ActiveRecord::UnionRelation

Build Status

There are times when you want to use SQL's UNION operator to pull rows from multiple relations, but you still want to maintain the query-builder interface of ActiveRecord. This gem allows you to do that with minimal syntax.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'active_record-union_relation'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install active_record-union_relation

Usage

Let's assume you're writing something like a search function, and you want to be able to return a polymorphic relation containing all of the search results. You could maintain a separate index table with links out to the entities or use a more advanced search engine. Or you could perform a UNION that searches each table.

UNION subrelations must all have the same number of columns, so first we define the name of the columns that the UNION will select, then we define the sources that will become those columns from each subrelation. It makes most sense looking at an example.

Let's assume we have the following structure with default table names:

class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base
  belongs_to :post
end

class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_many :comments
end

class Tag < ActiveRecord::Base
end

Now, let's pull all of the records matching a specific term. For Post, we'll pull published: true records that have a title matching the term. For Comment, we'll pull the records that have a body matching the term. And finally, for Tag, we'll pull records that have a name matching the term.

# Let's get a local variable that we'll use to reference within each of our
# subqueries. Presumably this would come from some kind of user input.
term = 'foo'

# First, we call ActiveRecord::union. The arguments are the names of the columns
# that will be aliased from each source relation. It also accepts a block that
# is used to configure the union's subqueries.
relation =
  ActiveRecord.union(:id, :post_id, :matched) do |union|
    # Okay, now we're going to pull the post records into a subquery. First,
    # we'll get a posts variable that contains the relation that we want to pull
    # just for this one table. That can include any kind of
    # joins/conditions/orders etc. that it needs to. In this case we'll need
    # published: true and a matching query.
    posts = Post.where(published: true).where('title LIKE ?', "%#{term}%")

    # Next, we'll add that posts relation as a subquery into the union. The
    # number of arguments here must directly align with the number of arguments
    # given to the overall union. In this case to line everything up, we'll
    # select id as the id column, nil as a placeholder since we don't need
    # anything for the post_id column, and title as the matched column.
    union.add posts, :id, nil, :title

    # Next we'll pull the comments relation that we want into its own variable,
    # and then add it into the overall union. We'll line up the id column to id,
    # the post_id column to post_id, and the body to matched. Since we're
    # explicitly pulling post_id, we'll actually be able to call .post on the
    # comment records that get pulled since we alias them back when we
    # instantiate the objects.
    comments = Comment.where('body LIKE ?', "%#{term}%")
    union.add comments, :id, :post_id, :body

    # Finally, we'll pull the tag records that we want and add them into the
    # overall union as well.
    tags = Tag.where('name LIKE ?', "%#{term}%")
    union.add tags, :id, nil, :name
  end

# Now we have a relation object that represents the UNION, and we can perform
# all of the mutations that we would normally perform on a relation.
relation.order(matched: :asc)

# This results in a polymorphic response that once we load the records has
# everything loaded and aliased properly, as in:
#
# [#<Tag:0x00 id: 3, name: "foo">,
#  #<Post:0x000 id: 2, title: "foo published">,
#  #<Comment:0x00 id: 3, post_id: 2, body: "This is a comment with foo in 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 tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/kddeisz/active_record-union_relation.

License

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