Path: | doc/model_hooks.rdoc |
Last Update: | Sat Jun 02 02:04:22 +0000 2018 |
This guide is based on guides.rubyonrails.org/activerecord_validations_callbacks.html
Model hooks are used to specify actions that occur at a given point in a model instance‘s lifecycle, such as before or after the model object is saved, created, updated, destroyed, or validated. There are also around hooks for all types, which wrap the before hooks, the behavior, and the after hooks.
Sequel::Model uses instance methods for hooks. To define a hook on a model, you just add an instance method to the model class:
class Album < Sequel::Model def before_create self.created_at ||= Time.now super end end
The one important thing to note here is the call to super inside the hook. Whenever you override one of Sequel::Model‘s methods, you should be calling super to get the default behavior. Many of the plugins that ship with Sequel work by overriding the hook methods and calling super. If you use these plugins and override the hook methods but do not call super, it‘s likely the plugins will not work correctly.
Sequel calls hooks in the following order when saving/creating a new object (one that does not already exist in the database):
Sequel calls hooks in the following order when saving an existing object:
Note that all of the hook calls are the same, except that around_create, before_create and after_create are used for a new object, and around_update, before_update and after_update are used for an existing object. Note that around_save, before_save, and after_save are called in both cases.
Note that the validation hooks are still called if validate: false option is passed to save. If you call Model#valid? manually, then only the validation hooks are called:
Sequel calls hooks in the following order when destroying an existing object:
Note that these hooks are only called when using Model#destroy, they are not called if you use Model#delete.
Sequel::Model no longer offers transaction hooks for model instances. However, you can use the database transaction hooks inside model before_save and after_save hooks:
class Album < Sequel::Model def before_save db.after_rollback{rollback_action} super end def after_save super db.after_commit{commit_action} end end
Sequel does not provide a simple way to turn off the running of save/create/update hooks. If you attempt to save a model object, the save hooks are always called. All model instance methods that modify the database call save in some manner, so you can be sure that if you define the hooks, they will be called when you save the object.
However, you should note that there are plenty of ways to modify the database without saving a model object. One example is by using plain datasets, or one of the model‘s dataset methods:
Album.where(name: 'RF').update(copies_sold: Sequel.+(:copies_sold, 1)) # UPDATE albums SET copies_sold = copies_sold + 1 WHERE name = 'RF'
In this case, the update method is called on the dataset returned by Album.where. Even if there is only a single object with the name RF, this will not call any hooks. If you want model hooks to be called, you need to make sure to operate on a model object:
album = Album.first(name: 'RF') album.update(copies_sold: album.copies_sold + 1) # UPDATE albums SET copies_sold = 2 WHERE id = 1
For the destroy hooks, you need to make sure you call destroy on the object:
album.destroy # runs destroy hooks
Sequel makes it easy to skip destroy hooks by calling delete instead of destroy:
album.delete # does not run destroy hooks
However, skipping hooks is a bad idea in general and should be avoided. As mentioned above, Sequel doesn‘t allow you to turn off the running of save hooks. If you know what you are doing and really want to skip them, you need to drop down to the dataset level to do so. This can be done for a specific model object by using the this method for a dataset that represents a single object:
album.this # dataset
The this dataset works just like any other dataset, so you can call update on it to modify it:
album.this.update(copies_sold: album.copies_sold + 1)
If you want to insert a row into the model‘s table without running the creation hooks, you can use Model.insert instead of Model.create:
Album.insert(name: 'RF') # does not run hooks
Sometimes want to cancel an action in a before hook, so the action is not performed. For example, you may want to not allow destroying or saving a record in certain cases. In those cases, you can call cancel_action inside the before_* hook, which will stop processing the hook and will either raise a Sequel::HookFailed exception (the default), or return nil if raise_on_save_failure is false). You can use this to implement validation-like behavior, that will run even if validations are skipped:
class Album < Sequel::Model def before_save cancel_action if name == '' super end end
For around hooks, neglecting to call super halts hook processing in the same way as calling cancel_action in a before hook. It‘s probably a bad idea to use cancel_action hook processing in after hooks, or after yielding in around hooks, since by then the main processing has already taken place.
By default, Sequel runs hooks other than validation hooks inside a transaction, so if you cancel the action by calling cancel_action in any hook, Sequel will rollback the transaction. However, note that the implicit use of transactions when saving and destroying model objects is conditional (it depends on the model instance‘s use_transactions setting and the :transaction option passed to save).
Sometimes you only take to take a certain action in a hook if the object meets a certain condition. For example, let‘s say you only want to make sure a timestamp is set when updating if the object is at a certain status level:
class Album < Sequel::Model def before_update self.timestamp ||= Time.now if status_id > 3 super end end
Note how this hook action is made conditional just be using the standard ruby if conditional. Sequel makes it easy to handle conditional hook actions by using standard ruby conditionals inside the instance methods.
If you want all your model classes to use the same hook, you can just define that hook in Sequel::Model:
class Sequel::Model def before_create self.created_at ||= Time.now super end end
Just remember to call super whenever you override the method in a subclass. Note that super is also used when overriding the hook in Sequel::Model itself. This is important as if you add any plugins to Sequel::Model itself, if you override a hook in Sequel::Model and do not call super, the plugin may not work correctly.
If you don‘t want all classes to use the same hook, but want to reuse hooks in multiple classes, you should use a plugin or a simple module:
module SetCreatedAt module InstanceMethods def before_create self.created_at ||= Time.now super end end end Album.plugin(SetCreatedAt) Artist.plugin(SetCreatedAt)
module SetCreatedAt def before_create self.created_at ||= Time.now super end end Album.send(:include, SetCreatedAt) Artist.send(:include, SetCreatedAt)
While it‘s not enforced anywhere, it‘s a good idea to make super the last expression when you override a before hook, and the first expression when you override an after hook:
class Album < Sequel::Model def before_save self.updated_at ||= Time.now super end def after_save super AuditLog.create(:log=>"Album #{name} created") end end
This allows the following general principles to be true:
So if you define the same before hook in both a model and a plugin that the model uses, the hooks will be called in this order:
Again, Sequel does not enforce that, and you are free to call super in an order other than the recommended one (just make sure that you call it).
Around hooks should only be used if you cannot accomplish the same results with before and after hooks. For example, if you want to catch database errors caused by the INSERT or UPDATE query when saving a model object and raise them as validation errors, you cannot use a before or after hook. You have use an around_save hook:
class Album < Sequel::Model def around_save super rescue Sequel::DatabaseError => e # parse database error, set error on self, and reraise a Sequel::ValidationFailed end end
Likewise, let‘s say that upon retrieval, you associate an object with a file descriptor, and you want to ensure that the file descriptor is closed after the object is saved to the database. Let‘s assume you are always saving the object and you are not using validations. You could not use an after_save hook safely, since if the database raises an error, the after_save method will not be called. In this case, an around_save hook is also the correct choice:
class Album < Sequel::Model def around_save super ensure @file_descriptor.close end end
Sequel also ships with an instance_hooks plugin that allows you to define before and after hooks on a per instance basis. It‘s very useful as it allows you to delay action on an instance until before or after saving. This can be important if you want to modify a group of related objects together (which is how the nested_attributes plugin uses instance_hooks).
While it‘s recommended to write your hooks as instance methods, Sequel ships with a hook_class_methods plugin that allows you to define hooks via class methods. It exists mostly for legacy compatibility, but is still supported. However, it does not implement around hooks.
The after_initialize plugin adds an after_initialize hook, that is called for all model instances on creation (both new instances and instances retrieved from the database). It exists mostly for legacy compatibility, but it is still supported.