# sequel-rails [![Gem Version](https://badge.fury.io/rb/sequel-rails.png)][gem] [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/TalentBox/sequel-rails.png?branch=master)][travis] [![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/TalentBox/sequel-rails.png)][codeclimate] [gem]: https://rubygems.org/gems/sequel-rails [travis]: http://travis-ci.org/TalentBox/sequel-rails [codeclimate]: https://codeclimate.com/github/TalentBox/sequel-rails This gem provides the railtie that allows [sequel](http://github.com/jeremyevans/sequel) to hook into [Rails (3.x and 4.x)](http://github.com/rails/rails) and thus behave like a rails framework component. Just like activerecord does in rails, [sequel-rails](http://github.com/talentbox/sequel-rails) uses the railtie API to hook into rails. The two are actually hooked into rails almost identically. The code for this gem was initially taken from the excellent [dm-rails](http://github.com/datamapper/dm-rails) project. This was originally a fork of [brasten](https://github.com/brasten)'s [sequel-rails](https://github.com/brasten/sequel-rails) that has been updated to support newer versions of rails. Since January 2013, we've become the official maintainers of the gem after [brasten](https://github.com/brasten) proposed us. Using sequel-rails ================== Using sequel with Rails (3.x or 4.x) requires a couple minor changes. First, add the following to your Gemfile (after the `Rails` lines): ```ruby # depending on you database gem "pg" # for PostgreSQL gem "mysql2" # for MySQL gem "sqlite3" # for Sqlite gem "sequel-rails" ``` ... be sure to run "bundle install" if needed! Secondly, you'll need to require the different Rails components separately in your `config/application.rb` file, and not require `ActiveRecord`. The top of your `config/application.rb` will probably look something like: ```ruby # require 'rails/all' # Instead of 'rails/all', require these: require "action_controller/railtie" # require "active_record/railtie" require "action_mailer/railtie" require "sprockets/railtie" ``` Then you need to get rid of `ActiveRecord` configurations, that is if you didn't generate the new app with `-O` (or the long form `--skip-active-record`): `config/application.rb` and `config/environments/*.rb` For example in a fresh `Rails 4.2.4`, you would need to remove those lines: ``` config/application.rb line 27: config.active_record.raise_in_transactional_callbacks = true ``` ``` config/environments/development.rb line 23: config.active_record.migration_error = :page_load ``` ``` config/environments/production.rb line 78: config.active_record.dump_schema_after_migration = false ``` Starting with sequel-rails 0.4.0.pre3 we don't change default Sequel behaviour nor include any plugin by default, if you want to get back the previous behaviour, you can create a new initializer (eg: `config/initializers/sequel.rb`) with content: ```ruby require "sequel_rails/railties/legacy_model_config" ``` After those changes, you should be good to go! Features provided by `sequel-rails` =================================== 1. Connection management: `sequel-rails` will initiate the `Sequel` connection mechanism based on your configuration in `database.yml`. 2. Generators: You can use them just like `ActiveRecord`'s ones: Migration: ```ruby rails generate migration create_admin_users # Or rails generate migration CreateAdminUsers ``` Model: ```ruby rails generate model User email:string ``` Observer: ```ruby rails generate observer User ``` Session: ```ruby rails generate sequel:session_migration ``` 3. Rake tasks similar to `ActiveRecord`, see [Available sequel specific rake tasks](#available-sequel-specific-rake-tasks) 4. Add some `Sequel` and `sequel-rails` specific exceptions to `ActionDispatch`'s `rescue_responses` `Sequel::Plugins::RailsExtensions::ModelNotFound` is mapped to `:not_found` `Sequel::NoMatchingRow` is mapped to `:not_found` `Sequel::ValidationFailed` is mapped to `:unprocessable_entity` `Sequel::NoExistingObject` is mapped to `:unprocessable_entity` 5. Add a `i18n_scope` method to `Sequel::Model` which respond with `"sequel"`. This is used by `ActiveModel`. 6. Adding `Sequel` to `ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber`. This is what allows you to see SQL queries in the log and also allows us to implement the next item. 7. Add a hook in `ActionController::Base` so that the sum of SQL queries time for the current action is reported as `DB` for the controller's line in logs. 8. Provide a `ActionDispatch::Session::SequelStore` similar to the `ActiveRecord` one, which stores sessions in database backed by a `Sequel` model. Configuration ============= You can configure some options with the usual rails mechanism, in `config/application.rb` and/or in `config/environments/*.rb`. ```ruby # Allowed options: :sql, :ruby. config.sequel.schema_format = :sql # Whether to dump the schema after successful migrations. # Defaults to false in production and test, true otherwise. config.sequel.schema_dump = true # These override corresponding settings from the database config. config.sequel.max_connections = 16 config.sequel.search_path = %w(mine public) # Configure whether database's rake tasks will be loaded or not. # # If passed a String or Symbol, this will replace the `db:` namespace for # the database's Rake tasks. # # ex: config.sequel.load_database_tasks = :sequel # will results in `rake db:migrate` to become `rake sequel:migrate` # # Defaults to true config.sequel.load_database_tasks = false # This setting disabled the automatic connect after Rails init config.sequel.skip_connect = true # If you want to use a specific logger config.sequel.logger = MyLogger.new($stdout) ``` The connection settings are read from the file `config/database.yml` and is expected to be similar to `ActiveRecord`'s format. Here's some examples: 1. For PostgreSQL: ```yaml development: adapter: postgresql database: a_database_name user: user_name # Also accept 'username' as key, if both are present 'username' is used password: password host: 10.0.0.2 # Optional port: 5432 # Optional owner: owner_name # Optional encoding: utf8 # Optional, also accept 'charset' as key, if both are present 'encoding' is used (defaults to 'utf8') maintenance_db: template2 # Optional locale: en_US.UTF-8 # Optional, equivalent to setting 'collation' and 'ctype' to the same value collation: en_US.UTF-8 # Optional ctype: en_US.UTF-8 # Optional template: template1 # Optional tablespace: non_default_tablespace_name # Optional max_connections: 20 # Optional, also accept 'pool' as key, if both are present 'max_connections' is used (default to nil, Sequel default is 4) url: "postgres://myuser:mypass@host/somedatabase" # Optional, if present it's passed to `Sequel.connect` with other config as options # If url is not set in config file, environment variable `DATABASE_URL` is used ``` 2. For MySQL: ```yaml development: adapter: mysql # Also accept mysql2 database: a_database_name user: user_name # Also accept 'username' as key, if both are present 'username' is used password: password host: 10.0.0.2 # Optional port: 5432 # Optional charset: latin1 # Optional (defaults to 'utf8') collation: latin1_general_ci # Optional (defaults to 'utf8_unicode_ci') url: "mysql://myuser:mypass@host/somedatabase" # Optional, if present it's passed to `Sequel.connect` with other config as options # If url is not set in config file, environment variable `DATABASE_URL` is used ``` 2. For SQLite: ```yaml development: adapter: sqlite # Also accept sqlite3 database: db/mydatabase.sqlite # Path to db relative to Rails root ``` For in memory testing: ```yaml development: adapter: sqlite # Also accept sqlite3 database: ":memory:" ``` Enabling plugins ================ If you want to enable plugins for all your models, you should use the after_connect configuration option in `config/application.rb` (0.6.2+): ```ruby config.sequel.after_connect = proc do Sequel::Model.plugin :timestamps, update_on_create: true end ``` This will ensure that these plugins are loaded before any Sequel models are loaded. Loading plugins into `Sequel::Model` after subclasses are already created is not supported by Sequel. You can also load extensions in `after_connect` or perform any custom actions that you need. Please note: some plugins require a `dataset` to work, which means they can't be added via `Sequel::Model.plugin`, they need to be added to a `Sequel::Model` subclass whose underlying table exists. Using the `SequelStore` to store session in database ==================================================== If you want to store your session in the database you can use the provided session store backed by a `Sequel` model. Edit your `config/initializers/session.rb` file and replace the existing code with: ```ruby YourAppName::Application.config.session_store :sequel_store ``` You can then generate a migration for the session table using the provided generator: ```bash rails generate sequel:session_migration rake db:migrate ``` Optionally if you want to use your own `Sequel` model to handle the session, you can do so in your `config/initializers/session.rb`: ```ruby ActionDispatch::Session::SequelStore.session_class = MyCustomSessionModelClass ``` Available sequel specific rake tasks ==================================== To get a list of all available rake tasks in your rails3 app, issue the usual in you app's root directory: ```bash rake -T ``` or if you don't have hooks in place to run commands with bundle by default: ```bash bundle exec rake -T ``` Once you do that, you will see the following rake tasks among others. These are the ones that sequel-rails added or replaced: ```bash rake db:create[env] # Create the database defined in config/database.yml for the current Rails.env rake db:create:all # Create all the local databases defined in config/database.yml rake db:drop[env] # Create the database defined in config/database.yml for the current Rails.env rake db:drop:all # Drops all the local databases defined in config/database.yml rake db:force_close_open_connections # Forcibly close any open connections to the test database rake db:migrate # Migrate the database to the latest version rake db:migrate:down # Runs the "down" for a given migration VERSION. rake db:migrate:redo # Rollbacks the database one migration and re migrate up. rake db:migrate:reset # Resets your database using your migrations for the current environment rake db:migrate:up # Runs the "up" for a given migration VERSION. rake db:reset # Drops and recreates the database from db/schema.rb for the current environment and loads the seeds. rake db:schema:dump # Create a db/schema.rb file that can be portably used against any DB supported by Sequel rake db:schema:load # Load a schema.rb file into the database rake db:seed # Load the seed data from db/seeds.rb rake db:setup # Create the database, load the schema, and initialize with the seed data rake db:test:prepare # Prepare test database (ensure all migrations ran, drop and re-create database then load schema). This task can be run in the same invocation as other task (eg: rake db:migrate db:test:prepare). ``` Note on Patches/Pull Requests ============================= * Fork the project. * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add specs for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. The sequel-rails team ===================== * Jonathan Tron (JonathanTron) - Current maintainer * Joseph Halter (JosephHalter) - Current maintainer Previous maintainer =================== [Original project](https://github.com/brasten/sequel-rails): * Brasten Sager (brasten) - Project creator Contributors ============ Improvements have been made by those awesome contributors: * Benjamin Atkin (@benatkin) * Gabor Ratky (@rgabo) * Joshua Hansen (@binarypaladin) * Arron Washington (@radicaled) * Thiago Pradi (@tchandy) * Sascha Cunz (@scunz) * Brian Donovan (@eventualbuddha) * Jack Danger Canty (@JackDanger) * Ed Ruder (@edruder) * RafaƂ Rzepecki (@dividedmind) * Sean Sorrell (@rudle) * Saulius Grigaliunas (@sauliusg) * Jacques Crocker (@railsjedi) * Eric Strathmeyer (@strathmeyer) * Jan Berdajs (@mrbrdo) * Robert Payne (@robertjpayne) * Kevin Menard (@nirvdrum) * Chris Heisterkamp (@cheister) * Tamir Duberstein (@tamird) * shelling (@shelling) * a3gis (@a3gis) * Andrey Chernih (@andreychernih) * Nico Rieck (@gix) * Alexander Birkner (@BirknerAlex) * kr3ssh (@kressh) * John Anderson (@djellemah) * Larivact (@Larivact) * Jan Berdajs (@mrbrdo) * Lukas Fittl (@lfittl) * Jordan Owens (@jkowens) * Pablo Herrero (@pabloh) Credits ======= The [dm-rails](http://github.com/datamapper/dm-rails) team wrote most of the original code, I just sequel-ized it, but since then most of it has been either adapted or rewritten. Copyright ========= Copyright (c) 2010-2013 The sequel-rails team. See [LICENSE](http://github.com/brasten/sequel-rails/blob/master/LICENSE) for details.