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Description

Given the following class definitions:

class Address
  belongs_to :addressable, :polymorphic => true
end

class Person
  has_many :addresses, :as => addressable
end

class Vendor < Person
end

and given the following code:

vendor = Vendor.create(...)
address = vendor.addresses.create(...)

p vendor
p address

will output:

#<Vendor id: 1, type: "Vendor" ...>
#<Address id: 1, addressable_id: 1, addressable_type: 'Person' ...>

Notice that addressable_type column is Person even though the actual class is Vendor.

Normally, this isn't a problem, however, it can have negative performance characteristics in certain circumstances. The most obvious one is that a join with persons or an extra query is required to find out the actual type of addressable.

This gem adds the ActiveRecord::Base.store_base_sti_class configuration option. It defaults to true for backwards compatibility. Setting it to false will alter ActiveRecord's behavior to store the actual class in polymorphic _type columns when STI is used.

In the example above, if the ActiveRecord::Base.store_base_sti_class is false, the output will be,

  #<Vendor id: 1, type: "Vendor" ...>
  #<Address id: 1, addressable_id: 1, addressable_type: 'Vendor' ...>

Usage

Add the following line to your Gemfile,

gem 'store_base_sti_class'

then bundle install. Once you have the gem installed, add the following to one of the initializers (or make a new one) in config/initializers,

ActiveRecord::Base.store_base_sti_class = false

When changing this behavior, you will have write a migration to update all of your existing _type columns accordingly. You may also need to change your application if it explicitly relies on the _type columns.

Notes

This gem incorporates work from:

It currently works with ActiveRecord 4.0.x through 5.0.x. If you need support for ActiveRecord 3.x, use a pre-1.0 version of the gem.

Copyright (c) 2011-2017 AppFolio, inc. See LICENSE.txt for further details.