Active Record Relation
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Constants
| CLAUSE_METHODS | = | [:where, :having, :from] |
| INVALID_METHODS_FOR_DELETE_ALL | = | [:distinct, :with] |
| MULTI_VALUE_METHODS | = | [:includes, :eager_load, :preload, :select, :group, :order, :joins, :left_outer_joins, :references, :extending, :unscope, :optimizer_hints, :annotate, :with] |
| SINGLE_VALUE_METHODS | = | [:limit, :offset, :lock, :readonly, :reordering, :strict_loading, :reverse_order, :distinct, :create_with, :skip_query_cache] |
| VALUE_METHODS | = | MULTI_VALUE_METHODS + SINGLE_VALUE_METHODS + CLAUSE_METHODS |
Attributes
| [R] | klass | |
| [R] | loaded | |
| [R] | loaded? | |
| [R] | model | |
| [R] | predicate_builder | |
| [RW] | skip_preloading_value | |
| [R] | table |
Class Public methods
new(klass, table: klass.arel_table, predicate_builder: klass.predicate_builder, values: {}) Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 28 def initialize(klass, table: klass.arel_table, predicate_builder: klass.predicate_builder, values: {}) @klass = klass @table = table @values = values @loaded = false @predicate_builder = predicate_builder @delegate_to_klass = false @future_result = nil @records = nil @async = false @none = false end
Instance Public methods
==(other) Link
Compares two relations for equality.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 798 def ==(other) case other when Associations::CollectionProxy, AssociationRelation self == other.records when Relation other.to_sql == to_sql when Array records == other end end
any?(*args) Link
Returns true if there are any records.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 302 def any?(*args) return false if @none return super if args.present? || block_given? !empty? end
blank?() Link
Returns true if relation is blank.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 819 def blank? records.blank? end
cache_key(timestamp_column = "updated_at") Link
Returns a stable cache key that can be used to identify this query. The cache key is built with a fingerprint of the SQL query.
Product.where("name like ?", "%Cosmic Encounter%").cache_key
# => "products/query-1850ab3d302391b85b8693e941286659"
If ActiveRecord::Base.collection_cache_versioning is turned off, as it was in Rails 6.0 and earlier, the cache key will also include a version.
ActiveRecord::Base.collection_cache_versioning = false
Product.where("name like ?", "%Cosmic Encounter%").cache_key
# => "products/query-1850ab3d302391b85b8693e941286659-1-20150714212553907087000"
You can also pass a custom timestamp column to fetch the timestamp of the last updated record.
Product.where("name like ?", "%Game%").cache_key(:last_reviewed_at)
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 344 def cache_key(timestamp_column = "updated_at") @cache_keys ||= {} @cache_keys[timestamp_column] ||= klass.collection_cache_key(self, timestamp_column) end
cache_key_with_version() Link
Returns a cache key along with the version.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 423 def cache_key_with_version if version = cache_version "#{cache_key}-#{version}" else cache_key end end
cache_version(timestamp_column = :updated_at) Link
Returns a cache version that can be used together with the cache key to form a recyclable caching scheme. The cache version is built with the number of records matching the query, and the timestamp of the last updated record. When a new record comes to match the query, or any of the existing records is updated or deleted, the cache version changes.
If the collection is loaded, the method will iterate through the records to generate the timestamp, otherwise it will trigger one SQL query like:
SELECT COUNT(*), MAX("products"."updated_at") FROM "products" WHERE (name like '%Cosmic Encounter%')
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 371 def cache_version(timestamp_column = :updated_at) if collection_cache_versioning @cache_versions ||= {} @cache_versions[timestamp_column] ||= compute_cache_version(timestamp_column) end end
create(attributes = nil, &block) Link
Tries to create a new record with the same scoped attributes defined in the relation. Returns the initialized object if validation fails.
Expects arguments in the same format as ActiveRecord::Base.create.
Examples
users = User.where(name: 'Oscar')
users.create # => #<User id: 3, name: "Oscar", ...>
users.create(name: 'fxn')
users.create # => #<User id: 4, name: "fxn", ...>
users.create { |user| user.name = 'tenderlove' }
# => #<User id: 5, name: "tenderlove", ...>
users.create(name: nil) # validation on name
# => #<User id: nil, name: nil, ...>
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 98 def create(attributes = nil, &block) if attributes.is_a?(Array) attributes.collect { |attr| create(attr, &block) } else block = current_scope_restoring_block(&block) scoping { _create(attributes, &block) } end end
create!(attributes = nil, &block) Link
Similar to create, but calls create! on the base class. Raises an exception if a validation error occurs.
Expects arguments in the same format as ActiveRecord::Base.create!.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 113 def create!(attributes = nil, &block) if attributes.is_a?(Array) attributes.collect { |attr| create!(attr, &block) } else block = current_scope_restoring_block(&block) scoping { _create!(attributes, &block) } end end
create_or_find_by(attributes, &block) Link
Attempts to create a record with the given attributes in a table that has a unique database constraint on one or several of its columns. If a row already exists with one or several of these unique constraints, the exception such an insertion would normally raise is caught, and the existing record with those attributes is found using find_by!.
This is similar to find_or_create_by, but tries to create the record first. As such it is better suited for cases where the record is most likely not to exist yet.
There are several drawbacks to create_or_find_by, though:
-
The underlying table must have the relevant columns defined with unique database constraints.
-
A unique constraint violation may be triggered by only one, or at least less than all, of the given attributes. This means that the subsequent find_by! may fail to find a matching record, which will then raise an
ActiveRecord::RecordNotFoundexception, rather than a record with the given attributes. -
While we avoid the race condition between SELECT -> INSERT from
find_or_create_by, we actually have another race condition between INSERT -> SELECT, which can be triggered if a DELETE between those two statements is run by another client. But for most applications, that’s a significantly less likely condition to hit. -
It relies on exception handling to handle control flow, which may be marginally slower.
-
The primary key may auto-increment on each create, even if it fails. This can accelerate the problem of running out of integers, if the underlying table is still stuck on a primary key of type int (note: All
Railsapps since 5.1+ have defaulted to bigint, which is not liable to this problem).
This method will return a record if all given attributes are covered by unique constraints (unless the INSERT -> DELETE -> SELECT race condition is triggered), but if creation was attempted and failed due to validation errors it won’t be persisted, you get what create returns in such situation.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 215 def create_or_find_by(attributes, &block) transaction(requires_new: true) { create(attributes, &block) } rescue ActiveRecord::RecordNotUnique if connection.transaction_open? where(attributes).lock.find_by!(attributes) else find_by!(attributes) end end
create_or_find_by!(attributes, &block) Link
Like create_or_find_by, but calls create! so an exception is raised if the created record is invalid.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 228 def create_or_find_by!(attributes, &block) transaction(requires_new: true) { create!(attributes, &block) } rescue ActiveRecord::RecordNotUnique if connection.transaction_open? where(attributes).lock.find_by!(attributes) else find_by!(attributes) end end
delete_all() Link
Deletes the records without instantiating the records first, and hence not calling the #destroy method nor invoking callbacks. This is a single SQL DELETE statement that goes straight to the database, much more efficient than destroy_all. Be careful with relations though, in particular :dependent rules defined on associations are not honored. Returns the number of rows affected.
Post.where(person_id: 5).where(category: ['Something', 'Else']).delete_all
Both calls delete the affected posts all at once with a single DELETE statement. If you need to destroy dependent associations or call your before_* or after_destroy callbacks, use the destroy_all method instead.
If an invalid method is supplied, delete_all raises an ActiveRecordError:
Post.distinct.delete_all
# => ActiveRecord::ActiveRecordError: delete_all doesn't support distinct
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 631 def delete_all return 0 if @none invalid_methods = INVALID_METHODS_FOR_DELETE_ALL.select do |method| value = @values[method] method == :distinct ? value : value&.any? end if invalid_methods.any? raise ActiveRecordError.new("delete_all doesn't support #{invalid_methods.join(', ')}") end arel = eager_loading? ? apply_join_dependency.arel : build_arel arel.source.left = table group_values_arel_columns = arel_columns(group_values.uniq) having_clause_ast = having_clause.ast unless having_clause.empty? stmt = arel.compile_delete(table[primary_key], having_clause_ast, group_values_arel_columns) klass.connection.delete(stmt, "#{klass} Delete All").tap { reset } end
delete_by(*args) Link
Finds and deletes all records matching the specified conditions. This is short-hand for relation.where(condition).delete_all. Returns the number of rows affected.
If no record is found, returns 0 as zero rows were affected.
Person.delete_by(id: 13)
Person.delete_by(name: 'Spartacus', rating: 4)
Person.delete_by("published_at < ?", 2.weeks.ago)
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 674 def delete_by(*args) where(*args).delete_all end
destroy_all() Link
Destroys the records by instantiating each record and calling its #destroy method. Each object’s callbacks are executed (including :dependent association options). Returns the collection of objects that were destroyed; each will be frozen, to reflect that no changes should be made (since they can’t be persisted).
Note: Instantiation, callback execution, and deletion of each record can be time consuming when you’re removing many records at once. It generates at least one SQL DELETE query per record (or possibly more, to enforce your callbacks). If you want to delete many rows quickly, without concern for their associations or callbacks, use delete_all instead.
Examples
Person.where(age: 0..18).destroy_all
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 609 def destroy_all records.each(&:destroy).tap { reset } end
destroy_by(*args) Link
Finds and destroys all records matching the specified conditions. This is short-hand for relation.where(condition).destroy_all. Returns the collection of objects that were destroyed.
If no record is found, returns empty array.
Person.destroy_by(id: 13)
Person.destroy_by(name: 'Spartacus', rating: 4)
Person.destroy_by("published_at < ?", 2.weeks.ago)
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 661 def destroy_by(*args) where(*args).destroy_all end
eager_loading?() Link
Returns true if relation needs eager loading.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 783 def eager_loading? @should_eager_load ||= eager_load_values.any? || includes_values.any? && (joined_includes_values.any? || references_eager_loaded_tables?) end
empty?() Link
Returns true if there are no records.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 283 def empty? return true if @none if loaded? records.empty? else !exists? end end
encode_with(coder) Link
Serializes the relation objects Array.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 269 def encode_with(coder) coder.represent_seq(nil, records) end
explain(*options) Link
Runs EXPLAIN on the query or queries triggered by this relation and returns the result as a string. The string is formatted imitating the ones printed by the database shell.
Note that this method actually runs the queries, since the results of some are needed by the next ones when eager loading is going on.
Please see further details in the Active Record Query Interface guide.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 253 def explain(*options) exec_explain(collecting_queries_for_explain { exec_queries }, options) end
find_or_create_by(attributes, &block) Link
Finds the first record with the given attributes, or creates a record with the attributes if one is not found:
# Find the first user named "Penélope" or create a new one.
User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Penélope')
# => #<User id: 1, first_name: "Penélope", last_name: nil>
# Find the first user named "Penélope" or create a new one.
# We already have one so the existing record will be returned.
User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Penélope')
# => #<User id: 1, first_name: "Penélope", last_name: nil>
# Find the first user named "Scarlett" or create a new one with
# a particular last name.
User.create_with(last_name: 'Johansson').find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Scarlett')
# => #<User id: 2, first_name: "Scarlett", last_name: "Johansson">
This method accepts a block, which is passed down to create. The last example above can be alternatively written this way:
# Find the first user named "Scarlett" or create a new one with a
# particular last name.
User.find_or_create_by(first_name: 'Scarlett') do |user|
user.last_name = 'Johansson'
end
# => #<User id: 2, first_name: "Scarlett", last_name: "Johansson">
This method always returns a record, but if creation was attempted and failed due to validation errors it won’t be persisted, you get what create returns in such situation.
If creation failed because of a unique constraint, this method will assume it encountered a race condition and will try finding the record once more If somehow the second find still find no record because a concurrent DELETE happened, it will then raise an ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound exception.
Please note this method is not atomic, it runs first a SELECT, and if there are no results an INSERT is attempted. So if the table doesn’t have a relevant unique constraint it could be the case that you end up with two or more similar records.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 175 def find_or_create_by(attributes, &block) find_by(attributes) || create_or_find_by(attributes, &block) end
find_or_create_by!(attributes, &block) Link
Like find_or_create_by, but calls create! so an exception is raised if the created record is invalid.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 182 def find_or_create_by!(attributes, &block) find_by(attributes) || create_or_find_by!(attributes, &block) end
find_or_initialize_by(attributes, &block) Link
Like find_or_create_by, but calls new instead of create.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 240 def find_or_initialize_by(attributes, &block) find_by(attributes) || new(attributes, &block) end
initialize_copy(other) Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 41 def initialize_copy(other) @values = @values.dup reset end
inspect() Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 831 def inspect subject = loaded? ? records : annotate("loading for inspect") entries = subject.take([limit_value, 11].compact.min).map!(&:inspect) entries[10] = "..." if entries.size == 11 "#<#{self.class.name} [#{entries.join(', ')}]>" end
joined_includes_values() Link
Joins that are also marked for preloading. In which case we should just eager load them. Note that this is a naive implementation because we could have strings and symbols which represent the same association, but that aren’t matched by this. Also, we could have nested hashes which partially match, e.g. { a: :b } & { a: [:b, :c] }
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 793 def joined_includes_values includes_values & joins_values end
load(&block) Link
Causes the records to be loaded from the database if they have not been loaded already. You can use this if for some reason you need to explicitly load some records before actually using them. The return value is the relation itself, not the records.
Post.where(published: true).load # => #<ActiveRecord::Relation>
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 725 def load(&block) if !loaded? || scheduled? @records = exec_queries(&block) @loaded = true end self end
load_async() Link
Schedule the query to be performed from a background thread pool.
Post.where(published: true).load_async # => #<ActiveRecord::Relation>
When the Relation is iterated, if the background query wasn’t executed yet, it will be performed by the foreground thread.
Note that config.active_record.async_query_executor must be configured for queries to actually be executed concurrently. Otherwise it defaults to executing them in the foreground.
load_async will also fall back to executing in the foreground in the test environment when transactional fixtures are enabled.
If the query was actually executed in the background, the Active Record logs will show it by prefixing the log line with ASYNC:
ASYNC Post Load (0.0ms) (db time 2ms) SELECT "posts".* FROM "posts" LIMIT 100
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 696 def load_async return load if !connection.async_enabled? unless loaded? result = exec_main_query(async: connection.current_transaction.closed?) if result.is_a?(Array) @records = result else @future_result = result end @loaded = true end self end
many?() Link
Returns true if there is more than one record.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 319 def many? return false if @none return super if block_given? return records.many? if loaded? limited_count > 1 end
new(attributes = nil, &block) Link
Initializes new record from relation while maintaining the current scope.
Expects arguments in the same format as ActiveRecord::Base.new.
users = User.where(name: 'DHH')
user = users.new # => #<User id: nil, name: "DHH", created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>
You can also pass a block to new with the new record as argument:
user = users.new { |user| user.name = 'Oscar' }
user.name # => Oscar
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 69 def new(attributes = nil, &block) if attributes.is_a?(Array) attributes.collect { |attr| new(attr, &block) } else block = current_scope_restoring_block(&block) scoping { _new(attributes, &block) } end end
none?(*args) Link
Returns true if there are no records.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 294 def none?(*args) return true if @none return super if args.present? || block_given? empty? end
one?(*args) Link
Returns true if there is exactly one record.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 310 def one?(*args) return false if @none return super if args.present? || block_given? return records.one? if loaded? limited_count == 1 end
pretty_print(pp) Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 809 def pretty_print(pp) subject = loaded? ? records : annotate("loading for pp") entries = subject.take([limit_value, 11].compact.min) entries[10] = "..." if entries.size == 11 pp.pp(entries) end
reload() Link
Forces reloading of relation.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 735 def reload reset load end
reset() Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 740 def reset @future_result&.cancel @future_result = nil @delegate_to_klass = false @to_sql = @arel = @loaded = @should_eager_load = nil @offsets = @take = nil @cache_keys = nil @cache_versions = nil @records = nil self end
scheduled?() Link
Returns true if the relation was scheduled on the background thread pool.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 715 def scheduled? !!@future_result end
scope_for_create() Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 776 def scope_for_create hash = where_clause.to_h(klass.table_name, equality_only: true) create_with_value.each { |k, v| hash[k.to_s] = v } unless create_with_value.empty? hash end
scoping(all_queries: nil, &block) Link
Scope all queries to the current scope.
Comment.where(post_id: 1).scoping do
Comment.first
end
# SELECT "comments".* FROM "comments" WHERE "comments"."post_id" = 1 ORDER BY "comments"."id" ASC LIMIT 1
If all_queries: true is passed, scoping will apply to all queries for the relation including update and delete on instances. Once all_queries is set to true it cannot be set to false in a nested block.
Please check unscoped if you want to remove all previous scopes (including the default_scope) during the execution of a block.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 445 def scoping(all_queries: nil, &block) registry = klass.scope_registry if global_scope?(registry) && all_queries == false raise ArgumentError, "Scoping is set to apply to all queries and cannot be unset in a nested block." elsif already_in_scope?(registry) yield else _scoping(self, registry, all_queries, &block) end end
size() Link
Returns size of the records.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 274 def size if loaded? records.length else count(:all) end end
to_ary() Link
Converts relation objects to Array.
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 258 def to_ary records.dup end
to_sql() Link
Returns sql statement for the relation.
User.where(name: 'Oscar').to_sql
# SELECT "users".* FROM "users" WHERE "users"."name" = 'Oscar'
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 756 def to_sql @to_sql ||= if eager_loading? apply_join_dependency do |relation, join_dependency| relation = join_dependency.apply_column_aliases(relation) relation.to_sql end else conn = klass.connection conn.unprepared_statement { conn.to_sql(arel) } end end
touch_all(*names, time: nil) Link
Touches all records in the current relation, setting the updated_at/updated_on attributes to the current time or the time specified. It does not instantiate the involved models, and it does not trigger Active Record callbacks or validations. This method can be passed attribute names and an optional time argument. If attribute names are passed, they are updated along with updated_at/updated_on attributes. If no time argument is passed, the current time is used as default.
Examples
# Touch all records
Person.all.touch_all
# => "UPDATE \"people\" SET \"updated_at\" = '2018-01-04 22:55:23.132670'"
# Touch multiple records with a custom attribute
Person.all.touch_all(:created_at)
# => "UPDATE \"people\" SET \"updated_at\" = '2018-01-04 22:55:23.132670', \"created_at\" = '2018-01-04 22:55:23.132670'"
# Touch multiple records with a specified time
Person.all.touch_all(time: Time.new(2020, 5, 16, 0, 0, 0))
# => "UPDATE \"people\" SET \"updated_at\" = '2020-05-16 00:00:00'"
# Touch records with scope
Person.where(name: 'David').touch_all
# => "UPDATE \"people\" SET \"updated_at\" = '2018-01-04 22:55:23.132670' WHERE \"people\".\"name\" = 'David'"
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 589 def touch_all(*names, time: nil) update_all klass.touch_attributes_with_time(*names, time: time) end
update_all(updates) Link
Updates all records in the current relation with details given. This method constructs a single SQL UPDATE statement and sends it straight to the database. It does not instantiate the involved models and it does not trigger Active Record callbacks or validations. However, values passed to update_all will still go through Active Record’s normal type casting and serialization. Returns the number of rows affected.
Note: As Active Record callbacks are not triggered, this method will not automatically update updated_at/updated_on columns.
Parameters
-
updates- A string, array, or hash representing the SET part of an SQL statement. Any strings provided will be type cast, unless you useArel.sql. (Don’t pass user-provided values toArel.sql.)
Examples
# Update all customers with the given attributes
Customer.update_all wants_email: true
# Update all books with 'Rails' in their title
Book.where('title LIKE ?', '%Rails%').update_all(author: 'David')
# Update all books that match conditions, but limit it to 5 ordered by date
Book.where('title LIKE ?', '%Rails%').order(:created_at).limit(5).update_all(author: 'David')
# Update all invoices and set the number column to its id value.
Invoice.update_all('number = id')
# Update all books with 'Rails' in their title
Book.where('title LIKE ?', '%Rails%').update_all(title: Arel.sql("title + ' - volume 1'"))
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 492 def update_all(updates) raise ArgumentError, "Empty list of attributes to change" if updates.blank? return 0 if @none if updates.is_a?(Hash) if klass.locking_enabled? && !updates.key?(klass.locking_column) && !updates.key?(klass.locking_column.to_sym) attr = table[klass.locking_column] updates[attr.name] = _increment_attribute(attr) end values = _substitute_values(updates) else values = Arel.sql(klass.sanitize_sql_for_assignment(updates, table.name)) end arel = eager_loading? ? apply_join_dependency.arel : build_arel arel.source.left = table group_values_arel_columns = arel_columns(group_values.uniq) having_clause_ast = having_clause.ast unless having_clause.empty? stmt = arel.compile_update(values, table[primary_key], having_clause_ast, group_values_arel_columns) klass.connection.update(stmt, "#{klass} Update All").tap { reset } end
update_counters(counters) Link
Updates the counters of the records in the current relation.
Parameters
-
counter- AHashcontaining the names of the fields to update as keys and the amount to update as values. -
:touchoption - Touch the timestamp columns when updating. -
If attributes names are passed, they are updated along with update_at/on attributes.
Examples
# For Posts by a given author increment the comment_count by 1.
Post.where(author_id: author.id).update_counters(comment_count: 1)
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 546 def update_counters(counters) touch = counters.delete(:touch) updates = {} counters.each do |counter_name, value| attr = table[counter_name] updates[attr.name] = _increment_attribute(attr, value) end if touch names = touch if touch != true names = Array.wrap(names) options = names.extract_options! touch_updates = klass.touch_attributes_with_time(*names, **options) updates.merge!(touch_updates) unless touch_updates.empty? end update_all updates end
values() Link
Source: show
# File activerecord/lib/active_record/relation.rb, line 823 def values @values.dup end