Best practices to handle routes for STI subclasses in rails

我是研究僧i 提交于 2019-11-27 09:58:32

This is the simplest solution I was able to come up with with minimal side effect.

class Person < Contact
  def self.model_name
    Contact.model_name
  end
end

Now url_for @person will map to contact_path as expected.

How it works: URL helpers rely on YourModel.model_name to reflect upon the model and generate (amongst many things) singular/plural route keys. Here Person is basically saying I'm just like Contact dude, ask him.

I had the same problem. After using STI, the form_for method was posting to the wrong child url.

NoMethodError (undefined method `building_url' for

I ended up adding in the extra routes for the child classes and pointing them to the same controllers

 resources :structures
 resources :buildings, :controller => 'structures'
 resources :bridges, :controller => 'structures'

Additionally:

<% form_for(@structure, :as => :structure) do |f| %>

in this case structure is actually a building (child class)

It seems to work for me after doing a submit with form_for.

Siwei Shen 申思维

I suggest you take a look at : https://stackoverflow.com/a/605172/445908, using this method will enable you to use "form_for".

ActiveRecord::Base#becomes

Use type in the routes:

resources :employee, controller: 'person', type: 'Employee' 

http://samurails.com/tutorial/single-table-inheritance-with-rails-4-part-2/

Following the idea of @Prathan Thananart but trying to not destroy nothing. (since there is so much magic involved)

class Person < Contact
  model_name.class_eval do
    def route_key
     "contacts"
    end
    def singular_route_key
      superclass.model_name.singular_route_key
    end
  end
end

Now url_for @person will map to contact_path as expected.

Marcus

I was having trouble with this problem too and came by this answer on a question similar to ours. It worked for me.

form_for @list.becomes(List)

Answer shown here: Using STI path with same controller

The .becomes method is defined as mainly used for solving STI problems like your form_for one.

.becomes info here: http://apidock.com/rails/ActiveRecord/Base/becomes

Super late response, but this is the best answer I could find and it worked well for me. Hope this helps some one. Cheers!

Ok, Ive had a ton of frustration in this area of Rails, and have arrived at the following approach, perhaps this will help others.

Firstly be aware that a number of solutions above and around the net suggest using constantize on client provided parameters. This is a known DoS attack vector as Ruby does not garbage collect symbols, thus allowing an attacker to create arbitrary symbols and consume available memory.

I've implemented the approach below which supports instantiation of model subclasses, and is SAFE from the contantize problem above. It is very similar to what rails 4 does, but also allows more than one level of subclassing (unlike Rails 4) and works in Rails 3.

# initializers/acts_as_castable.rb
module ActsAsCastable
  extend ActiveSupport::Concern

  module ClassMethods

    def new_with_cast(*args, &block)
      if (attrs = args.first).is_a?(Hash)
        if klass = descendant_class_from_attrs(attrs)
          return klass.new(*args, &block)
        end
      end
      new_without_cast(*args, &block)
    end

    def descendant_class_from_attrs(attrs)
      subclass_name = attrs.with_indifferent_access[inheritance_column]
      return nil if subclass_name.blank? || subclass_name == self.name
      unless subclass = descendants.detect { |sub| sub.name == subclass_name }
        raise ActiveRecord::SubclassNotFound.new("Invalid single-table inheritance type: #{subclass_name} is not a subclass of #{name}")
      end
      subclass
    end

    def acts_as_castable
      class << self
        alias_method_chain :new, :cast
      end
    end
  end
end

ActiveRecord::Base.send(:include, ActsAsCastable)

After trying various approaches for the 'sublclass loading in devlopment issue' many similar to whats suggested above, I found the only thing that worked reliably was to use 'require_dependency' in my model classes. This ensures that class loading works properly in development and causes no issues in production. In development, without 'require_dependency' AR wont know about all subclasses, which impacts the SQL emitted for matching on the type column. In addition without 'require_dependency' you can also end up in a situation with multiple versions of the model classes at the same time! (eg. this can happen when you change a base or intermediate class, the sub-classes don't always seem to reload and are left subclassing from the old class)

# contact.rb
class Contact < ActiveRecord::Base
  acts_as_castable
end

require_dependency 'person'
require_dependency 'organisation'

I also don't override model_name as suggested above because I use I18n and need different strings for the attributes of different subclasses, eg :tax_identifier becomes 'ABN' for Organisation, and 'TFN' for Person (in Australia).

I also use route mapping, as suggested above, setting the type:

resources :person, :controller => 'contacts', :defaults => { 'contact' => { 'type' => Person.sti_name } }
resources :organisation, :controller => 'contacts', :defaults => { 'contact' => { 'type' => Organisation.sti_name } }

In addition to the route mapping, I'm using InheritedResources and SimpleForm and I use the following generic form wrapper for new actions:

simple_form_for resource, as: resource_request_name, url: collection_url,
      html: { class: controller_name, multipart: true }

... and for edit actions:

simple_form_for resource, as: resource_request_name, url: resource_url,
      html: { class: controller_name, multipart: true }

And to make this work, in my base ResourceContoller I expose InheritedResource's resource_request_name as a helper method for the view:

helper_method :resource_request_name 

If you're not using InheritedResources, then use something like the following in your 'ResourceController':

# controllers/resource_controller.rb
class ResourceController < ApplicationController

protected
  helper_method :resource
  helper_method :resource_url
  helper_method :collection_url
  helper_method :resource_request_name

  def resource
    @model
  end

  def resource_url
    polymorphic_path(@model)
  end

  def collection_url
    polymorphic_path(Model)
  end

  def resource_request_name
    ActiveModel::Naming.param_key(Model)
  end
end

Always happy to hear others experiences and improvements.

I recently documented my attempts to get a stable STI pattern working in a Rails 3.0 app. Here's the TL;DR version:

# app/controllers/kase_controller.rb
class KasesController < ApplicationController

  def new
    setup_sti_model
    # ...
  end

  def create
    setup_sti_model
    # ...
  end

private

  def setup_sti_model
    # This lets us set the "type" attribute from forms and querystrings
    model = nil
    if !params[:kase].blank? and !params[:kase][:type].blank?
      model = params[:kase].delete(:type).constantize.to_s
    end
    @kase = Kase.new(params[:kase])
    @kase.type = model
  end
end

# app/models/kase.rb
class Kase < ActiveRecord::Base
  # This solves the `undefined method alpha_kase_path` errors
  def self.inherited(child)
    child.instance_eval do
      def model_name
        Kase.model_name
      end
    end
    super
  end  
end

# app/models/alpha_kase.rb
# Splitting out the subclasses into separate files solves
# the `uninitialize constant AlphaKase` errors
class AlphaKase < Kase; end

# app/models/beta_kase.rb
class BetaKase < Kase; end

# config/initializers/preload_sti_models.rb
if Rails.env.development?
  # This ensures that `Kase.subclasses` is populated correctly
  %w[kase alpha_kase beta_kase].each do |c|
    require_dependency File.join("app","models","#{c}.rb")
  end
end

This approach gets around the problems that you list as well as a number of other issues that others have had with STI approaches.

You can try this, if you have no nested routes:

resources :employee, path: :person, controller: :person

Or you can go another way and use some OOP-magic like described here: https://coderwall.com/p/yijmuq

In second way you can make similar helpers for all your nested models.

Here is a safe clean way to have it work in forms and throughout your application that we use.

resources :districts
resources :district_counties, controller: 'districts', type: 'County'
resources :district_cities, controller: 'districts', type: 'City'

Then I have in my form. The added piece for this is the as: :district.

= form_for(@district, as: :district, html: { class: "form-horizontal",         role: "form" }) do |f|

Hope this helps.

If I consider an STI inheritance like this:

class AModel < ActiveRecord::Base ; end
class BModel < AModel ; end
class CModel < AModel ; end
class DModel < AModel ; end
class EModel < AModel ; end

in 'app/models/a_model.rb' I add:

module ManagedAtAModelLevel
  def model_name
    AModel.model_name
  end
end

And then in the AModel class:

class AModel < ActiveRecord::Base
  def self.instanciate_STI
    managed_deps = { 
      :b_model => true,
      :c_model => true,
      :d_model => true,
      :e_model => true
    }
    managed_deps.each do |dep, managed|
      require_dependency dep.to_s
      klass = dep.to_s.camelize.constantize
      # Inject behavior to be managed at AModel level for classes I chose
      klass.send(:extend, ManagedAtAModelLevel) if managed
    end
  end

  instanciate_STI
end

Therefore I can even easily choose which model I want to use the default one, and this without even touching the sub class definition. Very dry.

This way works for me ok (define this method in the base class):

def self.inherited(child)
  child.instance_eval do
    alias :original_model_name :model_name
    def model_name
      Task::Base.model_name
    end
  end
  super
end

You can create method that returns dummy Parent object for routing purpouse

class Person < ActiveRecord::Base      
  def routing_object
    Person.new(id: id)
  end
end

and then simply call form_for @employee.routing_object which without type will return Person class object

Following @prathan-thananart answer, and for the multiple STI classes, you can add the following to the parent model ->

class Contact < ActiveRecord::Base
  def self.model_name
    ActiveModel::Name.new(self, nil, 'Contact')
  end
end

That will make each form with Contact data to send params as params[:contact] instead of params[:contact_person], params[:contact_whatever].

hackish,but just another one to the list of solutions.

class Parent < ActiveRecord::Base; end

Class Child < Parent
  def class
    Parent
  end
end

works on rails 2.x and 3.x

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!