# encoding: utf-8 require "friendly_id/slug_generator" require "friendly_id/candidates" module FriendlyId =begin ## Slugged Models FriendlyId can use a separate column to store slugs for models which require some text processing. For example, blog applications typically use a post title to provide the basis of a search engine friendly URL. Such identifiers typically lack uppercase characters, use ASCII to approximate UTF-8 character, and strip out other characters which may make them aesthetically unappealing or error-prone when used in a URL. class Post < ActiveRecord::Base extend FriendlyId friendly_id :title, :use => :slugged end @post = Post.create(:title => "This is the first post!") @post.friendly_id # returns "this-is-the-first-post" redirect_to @post # the URL will be /posts/this-is-the-first-post In general, use slugs by default unless you know for sure you don't need them. To activate the slugging functionality, use the {FriendlyId::Slugged} module. FriendlyId will generate slugs from a method or column that you specify, and store them in a field in your model. By default, this field must be named `:slug`, though you may change this using the {FriendlyId::Slugged::Configuration#slug_column slug_column} configuration option. You should add an index to this column, and in most cases, make it unique. You may also wish to constrain it to NOT NULL, but this depends on your app's behavior and requirements. ### Example Setup # your model class Post < ActiveRecord::Base extend FriendlyId friendly_id :title, :use => :slugged validates_presence_of :title, :slug, :body end # a migration class CreatePosts < ActiveRecord::Migration def self.up create_table :posts do |t| t.string :title, :null => false t.string :slug, :null => false t.text :body end add_index :posts, :slug, :unique => true end def self.down drop_table :posts end end ### Working With Slugs #### Formatting By default, FriendlyId uses Active Support's [paramaterize](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveSupport/Inflector.html#method-i-parameterize) method to create slugs. This method will intelligently replace spaces with dashes, and Unicode Latin characters with ASCII approximations: movie = Movie.create! :title => "Der Preis fürs Überleben" movie.slug #=> "der-preis-furs-uberleben" #### Column or Method? FriendlyId always uses a method as the basis of the slug text - not a column. At first glance, this may sound confusing, but remember that Active Record provides methods for each column in a model's associated table, and that's what FriendlyId uses. Here's an example of a class that uses a custom method to generate the slug: class Person < ActiveRecord::Base friendly_id :name_and_location def name_and_location "#{name} from #{location}" end end bob = Person.create! :name => "Bob Smith", :location => "New York City" bob.friendly_id #=> "bob-smith-from-new-york-city" FriendlyId refers to this internally as the "base" method. #### Uniqueness When you try to insert a record that would generate a duplicate friendly id, FriendlyId will append a UUID to the generated slug to ensure uniqueness: car = Car.create :title => "Peugot 206" car2 = Car.create :title => "Peugot 206" car.friendly_id #=> "peugot-206" car2.friendly_id #=> "peugot-206-f9f3789a-daec-4156-af1d-fab81aa16ee5" Previous versions of FriendlyId appended a numeric sequence to make slugs unique, but this was removed to simplify using FriendlyId in concurrent code. #### Candidates Since UUIDs are ugly, FriendlyId provides a "slug candidates" functionality to let you specify alternate slugs to use in the event the one you want to use is already taken. For example: class Restaurant < ActiveRecord::Base extend FriendlyId friendly_id :slug_candidates, use: :slugged # Try building a slug based on the following fields in # increasing order of specificity. def slug_candidates [ :name, [:name, :city], [:name, :street, :city], [:name, :street_number, :street, :city] ] end end r1 = Restaurant.create! name: 'Plaza Diner', city: 'New Paltz' r2 = Restaurant.create! name: 'Plaza Diner', city: 'Kingston' r1.friendly_id #=> 'plaza-diner' r2.friendly_id #=> 'plaza-diner-kingston' To use candidates, make your FriendlyId base method return an array. The method need not be named `slug_candidates`; it can be anything you want. The array may contain any combination of symbols, strings, procs or lambdas and will be evaluated lazily and in order. If you include symbols, FriendlyId will invoke a method on your model class with the same name. Strings will be interpreted literally. Procs and lambdas will be called and their return values used as the basis of the friendly id. If none of the candidates can generate a unique slug, then FriendlyId will append a UUID to the first candidate as a last resort. #### Sequence Separator By default, FriendlyId uses a dash to separate the slug from a sequence. You can change this with the {FriendlyId::Slugged::Configuration#sequence_separator sequence_separator} configuration option. #### Providing Your Own Slug Processing Method You can override {FriendlyId::Slugged#normalize_friendly_id} in your model for total control over the slug format. It will be invoked for any generated slug, whether for a single slug or for slug candidates. #### Deciding When to Generate New Slugs As of FriendlyId 5.0, slugs are only generated when the `slug` field is nil. If you want a slug to be regenerated,set the slug field to nil: restaurant.friendly_id # joes-diner restaurant.name = "The Plaza Diner" restaurant.save! restaurant.friendly_id # joes-diner restaurant.slug = nil restaurant.save! restaurant.friendly_id # the-plaza-diner You can also override the {FriendlyId::Slugged#should_generate_new_friendly_id?} method, which lets you control exactly when new friendly ids are set: class Post < ActiveRecord::Base extend FriendlyId friendly_id :title, :use => :slugged def should_generate_new_friendly_id? title_changed? end end #### Locale-specific Transliterations Active Support's `parameterize` uses [transliterate](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveSupport/Inflector.html#method-i-transliterate), which in turn can use I18n's transliteration rules to consider the current locale when replacing Latin characters: # config/locales/de.yml de: i18n: transliterate: rule: ü: "ue" ö: "oe" etc... movie = Movie.create! :title => "Der Preis fürs Überleben" movie.slug #=> "der-preis-fuers-ueberleben" This functionality was in fact taken from earlier versions of FriendlyId. #### Gotchas: Common Problems FriendlyId uses a before_validation callback to generate and set the slug. This means that if you create two model instances before saving them, it's possible they will generate the same slug, and the second save will fail. This can happen in two fairly normal cases: the first, when a model using nested attributes creates more than one record for a model that uses friendly_id. The second, in concurrent code, either in threads or multiple processes. To solve the nested attributes issue, I recommend simply avoiding them when creating more than one nested record for a model that uses FriendlyId. See [this Github issue](https://github.com/norman/friendly_id/issues/185) for discussion. =end module Slugged # Sets up behavior and configuration options for FriendlyId's slugging # feature. def self.included(model_class) model_class.friendly_id_config.instance_eval do self.class.send :include, Configuration self.slug_generator_class ||= SlugGenerator defaults[:slug_column] ||= 'slug' defaults[:sequence_separator] ||= '-' end model_class.before_validation :set_slug end # Process the given value to make it suitable for use as a slug. # # This method is not intended to be invoked directly; FriendlyId uses it # internaly to process strings into slugs. # # However, if FriendlyId's default slug generation doesn't suite your needs, # you can override this method in your model class to control exactly how # slugs are generated. # # ### Example # # class Person < ActiveRecord::Base # friendly_id :name_and_location # # def name_and_location # "#{name} from #{location}" # end # # # Use default slug, but upper case and with underscores # def normalize_friendly_id(string) # super.upcase.gsub("-", "_") # end # end # # bob = Person.create! :name => "Bob Smith", :location => "New York City" # bob.friendly_id #=> "BOB_SMITH_FROM_NEW_YORK_CITY" # # ### More Resources # # You might want to look into Babosa[https://github.com/norman/babosa], # which is the slugging library used by FriendlyId prior to version 4, which # offers some specialized functionality missing from Active Support. # # @param [#to_s] value The value used as the basis of the slug. # @return The candidate slug text, without a sequence. def normalize_friendly_id(value) value.to_s.parameterize end # Whether to generate a new slug. # # You can override this method in your model if, for example, you only want # slugs to be generated once, and then never updated. def should_generate_new_friendly_id? send(friendly_id_config.slug_column).nil? && !send(friendly_id_config.base).nil? end def resolve_friendly_id_conflict(candidates) candidates.first + friendly_id_config.sequence_separator + SecureRandom.uuid end # Sets the slug. def set_slug(normalized_slug = nil) if should_generate_new_friendly_id? candidates = FriendlyId::Candidates.new(self, normalized_slug || send(friendly_id_config.base)) slug = slug_generator.generate(candidates) || resolve_friendly_id_conflict(candidates) send "#{friendly_id_config.slug_column}=", slug end end private :set_slug def scope_for_slug_generator scope = self.class.base_class.unscoped scope = scope.friendly unless scope.respond_to?(:exists_by_friendly_id?) if changed.include?(friendly_id_config.slug_column) primary_key_name = self.class.primary_key scope = scope.where.not(primary_key_name => send(primary_key_name)) end scope end private :scope_for_slug_generator def slug_generator friendly_id_config.slug_generator_class.new(scope_for_slug_generator) end private :slug_generator # This module adds the `:slug_column`, and `:sequence_separator`, and # `:slug_generator_class` configuration options to # {FriendlyId::Configuration FriendlyId::Configuration}. module Configuration attr_writer :slug_column, :sequence_separator attr_accessor :slug_generator_class # Makes FriendlyId use the slug column for querying. # @return String The slug column. def query_field slug_column end # The string used to separate a slug base from a numeric sequence. # # You can change the default separator by setting the # {FriendlyId::Slugged::Configuration#sequence_separator # sequence_separator} configuration option. # @return String The sequence separator string. Defaults to "`-`". def sequence_separator @sequence_separator or defaults[:sequence_separator] end # The column that will be used to store the generated slug. def slug_column @slug_column or defaults[:slug_column] end end end end