Active Record is great, but could be better. Here are some tweaks for it.
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gem 'active_record_tweaks'
Either include it in specific record or just ActiveRecord::Base
class SomeRecord
include ActiveRecordTweaks::Integration::InstanceMethods
# This module is also DEPRECATED
# See below for details
extend ActiveRecordTweaks::Integration::ClassMethods
# DEPRECATED
include ActiveRecordTweaks
end
# or
# In a initialzer
# DEPRECATED
ActiveRecord::Base.send(:include, ActiveRecordTweaks)
Nothing special, just like record.cache_key
But it has no timestamp so you can use it for scoped cache key
e.g. When caching with Cookie, which you want to control the expiry time independent of record update time
Usage:
# Just like using #cache_key
record.cache_key_without_timestamp
Nothing special, just like record.cache_key
in rails 4.1
But it does not check against columns
e.g. When you have some virtual timestamp attribute method (cached or not)
Just make sure you throw some name to it or it will raise error
Alias: #cache_key_from_attribute
Usage:
# Just like using #cache_key
record.cache_key_from_attributes(:happy_at, :children_max_updated_at)
DEPRECATED
This method does NOT consider the query like filters and and sort orders.
Thus deprecated without replacement.
Rails 5 already have #cache_key
in relation class: rails/rails#20884
There is also a gem for older rails: https://github.com/customink/activerecord-collection_cache_key
Usage
There is no class level cache key for ActiveRecord at the moment (4.0.1)
Passing an array to cache_digest
could lead to performance issue and the key can become too long when collection is big
(rails#12726)
This is used for getting a cache key for a ActiveRecord class for all record (I don't know how to write one for Relation
, could be similar)
You can use it for class level caching (like displaying all Categories or a random list of 5 users
And the cache would only expire when there is any record created, updated, or deleted (since count
and maximum of updated_at
are used)
Person.count # => 1000
Person.maximum(:updated_at) # => 20131106012125528738000
Person.cache_key # => "people/all/1000-20131106012125528738000"
# When record has multiple updated columns
Person.maximum(:updated_at) # => 20131106012125528738000
Person.maximum(:updated_on) # => 20141106012125528738000
Person.cache_key(:update_at, :updated_on) # => "people/all/1000-20141106012125528738000" (not empty but has mutiple updated timestamp columns)
# Just get cache key without timestamp
Person.maximum(:updated_on) # => some timestamp
Person.cache_key(nil) # => "people/all/1000"
# Other examples
Product.cache_key # => "products/all/0" (empty, has updated timestamp columns or not)
Product.cache_key # => "products/all/1" (not empty but has no updated timestamp columns)
Usage:
RecordClass.cache_key
You can also use it with multiple records (Rails 4 Record might have updated_at
and updated_on
)
RecordClass.cache_key(:updated_at, :updated_on)
DEPRECATED
Same deprecation reasons and replacement suggestion as .cache_key
above
Usage
Just like .cache_key(nil)
But much clearer
Person.count # => 1000
Person.maximum(:updated_at) # => 20131106012125528738000
Person.cache_key_without_timestamp # => "people/all/1000"
# Other examples
Product.cache_key_without_timestamp # => "products/all/0" (empty, has updated timestamp columns or not)
Product.cache_key_without_timestamp # => "products/all/1" (not empty but has no updated timestamp columns)
Usage:
RecordClass.cache_key_without_timestamp