default: false, null: false
s.string :email
s.datetime :publish_at
s.integer :age, null: false
# You can define array attributes like in rails 4 and postgres
s.string :tags, array: true, default: [], null: false
# In addition to prevent null values you can prevent blank values
s.string :title, blank: false, default: 'Title'
# If you don't want to enforce a datatype but still like to have default handling
s.any :source, blank: false, default: 'web'
end
# You can use any ActiveModel validator
validates :age, presence: true
end
# Values are accessible like normal model attributes
shop = Shop.new(email: 'george@cyclim.se')
shop.public? # => false
shop.email # => 'george@cyclim.se'
shop.published_at # => nil
# Values are type casted
shop.update_attributes(
age: '42',
published_at: '1984-06-08 13:57:12'
)
shop.age # => 42
shop.published_at.class #= DateTime
# And changes are tracked
shop.age_changed? # => false
shop.age = 12
shop.age_changed? # => true
shop.age_was # => 42
# You can still use it as a regular store
shop.settings[:unknown] = 'Hello World'
shop.save
shop.reload
shop.settings[:unknown] # => 'Hello World'
# If you only want type casting and default handling without accessors
# you can disable them store wide
typed_store :settings, accessors: false do |s|
# ...
end
# or on a per attribute basis
typed_store :settings do |s|
s.integer :age
s.string :postal_code, accessor: false
end
Type casting rules and attribute behavior are exactly the same as a for real database columns. Actually the only difference is that you wont be able to query on these attributes (unless you use Postgres JSON or HStore types) and that you don't need to do a migration to add / remove an attribute.
If not, please fill an issue.
Just like for store, you can use any custom coder:
module Base64MarshalCoder
extend self
def load(data)
return {} unless data
Marshal.load(Base64.decode64(data))
end
def dump(data)
Base64.encode64(Marshal.dump(data || {}))
end
end
typed_store :settings, coder: Base64MarshalCoder do |s|
# ...
end
If you want to use Postgres HStore or JSON column types, then you need a very simple coder:
module DumbCoder
extend self
def load(data)
data || {}
end
def dump(data)
data || {}
end
end
If you want to persist your store in a Postgres HStore, then there is some limitations imposed by the current HStore implementation in Postgres. Since HStore can only store strings:
array
attributes won't workany
attributes will be converted to string
If you use HStore because you need to be able to query the store from SQL, and any of these limitations are an issue for you, than you could probably use the JSON column type, which do not suffer from these limitations and is also queriable.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request