EncodedId::Rails (encoded_id-rails)

EncodedId for Rails and ActiveRecord models.

EncodedID lets you turn numeric or hex IDs into reversible and human friendly obfuscated strings.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model

  def name_for_encoded_id_slug
    full_name
  end
end

user = User.find_by_encoded_id("p5w9-z27j") # => #<User id: 78>
user.encoded_id                             # => "p5w9-z27j"
user.slugged_encoded_id                     # => "bob-smith--p5w9-z27j"

Features

  • encoded IDs are reversible (see encoded_id)
  • supports slugged IDs (eg my-cool-product-name--p5w9-z27j) that are URL friendly (assuming your alphabet is too)
  • encoded string can be split into groups of letters to improve human-readability (eg abcd-efgh)
  • supports multiple IDs encoded in one encoded string (eg imagine the encoded ID 7aq60zqw might decode to two IDs [78, 45])
  • supports custom alphabets for the encoded string (at least 16 characters needed)
    • by default uses a variation of the Crockford reduced character set (https://www.crockford.com/base32.html)
    • easily confused characters (eg i and j, 0 and O, 1 and I etc) are mapped to counterpart characters, to help avoid common readability mistakes when reading/sharing
    • build in profanity limitation

The gem provides:

  • methods to mixin to ActiveRecord models which will allow you to encode and decode IDs, and find or query by encoded IDs
  • sensible defaults to allow you to get started out of the box

Coming in future (?)

  • support for UUIDs for IDs (which will be encoded as an array of integers)

Why this gem?

With this gem you can easily obfuscate your IDs in your URLs, and still be able to find records by using the encoded IDs. The encoded IDs are meant to be somewhat human friendly, to make communication easier when sharing encoded IDs with other people.

  • Hashids are reversible, no need to persist the generated Id
  • we don't override any AR methods. encoded_ids are intentionally not interchangeable with normal record ids (ie you can't use .find to find by encoded ID or record ID, you must be explicit)
  • we support slugged IDs (eg my-amazing-product--p5w9-z27j)
  • we support multiple model IDs encoded in one EncodedId (eg 7aq6-0zqw might decode to [78, 45])
  • the gem is configurable
  • encoded IDs can be stable across environments, or not (you can set the salt to different values per environment)

Installation

Install the gem and add to the application's Gemfile by executing:

$ bundle add encoded_id-rails

If bundler is not being used to manage dependencies, install the gem by executing:

$ gem install encoded_id-rails

Then run the generator to add the initializer:

rails g encoded_id:rails:install

Usage

Configuration

The install generator will create an initializer file config/initializers/encoded_id.rb. It is documented and should be self-explanatory.

You can configure:

  • a global salt needed to generate the encoded IDs (if you dont use a global salt, you can set a salt per model)
  • the size of the character groups in the encoded string (default is 4)
  • the separator between the character groups (default is '-')
  • the alphabet used to generate the encoded string (default is a variation of the Crockford reduced character set)
  • the minimum length of the encoded ID string (default is 8 characters)

ActiveRecord model setup

Include EncodedId::Model in your model and optionally specify a encoded id salt (or not if using a global one):

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model

  # and optionally the model's salt
  def encoded_id_salt
    "my-user-model-salt"
  end

  # ...
end

Optional mixins

You can optionally include one of the following mixins to add default overrides to #to_param.

  • EncodedId::PathParam
  • EncodedId::SluggedPathParam

This is so that an instance of the model can be used in path helpers and return the encoded ID string instead of the record ID by default.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model
  include EncodedId::SluggedPathParam

  def name_for_encoded_id_slug
    full_name
  end
end

user = User.create(full_name: "Bob Smith")
Rails.application.routes.url_helpers.user_path(user) # => "/users/bob-smith--p5w9-z27j"

Documentation

.find_by_encoded_id

Like .find but accepts an encoded ID string instead of an ID. Will return nil if no record is found.

user = User.find_by_encoded_id("p5w9-z27j")  # => #<User id: 78>
user.encoded_id  # => "p5w9-z27j"

.find_by_encoded_id!

Like .find! but accepts an encoded ID string instead of an ID. Raises ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound if no record is found.

user = User.find_by_encoded_id!("p5w9-z27j")  # => #<User id: 78>

# raises ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound
user = User.find_by_encoded_id!("encoded-id-that-is-not-found")  # => ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound

.where_encoded_id

A helper for creating relations. Decodes the encoded ID string before passing it to .where.

encoded_id = User.encode_encoded_id([user1.id, user2.id])  # => "p5w9-z27j"
User.where(active: true)
  .where_encoded_id(encoded_id)
  .map(&:name) # => ["Bob Smith", "Jane Doe"]

.encode_encoded_id

Encodes an ID or array of IDs into an encoded ID string.

User.encode_encoded_id(78)  # => "p5w9-z27j"
User.encode_encoded_id([78, 45])  # => "7aq6-0zqw"

.decode_encoded_id

Decodes an encoded ID string into an array of IDs.

User.decode_encoded_id("p5w9-z27j")  # => [78]
User.decode_encoded_id("7aq6-0zqw")  # => [78, 45]

.encoded_id_salt

Returns the salt used to generate the encoded ID string. If not defined, the global salt is used with EncodedId::Rails::Salt to generate a model specific one.

User.encoded_id_salt  # => "User/the-salt-from-the-initializer"

Otherwise override this method to return a salt specific to the model.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model

  def encoded_id_salt
    "my-user-model-salt"
  end
end

User.encoded_id_salt  # => "my-user-model-salt"

#encoded_id

Use the encoded_id instance method to get the encoded ID for the record:

user = User.create(name: "Bob Smith")
user.encoded_id  # => "p5w9-z27j"

#slugged_encoded_id

Use the slugged_encoded_id instance method to get the slugged version of the encoded ID for the record. Calls #name_for_encoded_id_slug on the record to get the slug part of the encoded ID:

user = User.create(name: "Bob Smith")
user.slugged_encoded_id  # => "bob-smith--p5w9-z27j"

#name_for_encoded_id_slug

Use #name_for_encoded_id_slug to specify what will be used to create the slug part of the encoded ID. By default it calls #name on the instance, or if the instance does not respond to name (or the value returned is blank) then uses the Model name.

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model

  # If User has an attribute `name`, that will be used for the slug, 
  # otherwise `user` will be used as determined by the class name.
end

user = User.create(name: "Bob Smith")
user.slugged_encoded_id  # => "bob-smith--p5w9-z27j"
user2 = User.create(name: "")
user2.slugged_encoded_id  # => "user--i74r-bn28"

You can optionally override this method to define your own slug:

class User < ApplicationRecord
  include EncodedId::Model

  def name_for_encoded_id_slug
    superhero_name
  end
end

user = User.create(superhero_name: "Super Dev")
user.slugged_encoded_id  # => "super-dev--37nw-8nh7"

To use on all models

Simply add the mixin to your ApplicationRecord:

class ApplicationRecord < ActiveRecord::Base
  self.abstract_class = true
  include EncodedId::Model

  ...
end

However, I recommend you only use it on the models that need it.

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and the created tag, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Type check

First install dependencies:

rbs collection install

Then run:

steep check

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/stevegeek/encoded_id-rails.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.