require 'active_record/associations/association_proxy'
require 'active_record/associations/association_collection'
require 'active_record/associations/belongs_to_association'
require 'active_record/associations/has_one_association'
require 'active_record/associations/has_many_association'
require 'active_record/associations/has_and_belongs_to_many_association'
require 'active_record/deprecated_associations'
module ActiveRecord
module Associations # :nodoc:
def self.append_features(base)
super
base.extend(ClassMethods)
end
# Clears out the association cache
def clear_association_cache #:nodoc:
self.class.reflect_on_all_associations.to_a.each do |assoc|
instance_variable_set "@#{assoc.name}", nil
end unless self.new_record?
end
# Associations are a set of macro-like class methods for tying objects together through foreign keys. They express relationships like
# "Project has one Project Manager" or "Project belongs to a Portfolio". Each macro adds a number of methods to the class which are
# specialized according to the collection or association symbol and the options hash. It works much the same was as Ruby's own attr*
# methods. Example:
#
# class Project < ActiveRecord::Base
# belongs_to :portfolio
# has_one :project_manager
# has_many :milestones
# has_and_belongs_to_many :categories
# end
#
# The project class now has the following methods (and more) to ease the traversal and manipulation of its relationships:
# * Project#portfolio, Project#portfolio=(portfolio), Project#portfolio.nil?
# * Project#project_manager, Project#project_manager=(project_manager), Project#project_manager.nil?,
# * Project#milestones.empty?, Project#milestones.size, Project#milestones, Project#milestones<<(milestone),
# Project#milestones.delete(milestone), Project#milestones.find(milestone_id), Project#milestones.find_all(conditions),
# Project#milestones.build, Project#milestones.create
# * Project#categories.empty?, Project#categories.size, Project#categories, Project#categories<<(category1),
# Project#categories.delete(category1)
#
# == Example
#
# link:files/examples/associations.png
#
# == Is it belongs_to or has_one?
#
# Both express a 1-1 relationship, the difference is mostly where to place the foreign key, which goes on the table for the class
# saying belongs_to. Example:
#
# class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
# has_one :author
# end
#
# class Author < ActiveRecord::Base
# belongs_to :post
# end
#
# The tables for these classes could look something like:
#
# CREATE TABLE posts (
# id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
# title varchar default NULL,
# PRIMARY KEY (id)
# )
#
# CREATE TABLE authors (
# id int(11) NOT NULL auto_increment,
# post_id int(11) default NULL,
# name varchar default NULL,
# PRIMARY KEY (id)
# )
#
# == Unsaved objects and associations
#
# You can manipulate objects and associations before they are saved to the database, but there is some special behaviour you should be
# aware of, mostly involving the saving of associated objects.
#
# === One-to-one associations
#
# * Assigning an object to a has_one association automatically saves that object, and the object being replaced (if there is one), in
# order to update their primary keys - except if the parent object is unsaved (new_record? == true).
# * If either of these saves fail (due to one of the objects being invalid) the assignment statement returns false and the assignment
# is cancelled.
# * If you wish to assign an object to a has_one association without saving it, use the #association.build method (documented below).
# * Assigning an object to a belongs_to association does not save the object, since the foreign key field belongs on the parent. It does
# not save the parent either.
#
# === Collections
#
# * Adding an object to a collection (has_many or has_and_belongs_to_many) automatically saves that object, except if the parent object
# (the owner of the collection) is not yet stored in the database.
# * If saving any of the objects being added to a collection (via #push or similar) fails, then #push returns false.
# * You can add an object to a collection without automatically saving it by using the #collection.build method (documented below).
# * All unsaved (new_record? == true) members of the collection are automatically saved when the parent is saved.
#
# === Association callbacks
#
# Similiar to the normal callbacks that hook into the lifecycle of an Active Record object, you can also define callbacks that get
# trigged when you add an object to or removing an object from a association collection. Example:
#
# class Project
# has_and_belongs_to_many :developers, :after_add => :evaluate_velocity
#
# def evaluate_velocity(developer)
# ...
# end
# end
#
# It's possible to stack callbacks by passing them as an array. Example:
#
# class Project
# has_and_belongs_to_many :developers, :after_add => [:evaluate_velocity, Proc.new { |p, d| p.shipping_date = Time.now}]
# end
#
# Possible callbacks are: before_add, after_add, before_remove and after_remove.
#
# Should any of the before_add callbacks throw an exception, the object does not get added to the collection. Same with
# the before_remove callbacks, if an exception is thrown the object doesn't get removed.
#
# == Caching
#
# All of the methods are built on a simple caching principle that will keep the result of the last query around unless specifically
# instructed not to. The cache is even shared across methods to make it even cheaper to use the macro-added methods without
# worrying too much about performance at the first go. Example:
#
# project.milestones # fetches milestones from the database
# project.milestones.size # uses the milestone cache
# project.milestones.empty? # uses the milestone cache
# project.milestones(true).size # fetches milestones from the database
# project.milestones # uses the milestone cache
#
# == Eager loading of associations
#
# Eager loading is a way to find objects of a certain class and a number of named associations along with it in a single SQL call. This is
# one of the easiest ways of to prevent the dreaded 1+N problem in which fetching 100 posts that each needs to display their author
# triggers 101 database queries. Through the use of eager loading, the 101 queries can be reduced to 1. Example:
#
# class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
# belongs_to :author
# has_many :comments
# end
#
# Consider the following loop using the class above:
#
# for post in Post.find(:all)
# puts "Post: " + post.title
# puts "Written by: " + post.author.name
# puts "Last comment on: " + post.comments.first.created_on
# end
#
# To iterate over these one hundred posts, we'll generate 201 database queries. Let's first just optimize it for retrieving the author:
#
# for post in Post.find(:all, :include => :author)
#
# This references the name of the belongs_to association that also used the :author symbol, so the find will now weave in a join something
# like this: LEFT OUTER JOIN authors ON authors.id = posts.author_id. Doing so will cut down the number of queries from 201 to 101.
#
# We can improve upon the situation further by referencing both associations in the finder with:
#
# for post in Post.find(:all, :include => [ :author, :comments ])
#
# That'll add another join along the lines of: LEFT OUTER JOIN comments ON comments.post_id = posts.id. And we'll be down to 1 query.
# But that shouldn't fool you to think that you can pull out huge amounts of data with no performance penalty just because you've reduced
# the number of queries. The database still needs to send all the data to Active Record and it still needs to be processed. So its no
# catch-all for performance problems, but its a great way to cut down on the number of queries in a situation as the one described above.
#
# Please note that because eager loading is fetching both models and associations in the same grab, it doesn't make sense to use the
# :limit and :offset options on has_many and has_and_belongs_to_many associations and an ConfigurationError exception will be raised
# if attempted. It does, however, work just fine with has_one and belongs_to associations.
#
# Also have in mind that since the eager loading is pulling from multiple tables, you'll have to disambiguate any column references
# in both conditions and orders. So :order => "posts.id DESC" will work while :order => "id DESC" will not. This may require that
# you alter the :order and :conditions on the association definitions themselves.
#
# It's currently not possible to use eager loading on multiple associations from the same table. Eager loading will also not pull
# additional attributes on join tables, so "rich associations" with has_and_belongs_to_many is not a good fit for eager loading.
#
# == Modules
#
# By default, associations will look for objects within the current module scope. Consider:
#
# module MyApplication
# module Business
# class Firm < ActiveRecord::Base
# has_many :clients
# end
#
# class Company < ActiveRecord::Base; end
# end
# end
#
# When Firm#clients is called, it'll in turn call MyApplication::Business::Company.find(firm.id). If you want to associate
# with a class in another module scope this can be done by specifying the complete class name, such as:
#
# module MyApplication
# module Business
# class Firm < ActiveRecord::Base; end
# end
#
# module Billing
# class Account < ActiveRecord::Base
# belongs_to :firm, :class_name => "MyApplication::Business::Firm"
# end
# end
# end
#
# == Type safety with ActiveRecord::AssociationTypeMismatch
#
# If you attempt to assign an object to an association that doesn't match the inferred or specified :class_name, you'll
# get a ActiveRecord::AssociationTypeMismatch.
#
# == Options
#
# All of the association macros can be specialized through options which makes more complex cases than the simple and guessable ones
# possible.
module ClassMethods
# Adds the following methods for retrieval and query of collections of associated objects.
# +collection+ is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument, so
# has_many :clients would add among others clients.empty?.
# * collection(force_reload = false) - returns an array of all the associated objects.
# An empty array is returned if none are found.
# * collection<<(object, ...) - adds one or more objects to the collection by setting their foreign keys to the collection's primary key.
# * collection.delete(object, ...) - removes one or more objects from the collection by setting their foreign keys to NULL.
# This will also destroy the objects if they're declared as belongs_to and dependent on this model.
# * collection=objects - replaces the collections content by deleting and adding objects as appropriate.
# * collection_singular_ids=ids - replace the collection by the objects identified by the primary keys in +ids+
# * collection.clear - removes every object from the collection. This destroys the associated objects if they
# are :dependent, deletes them directly from the database if they are :exclusively_dependent,
# and sets their foreign keys to NULL otherwise.
# * collection.empty? - returns true if there are no associated objects.
# * collection.size - returns the number of associated objects.
# * collection.find - finds an associated object according to the same rules as Base.find.
# * collection.build(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the collection type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key but has not yet been saved. *Note:* This only works if an
# associated object already exists, not if its nil!
# * collection.create(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the collection type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key and that has already been saved (if it passed the validation).
# *Note:* This only works if an associated object already exists, not if its nil!
#
# Example: A Firm class declares has_many :clients, which will add:
# * Firm#clients (similar to Clients.find :all, :conditions => "firm_id = #{id}")
# * Firm#clients<<
# * Firm#clients.delete
# * Firm#clients=
# * Firm#client_ids=
# * Firm#clients.clear
# * Firm#clients.empty? (similar to firm.clients.size == 0)
# * Firm#clients.size (similar to Client.count "firm_id = #{id}")
# * Firm#clients.find (similar to Client.find(id, :conditions => "firm_id = #{id}"))
# * Firm#clients.build (similar to Client.new("firm_id" => id))
# * Firm#clients.create (similar to c = Client.new("firm_id" => id); c.save; c)
# The declaration can also include an options hash to specialize the behavior of the association.
#
# Options are:
# * :class_name - specify the class name of the association. Use it only if that name can't be inferred
# from the association name. So has_many :products will by default be linked to the +Product+ class, but
# if the real class name is +SpecialProduct+, you'll have to specify it with this option.
# * :conditions - specify the conditions that the associated objects must meet in order to be included as a "WHERE"
# sql fragment, such as "price > 5 AND name LIKE 'B%'".
# * :order - specify the order in which the associated objects are returned as a "ORDER BY" sql fragment,
# such as "last_name, first_name DESC"
# * :foreign_key - specify the foreign key used for the association. By default this is guessed to be the name
# of this class in lower-case and "_id" suffixed. So a +Person+ class that makes a has_many association will use "person_id"
# as the default foreign_key.
# * :dependent - if set to true all the associated object are destroyed alongside this object.
# May not be set if :exclusively_dependent is also set.
# * :exclusively_dependent - if set to true all the associated object are deleted in one SQL statement without having their
# before_destroy callback run. This should only be used on associations that depend solely on this class and don't need to do any
# clean-up in before_destroy. The upside is that it's much faster, especially if there's a counter_cache involved.
# May not be set if :dependent is also set.
# * :finder_sql - specify a complete SQL statement to fetch the association. This is a good way to go for complex
# associations that depends on multiple tables. Note: When this option is used, +find_in_collection+ is _not_ added.
# * :counter_sql - specify a complete SQL statement to fetch the size of the association. If +:finder_sql+ is
# specified but +:counter_sql+, +:counter_sql+ will be generated by replacing SELECT ... FROM with SELECT COUNT(*) FROM.
#
# Option examples:
# has_many :comments, :order => "posted_on"
# has_many :people, :class_name => "Person", :conditions => "deleted = 0", :order => "name"
# has_many :tracks, :order => "position", :dependent => true
# has_many :subscribers, :class_name => "Person", :finder_sql =>
# 'SELECT DISTINCT people.* ' +
# 'FROM people p, post_subscriptions ps ' +
# 'WHERE ps.post_id = #{id} AND ps.person_id = p.id ' +
# 'ORDER BY p.first_name'
def has_many(association_id, options = {})
options.assert_valid_keys(
:foreign_key, :class_name, :exclusively_dependent, :dependent,
:conditions, :order, :finder_sql, :counter_sql,
:before_add, :after_add, :before_remove, :after_remove
)
association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name =
associate_identification(association_id, options[:class_name], options[:foreign_key])
require_association_class(association_class_name)
if options[:dependent] and options[:exclusively_dependent]
raise ArgumentError, ':dependent and :exclusively_dependent are mutually exclusive options. You may specify one or the other.' # ' ruby-mode
# See HasManyAssociation#delete_records. Dependent associations
# delete children, otherwise foreign key is set to NULL.
elsif options[:dependent]
module_eval "before_destroy '#{association_name}.each { |o| o.destroy }'"
elsif options[:exclusively_dependent]
module_eval "before_destroy { |record| #{association_class_name}.delete_all(%(#{association_class_primary_key_name} = \#{record.quoted_id})) }"
end
add_multiple_associated_save_callbacks(association_name)
add_association_callbacks(association_name, options)
collection_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, HasManyAssociation)
# deprecated api
deprecated_collection_count_method(association_name)
deprecated_add_association_relation(association_name)
deprecated_remove_association_relation(association_name)
deprecated_has_collection_method(association_name)
deprecated_find_in_collection_method(association_name)
deprecated_find_all_in_collection_method(association_name)
deprecated_collection_create_method(association_name)
deprecated_collection_build_method(association_name)
end
# Adds the following methods for retrieval and query of a single associated object.
# +association+ is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument, so
# has_one :manager would add among others manager.nil?.
# * association(force_reload = false) - returns the associated object. Nil is returned if none is found.
# * association=(associate) - assigns the associate object, extracts the primary key, sets it as the foreign key,
# and saves the associate object.
# * association.nil? - returns true if there is no associated object.
# * build_association(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the associated type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key but has not yet been saved. Note: This ONLY works if
# an association already exists. It will NOT work if the association is nil.
# * create_association(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the associated type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key and that has already been saved (if it passed the validation).
#
# Example: An Account class declares has_one :beneficiary, which will add:
# * Account#beneficiary (similar to Beneficiary.find(:first, :conditions => "account_id = #{id}"))
# * Account#beneficiary=(beneficiary) (similar to beneficiary.account_id = account.id; beneficiary.save)
# * Account#beneficiary.nil?
# * Account#build_beneficiary (similar to Beneficiary.new("account_id" => id))
# * Account#create_beneficiary (similar to b = Beneficiary.new("account_id" => id); b.save; b)
#
# The declaration can also include an options hash to specialize the behavior of the association.
#
# Options are:
# * :class_name - specify the class name of the association. Use it only if that name can't be inferred
# from the association name. So has_one :manager will by default be linked to the +Manager+ class, but
# if the real class name is +Person+, you'll have to specify it with this option.
# * :conditions - specify the conditions that the associated object must meet in order to be included as a "WHERE"
# sql fragment, such as "rank = 5".
# * :order - specify the order from which the associated object will be picked at the top. Specified as
# an "ORDER BY" sql fragment, such as "last_name, first_name DESC"
# * :dependent - if set to true, the associated object is destroyed when this object is. It's also destroyed if another
# association is assigned.
# * :foreign_key - specify the foreign key used for the association. By default this is guessed to be the name
# of this class in lower-case and "_id" suffixed. So a +Person+ class that makes a has_one association will use "person_id"
# as the default foreign_key.
#
# Option examples:
# has_one :credit_card, :dependent => true
# has_one :last_comment, :class_name => "Comment", :order => "posted_on"
# has_one :project_manager, :class_name => "Person", :conditions => "role = 'project_manager'"
def has_one(association_id, options = {})
options.assert_valid_keys(:class_name, :foreign_key, :remote, :conditions, :order, :dependent, :counter_cache)
association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name =
associate_identification(association_id, options[:class_name], options[:foreign_key], false)
require_association_class(association_class_name)
module_eval do
after_save <<-EOF
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
unless association.nil?
association["#{association_class_primary_key_name}"] = id
association.save(true)
association.send(:construct_sql)
end
EOF
end
association_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, HasOneAssociation)
association_constructor_method(:build, association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, HasOneAssociation)
association_constructor_method(:create, association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, HasOneAssociation)
module_eval "before_destroy '#{association_name}.destroy unless #{association_name}.nil?'" if options[:dependent]
# deprecated api
deprecated_has_association_method(association_name)
deprecated_association_comparison_method(association_name, association_class_name)
end
# Adds the following methods for retrieval and query for a single associated object that this object holds an id to.
# +association+ is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument, so
# belongs_to :author would add among others author.nil?.
# * association(force_reload = false) - returns the associated object. Nil is returned if none is found.
# * association=(associate) - assigns the associate object, extracts the primary key, and sets it as the foreign key.
# * association.nil? - returns true if there is no associated object.
# * build_association(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the associated type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key but has not yet been saved.
# * create_association(attributes = {}) - returns a new object of the associated type that has been instantiated
# with +attributes+ and linked to this object through a foreign key and that has already been saved (if it passed the validation).
#
# Example: A Post class declares belongs_to :author, which will add:
# * Post#author (similar to Author.find(author_id))
# * Post#author=(author) (similar to post.author_id = author.id)
# * Post#author? (similar to post.author == some_author)
# * Post#author.nil?
# * Post#build_author (similar to post.author = Author.new)
# * Post#create_author (similar to post.author = Author.new; post.author.save; post.author)
# The declaration can also include an options hash to specialize the behavior of the association.
#
# Options are:
# * :class_name - specify the class name of the association. Use it only if that name can't be inferred
# from the association name. So has_one :author will by default be linked to the +Author+ class, but
# if the real class name is +Person+, you'll have to specify it with this option.
# * :conditions - specify the conditions that the associated object must meet in order to be included as a "WHERE"
# sql fragment, such as "authorized = 1".
# * :order - specify the order from which the associated object will be picked at the top. Specified as
# an "ORDER BY" sql fragment, such as "last_name, first_name DESC"
# * :foreign_key - specify the foreign key used for the association. By default this is guessed to be the name
# of the associated class in lower-case and "_id" suffixed. So a +Person+ class that makes a belongs_to association to a
# +Boss+ class will use "boss_id" as the default foreign_key.
# * :counter_cache - caches the number of belonging objects on the associate class through use of increment_counter
# and decrement_counter. The counter cache is incremented when an object of this class is created and decremented when it's
# destroyed. This requires that a column named "#{table_name}_count" (such as comments_count for a belonging Comment class)
# is used on the associate class (such as a Post class).
#
# Option examples:
# belongs_to :firm, :foreign_key => "client_of"
# belongs_to :author, :class_name => "Person", :foreign_key => "author_id"
# belongs_to :valid_coupon, :class_name => "Coupon", :foreign_key => "coupon_id",
# :conditions => 'discounts > #{payments_count}'
def belongs_to(association_id, options = {})
options.assert_valid_keys(:class_name, :foreign_key, :remote, :conditions, :order, :dependent, :counter_cache)
association_name, association_class_name, class_primary_key_name =
associate_identification(association_id, options[:class_name], options[:foreign_key], false)
require_association_class(association_class_name)
association_class_primary_key_name = options[:foreign_key] || association_class_name.foreign_key
association_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, BelongsToAssociation)
association_constructor_method(:build, association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, BelongsToAssociation)
association_constructor_method(:create, association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, BelongsToAssociation)
module_eval do
before_save <<-EOF
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if not association.nil?
if association.new_record?
association.save(true)
association.send(:construct_sql)
end
self["#{association_class_primary_key_name}"] = association.id if association.updated?
end
EOF
end
if options[:counter_cache]
module_eval(
"after_create '#{association_class_name}.increment_counter(\"#{self.to_s.underscore.pluralize + "_count"}\", #{association_class_primary_key_name})" +
" unless #{association_name}.nil?'"
)
module_eval(
"before_destroy '#{association_class_name}.decrement_counter(\"#{self.to_s.underscore.pluralize + "_count"}\", #{association_class_primary_key_name})" +
" unless #{association_name}.nil?'"
)
end
# deprecated api
deprecated_has_association_method(association_name)
deprecated_association_comparison_method(association_name, association_class_name)
end
# Associates two classes via an intermediate join table. Unless the join table is explicitly specified as
# an option, it is guessed using the lexical order of the class names. So a join between Developer and Project
# will give the default join table name of "developers_projects" because "D" outranks "P".
#
# Any additional fields added to the join table will be placed as attributes when pulling records out through
# has_and_belongs_to_many associations. This is helpful when have information about the association itself
# that you want available on retrieval. Note that any fields in the join table will override matching field names
# in the two joined tables. As a consequence, having an "id" field in the join table usually has the undesirable
# result of clobbering the "id" fields in either of the other two tables.
#
# Adds the following methods for retrieval and query.
# +collection+ is replaced with the symbol passed as the first argument, so
# has_and_belongs_to_many :categories would add among others categories.empty?.
# * collection(force_reload = false) - returns an array of all the associated objects.
# An empty array is returned if none is found.
# * collection<<(object, ...) - adds one or more objects to the collection by creating associations in the join table
# (collection.push and collection.concat are aliases to this method).
# * collection.push_with_attributes(object, join_attributes) - adds one to the collection by creating an association in the join table that
# also holds the attributes from join_attributes (should be a hash with the column names as keys). This can be used to have additional
# attributes on the join, which will be injected into the associated objects when they are retrieved through the collection.
# (collection.concat_with_attributes is an alias to this method).
# * collection.delete(object, ...) - removes one or more objects from the collection by removing their associations from the join table.
# This does not destroy the objects.
# * collection=objects - replaces the collections content by deleting and adding objects as appropriate.
# * collection_singular_ids=ids - replace the collection by the objects identified by the primary keys in +ids+
# * collection.clear - removes every object from the collection. This does not destroy the objects.
# * collection.empty? - returns true if there are no associated objects.
# * collection.size - returns the number of associated objects.
# * collection.find(id) - finds an associated object responding to the +id+ and that
# meets the condition that it has to be associated with this object.
#
# Example: An Developer class declares has_and_belongs_to_many :projects, which will add:
# * Developer#projects
# * Developer#projects<<
# * Developer#projects.push_with_attributes
# * Developer#projects.delete
# * Developer#projects=
# * Developer#project_ids=
# * Developer#projects.clear
# * Developer#projects.empty?
# * Developer#projects.size
# * Developer#projects.find(id)
# The declaration may include an options hash to specialize the behavior of the association.
#
# Options are:
# * :class_name - specify the class name of the association. Use it only if that name can't be inferred
# from the association name. So has_and_belongs_to_many :projects will by default be linked to the
# +Project+ class, but if the real class name is +SuperProject+, you'll have to specify it with this option.
# * :join_table - specify the name of the join table if the default based on lexical order isn't what you want.
# WARNING: If you're overwriting the table name of either class, the table_name method MUST be declared underneath any
# has_and_belongs_to_many declaration in order to work.
# * :foreign_key - specify the foreign key used for the association. By default this is guessed to be the name
# of this class in lower-case and "_id" suffixed. So a +Person+ class that makes a has_and_belongs_to_many association
# will use "person_id" as the default foreign_key.
# * :association_foreign_key - specify the association foreign key used for the association. By default this is
# guessed to be the name of the associated class in lower-case and "_id" suffixed. So the associated class is +Project+
# that makes a has_and_belongs_to_many association will use "project_id" as the default association foreign_key.
# * :conditions - specify the conditions that the associated object must meet in order to be included as a "WHERE"
# sql fragment, such as "authorized = 1".
# * :order - specify the order in which the associated objects are returned as a "ORDER BY" sql fragment, such as "last_name, first_name DESC"
# * :uniq - if set to true, duplicate associated objects will be ignored by accessors and query methods
# * :finder_sql - overwrite the default generated SQL used to fetch the association with a manual one
# * :delete_sql - overwrite the default generated SQL used to remove links between the associated
# classes with a manual one
# * :insert_sql - overwrite the default generated SQL used to add links between the associated classes
# with a manual one
#
# Option examples:
# has_and_belongs_to_many :projects
# has_and_belongs_to_many :nations, :class_name => "Country"
# has_and_belongs_to_many :categories, :join_table => "prods_cats"
# has_and_belongs_to_many :active_projects, :join_table => 'developers_projects', :delete_sql =>
# 'DELETE FROM developers_projects WHERE active=1 AND developer_id = #{id} AND project_id = #{record.id}'
def has_and_belongs_to_many(association_id, options = {})
options.assert_valid_keys(
:class_name, :table_name, :foreign_key, :association_foreign_key, :conditions,
:join_table, :finder_sql, :delete_sql, :insert_sql, :order, :uniq, :before_add, :after_add,
:before_remove, :after_remove
)
association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name =
associate_identification(association_id, options[:class_name], options[:foreign_key])
require_association_class(association_class_name)
options[:join_table] ||= join_table_name(undecorated_table_name(self.to_s), undecorated_table_name(association_class_name))
add_multiple_associated_save_callbacks(association_name)
collection_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, HasAndBelongsToManyAssociation)
before_destroy_sql = "DELETE FROM #{options[:join_table]} WHERE #{association_class_primary_key_name} = \\\#{self.quoted_id}"
module_eval(%{before_destroy "self.connection.delete(%{#{before_destroy_sql}})"}) # "
add_association_callbacks(association_name, options)
# deprecated api
deprecated_collection_count_method(association_name)
deprecated_add_association_relation(association_name)
deprecated_remove_association_relation(association_name)
deprecated_has_collection_method(association_name)
end
private
def join_table_name(first_table_name, second_table_name)
if first_table_name < second_table_name
join_table = "#{first_table_name}_#{second_table_name}"
else
join_table = "#{second_table_name}_#{first_table_name}"
end
table_name_prefix + join_table + table_name_suffix
end
def associate_identification(association_id, association_class_name, foreign_key, plural = true)
if association_class_name !~ /::/
association_class_name = type_name_with_module(
association_class_name ||
Inflector.camelize(plural ? Inflector.singularize(association_id.id2name) : association_id.id2name)
)
end
primary_key_name = foreign_key || name.foreign_key
return association_id.id2name, association_class_name, primary_key_name
end
def association_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, association_proxy_class)
define_method(association_name) do |*params|
force_reload = params.first unless params.empty?
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if association.nil? or force_reload
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
retval = association.reload
unless retval.nil?
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
else
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", nil)
return nil
end
end
association
end
define_method("#{association_name}=") do |new_value|
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if association.nil?
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
end
association.replace(new_value)
unless new_value.nil?
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
else
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", nil)
return nil
end
association
end
define_method("set_#{association_name}_target") do |target|
return if target.nil?
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
association.target = target
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
end
end
def collection_accessor_methods(association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, association_proxy_class)
define_method(association_name) do |*params|
force_reload = params.first unless params.empty?
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
unless association.respond_to?(:loaded?)
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
end
association.reload if force_reload
association
end
define_method("#{association_name}=") do |new_value|
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
unless association.respond_to?(:loaded?)
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
end
association.replace(new_value)
association
end
define_method("#{Inflector.singularize(association_name)}_ids=") do |new_value|
send("#{association_name}=", association_class_name.constantize.find(new_value))
end
end
def require_association_class(class_name)
require_association(Inflector.underscore(class_name)) if class_name
end
def add_multiple_associated_save_callbacks(association_name)
method_name = "validate_associated_records_for_#{association_name}".to_sym
define_method(method_name) do
@new_record_before_save = new_record?
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if association.respond_to?(:loaded?)
if new_record?
association
else
association.select { |record| record.new_record? }
end.each do |record|
errors.add "#{association_name}" unless record.valid?
end
end
end
validate method_name
after_callback = <<-end_eval
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if association.respond_to?(:loaded?)
if @new_record_before_save
records_to_save = association
else
records_to_save = association.select { |record| record.new_record? }
end
records_to_save.each { |record| association.send(:insert_record, record) }
association.send(:construct_sql) # reconstruct the SQL queries now that we know the owner's id
end
end_eval
# Doesn't use after_save as that would save associations added in after_create/after_update twice
after_create(after_callback)
after_update(after_callback)
end
def association_constructor_method(constructor, association_name, association_class_name, association_class_primary_key_name, options, association_proxy_class)
define_method("#{constructor}_#{association_name}") do |*params|
attributees = params.first unless params.empty?
replace_existing = params[1].nil? ? true : params[1]
association = instance_variable_get("@#{association_name}")
if association.nil?
association = association_proxy_class.new(self,
association_name, association_class_name,
association_class_primary_key_name, options)
instance_variable_set("@#{association_name}", association)
end
if association_proxy_class == HasOneAssociation
association.send(constructor, attributees, replace_existing)
else
association.send(constructor, attributees)
end
end
end
def find_with_associations(options = {})
reflections = reflect_on_included_associations(options[:include])
guard_against_missing_reflections(reflections, options)
guard_against_unlimitable_reflections(reflections, options)
schema_abbreviations = generate_schema_abbreviations(reflections)
primary_key_table = generate_primary_key_table(reflections, schema_abbreviations)
rows = select_all_rows(options, schema_abbreviations, reflections)
records, records_in_order = { }, []
primary_key = primary_key_table[table_name]
for row in rows
id = row[primary_key]
records_in_order << (records[id] = instantiate(extract_record(schema_abbreviations, table_name, row))) unless records[id]
record = records[id]
reflections.each do |reflection|
case reflection.macro
when :has_many, :has_and_belongs_to_many
collection = record.send(reflection.name)
collection.loaded
next unless row[primary_key_table[reflection.table_name]]
association = reflection.klass.send(:instantiate, extract_record(schema_abbreviations, reflection.table_name, row))
collection.target.push(association) unless collection.target.include?(association)
when :has_one, :belongs_to
next unless row[primary_key_table[reflection.table_name]]
record.send(
"set_#{reflection.name}_target",
reflection.klass.send(:instantiate, extract_record(schema_abbreviations, reflection.table_name, row))
)
end
end
end
return records_in_order
end
def reflect_on_included_associations(associations)
[ associations ].flatten.collect { |association| reflect_on_association(association.to_s.intern) }
end
def guard_against_missing_reflections(reflections, options)
reflections.each do |r|
raise(
ConfigurationError,
"Association was not found; perhaps you misspelled it? " +
"You specified :include => :#{[options[:include]].flatten.join(', :')}"
) if r.nil?
end
end
def guard_against_unlimitable_reflections(reflections, options)
if (options[:offset] || options[:limit]) && !using_limitable_reflections?(reflections)
raise(
ConfigurationError,
"You can not use offset and limit together with has_many or has_and_belongs_to_many associations"
)
end
end
def generate_schema_abbreviations(reflections)
schema = [ [ table_name, column_names ] ]
schema += reflections.collect { |r| [ r.table_name, r.klass.column_names ] }
schema_abbreviations = {}
schema.each_with_index do |table_and_columns, i|
table, columns = table_and_columns
columns.each_with_index { |column, j| schema_abbreviations["t#{i}_r#{j}"] = [ table, column ] }
end
return schema_abbreviations
end
def generate_primary_key_table(reflections, schema_abbreviations)
primary_key_lookup_table = {}
primary_key_lookup_table[table_name] =
schema_abbreviations.find { |cn, tc| tc == [ table_name, primary_key ] }.first
reflections.collect do |reflection|
primary_key_lookup_table[reflection.klass.table_name] = schema_abbreviations.find { |cn, tc|
tc == [ reflection.klass.table_name, reflection.klass.primary_key ]
}.first
end
return primary_key_lookup_table
end
def select_all_rows(options, schema_abbreviations, reflections)
connection.select_all(
construct_finder_sql_with_included_associations(options, schema_abbreviations, reflections),
"#{name} Load Including Associations"
)
end
def construct_finder_sql_with_included_associations(options, schema_abbreviations, reflections)
sql = "SELECT #{column_aliases(schema_abbreviations)} FROM #{table_name} "
sql << reflections.collect { |reflection| association_join(reflection) }.to_s
sql << "#{options[:joins]} " if options[:joins]
add_conditions!(sql, options[:conditions])
add_sti_conditions!(sql, reflections)
sql << "ORDER BY #{options[:order]} " if options[:order]
add_limit!(sql, options) if using_limitable_reflections?(reflections)
return sanitize_sql(sql)
end
def using_limitable_reflections?(reflections)
reflections.reject { |r| [ :belongs_to, :has_one ].include?(r.macro) }.length.zero?
end
def add_sti_conditions!(sql, reflections)
sti_sql = ""
reflections.each do |reflection|
sti_sql << " AND #{reflection.klass.send(:type_condition)}" unless reflection.klass.descends_from_active_record?
end
sti_sql.sub!(/AND/, "WHERE") unless sql =~ /where/i
sql << sti_sql
end
def column_aliases(schema_abbreviations)
schema_abbreviations.collect { |cn, tc| "#{tc.join(".")} AS #{cn}" }.join(", ")
end
def association_join(reflection)
case reflection.macro
when :has_and_belongs_to_many
" LEFT OUTER JOIN #{reflection.options[:join_table]} ON " +
"#{reflection.options[:join_table]}.#{reflection.options[:foreign_key] || table_name.classify.foreign_key} = " +
"#{table_name}.#{primary_key} " +
" LEFT OUTER JOIN #{reflection.klass.table_name} ON " +
"#{reflection.options[:join_table]}.#{reflection.options[:association_foreign_key] || reflection.klass.table_name.classify.foreign_key} = " +
"#{reflection.klass.table_name}.#{reflection.klass.primary_key} "
when :has_many, :has_one
" LEFT OUTER JOIN #{reflection.klass.table_name} ON " +
"#{reflection.klass.table_name}.#{reflection.options[:foreign_key] || table_name.classify.foreign_key} = " +
"#{table_name}.#{primary_key} "
when :belongs_to
" LEFT OUTER JOIN #{reflection.klass.table_name} ON " +
"#{reflection.klass.table_name}.#{reflection.klass.primary_key} = " +
"#{table_name}.#{reflection.options[:foreign_key] || reflection.klass.table_name.classify.foreign_key} "
else
""
end
end
def add_association_callbacks(association_name, options)
callbacks = %w(before_add after_add before_remove after_remove)
callbacks.each do |callback_name|
full_callback_name = "#{callback_name.to_s}_for_#{association_name.to_s}"
defined_callbacks = options[callback_name.to_sym]
if options.has_key?(callback_name.to_sym)
class_inheritable_reader full_callback_name.to_sym
write_inheritable_array(full_callback_name.to_sym, [defined_callbacks].flatten)
end
end
end
def extract_record(schema_abbreviations, table_name, row)
record = {}
row.each do |column, value|
prefix, column_name = schema_abbreviations[column]
record[column_name] = value if prefix == table_name
end
return record
end
end
end
end