Use Jsonb Accessor instead! It has more features and is better maintained.
Hstore Accessor allows you to treat fields on an hstore column as though they were actual columns being picked up by ActiveRecord. This is especially handy when trying to avoid sparse columns while making use of single table inheritence. Hstore Accessor currently supports ActiveRecord versions 4.0, 4.1, 4.2, 5.0, and 5.1.
- HstoreAccessor (Deprecated)
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "hstore_accessor", "~> 1.1"
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install hstore_accessor
The hstore_accessor
method accepts the name of the hstore column you'd
like to use and a hash with keys representing fields and values
indicating the type to be stored in that field. The available types
are: string
, integer
, float
, decimal
, datetime
, date
, boolean
, array
, and hash
. It is available on an class that inherits from ActiveRecord::Base
.
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
hstore_accessor :options,
color: :string,
weight: :integer,
price: :float,
built_at: :datetime,
build_date: :date,
tags: :array, # deprecated
ratings: :hash # deprecated
miles: :decimal
end
Now you can interact with the fields stored in the hstore directly.
product = Product.new
product.color = "green"
product.weight = 34
product.price = 99.95
product.built_at = Time.now - 10.days
product.build_date = Date.today
product.popular = true
product.tags = %w(housewares kitchen) # deprecated
product.ratings = { user_a: 3, user_b: 4 } # deprecated
product.miles = 3.14
Reading these fields works as well.
product.color # => "green"
product.price # => 99.95
In order to reduce the storage overhead of hstore keys (especially when indexed) you can specify an alternate key.
hstore_accessor :options,
color: { data_type: :string, store_key: "c" },
weight: { data_type: :integer, store_key: "w" }
In the above example you can continue to interact with the fields using
their full name but when saved to the database the field will be set
using the store_key
.
Additionally, dirty tracking is implemented in the same way that normal
ActiveRecord
fields work.
product.color #=> "green"
product.color = "blue"
product.changed? #=> true
product.color_changed? #=> true
product.color_was #=> "green"
product.color_change #=> ["green", "blue"]
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
hstore_accessor :data, field: :string
end
field
field=
field?
field_changed?
field_was
field_change
reset_field!
restore_field!
field_will_change!
Overriding methods is supported, with access to the original Hstore Accessor implementation available via super
.
Additionally, there is also hstore_metadata_for_<fields>
on both the class and instances. column_for_attribute
will also return a column object for an Hstore Accessor defined field. If you're using ActiveRecord 4.2, type_for_attribute
will return a type object for Hstore Accessor defined fields the same as it does for actual columns.
The hstore_accessor
macro also creates scopes for string
, integer
,
float
, decimal
, time
, date
, boolean
, and array
fields.
For string
types, a with_<key>
scope is created which checks for
equality.
Product.with_color("green")
For integer
, float
and decimal
types five scopes are created:
Product.price_lt(240.00) # price less than
Product.price_lte(240.00) # price less than or equal to
Product.price_eq(240.00) # price equal to
Product.price_gte(240.00) # price greater than or equal to
Product.price_gt(240.00) # price greater than
For datetime
fields, three scopes are created:
Product.built_at_before(Time.now) # built before the given time
Product.built_at_eq(Time.now - 10.days) # built at an exact time
Product.built_at_after(Time.now - 4.days) # built after the given time
For date
fields, three scopes are created:
Product.build_date_before(Date.today) # built before the given date
Product.build_date_eq(Date.today - 10.days) # built at an exact date
Product.built_date_after(Date.today - 4.days) # built after the given date
Note: the array field type is deprecated. It is available in version 0.9.0 but not > 1.0.0
For array
types, two scopes are created:
Product.tags_eq(%w(housewares kitchen)) # tags equaling
Product.tags_contains("kitchen") # tags containing a single value
Product.tags_contains(%w(housewares kitchen)) # tags containing a number of values
Two scopes are created for boolean
fields:
Product.is_popular # => when popular is set to true
Product.not_popular # => when popular is set to false
Predicate methods are also available on instances:
product = Product.new(popular: true)
product.popular? # => true
One of the big issues with ActiveRecord
single-table inheritance (STI)
is sparse columns. Essentially, as sub-types of the original table
diverge further from their parent more columns are left empty in a given
table. Postgres' hstore
type provides part of the solution in that
the values in an hstore
column does not impose a structure - different
rows can have different values.
We set up our table with an hstore field:
# db/migration/<timestamp>_create_players_table.rb
class CreateVehiclesTable < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
create_table :vehicles do |t|
t.string :make
t.string :model
t.integer :model_year
t.string :type
t.hstore :data
end
end
end
And for our models:
# app/models/vehicle.rb
class Vehicle < ActiveRecord::Base
end
# app/models/vehicles/automobile.rb
class Automobile < Vehicle
hstore_accessor :data,
axle_count: :integer,
weight: :float,
engine_details: :hash
end
# app/models/vehicles/airplane.rb
class Airplane < Vehicle
hstore_accessor :data,
engine_type: :string,
safety_rating: :integer,
features: :hash
end
From here any attributes specific to any sub-class can be stored in the
hstore
column avoiding sparse data. Indices can also be created on
individual fields in an hstore
column.
This approach was originally concieved by Joe Hirn in this blog post.
Upgrading from version 0.6.0 to 0.9.0 should be fairly painless. If you were previously using a time
type fields, simply change it to datetime
like so:
# Before...
hstore_accessor :data, published_at: :time
# After...
hstore_accessor :data, published_at: :datetime
While the array
and hash
types are available in version 0.9.0, they are deprecated and are not available in 1.0.0.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Write code and tests
- Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Before you make your pull requests, please make sure you style is in line with our Rubocop settings and that all of the tests pass.
bundle install
appraisal install
- Make sure Postgres is installed and running
appraisal rspec
to run all the testsrubocop
to check for style