ActiveRecord::DatabaseValidations
Add validations to your ActiveRecord models based on your database constraints.
This gem is primarily intended for MySQL databases not running in strict mode, which can easily cause data loss. These problems are documented in DataLossTest
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'activerecord-databasevalidations'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install activerecord-databasevalidations
Usage
You can use ActiveModel's validates method to define what fields you want
to validate based on the database constraints.
class Foo < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :boolean_field, database_constraints: :not_null
validates :string_field, database_constraints: [:size, :basic_multilingual_plane]
end
You can also use validates_database_constraints_of:
class Bar < ActiveRecord::Base
validates_database_constraints_of :my_field, with: :size
end
### Available validations
You have to specify what conatrints you want to validate for. Valid values are:
- `:size` to validate for the size of textual and binary columns. It will pick character
size or bytesize based on the column's type.
- `:not_null` to validate a NOT NULL contraint.
- `:basic_multilingual_plane` to validate that all characters for text fields are inside
the basic multilingual plane of unicode (unless you use the utf8mb4 character set).
The validations will only be created if it makes sense for the column, e.g. a `:not_null`
validation will only be added if the column has a NOT NULL constraint defined on it.
### Hand-rolling validations
You can also instantiate the validators yourself:
``` ruby
class Bar < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :string_field, bytesize: { maximum: 255}, basic_multilingual_plane: true
validates :string_field, not_null: true
end
Note that this will create validations without inspecting the column to see if it actually makes sense.
## Contributing
1. Fork it (http://github.com/wvanbergen/activerecord-databasevalidations/fork)
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`)
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
5. Create new Pull Request