PostgreSQL and ActiveRecord have a good support for storing dynamic attributes (hashes) in columns of type JSONB
. But sometimes you are missing some kind of validation or lookup possibility (with plain attributes you can use Active Record's built-in validations and have your schema.rb
).
One approach about being more strict with dynamic attributes is to use JSON Schema validations. Here is an example, where a project has the dynamic attributes analytic_stats
, that we can use to store analytics from an external measurement tool.
- A good default is to start without schema versioning (this card already included a versioning for documentation purpose) and add it once you are not able to migrate the old data to a new schema.
- If you have different versions, you always need to test all different version if required. With
FactoryBot
this should be traits. - The JSON Schema files could also live somewhere in
config/some_folder
, to keep theapp/models
directory cleaner. - Check which version of JSON Schema you need. The gem
json-schema
uses draft-v4 as default, whereas the most recent version isdraft-08
. You might want to use
another gem if you need the newest version ofjson-schema
. - A good default is to use the
strict
option, which marks every attribute as required and do not allow additional attribute. If you have optional attributes, they have to be present in the dynamic attributes, but can benull
. - JSON Schema is very powerful, actually you can express if/else and case statements (a use case for this are different attributes based on an enum).
Gemfile
gem 'has_defaults'
gem 'json-schema'
db/migrate/20190511155410_add_analytic_stats_to_projects.rb
class AddRepositoryStatsToProjects < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.2]
class Project < ActiveRecord::Base
end
def up
add_column(:projects, :analytic_stats, :jsonb)
Project.reset_column_information
Project.find_each do |project|
project.analytic_stats = {
version: 1,
analytics_url: nil,
clicks_this_week: 0,
clicks_this_month: 0,
clicks_this_year: 0,
top_referrer: [],
last_synchronized_at: nil,
}
project.save!
end
end
def down
remove_column(:projects, :analytic_stats, :jsonb)
end
end
app/models/project.rb
class Project < ApplicationRecord
validate :validate_analytic_stats_against_json_schema
has_defaults(
analytic_stats: proc {
{
version: 1,
analytics_url: nil,
clicks_this_week: 0,
clicks_this_month: 0,
clicks_this_year: 0,
top_referrer: [],
last_synchronized_at: nil,
}
}
)
def validate_analytic_stats_against_json_schema
@schema ||= File.read(File.join(Rails.root, 'app', 'models', 'project', "analytic_stats_schema_v#{analytics_stats_version}.json"))
analytic_stats_errors = JSON::Validator.fully_validate(@schema, analytic_stats, strict: true, validate_schema: true)
analytic_stats_errors.each do |error|
errors.add(:analytic_stats, error)
end
end
def analytics_stats_version
analytic_stats.fetch(:version)
end
end
app/models/project/analytic_stats_schema_v1.json
{
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"version": {
"type": ["number"]
},
"analytics_url": {
"type": ["string", "null"]
},
"clicks_this_week": {
"type": ["number"]
},
"clicks_this_month": {
"type": ["number"]
},
"clicks_this_year": {
"type": ["number"]
},
"languages": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
}
},
"top_referrer": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
}
},
"last_synchronized_at": {
"type": ["string", "null"],
"format": "date-time"
}
}
}
Posted by Emanuel to makandra dev (2020-02-20 07:25)