HairTrigger lets you create and manage database triggers in a concise, db-agnostic, Rails-y way. You declare triggers right in your models in Ruby, and a simple rake task does all the dirty work for you.
If you are using Rails 3 or beyond, just add gem 'hairtrigger'
to your
Gemfile. For Rails 2, it's slightly more involved
Declare triggers in your models and use a rake task to auto-generate the appropriate migration. For example:
class AccountUser < ActiveRecord::Base
trigger.after(:insert) do
"UPDATE accounts SET user_count = user_count + 1 WHERE id = NEW.account_id;"
end
trigger.after(:update).of(:name) do
"INSERT INTO user_changes(id, name) VALUES(NEW.id, NEW.name);"
end
end
and then:
rake db:generate_trigger_migration
This will create a db-agnostic migration for the trigger that mirrors the model declaration. The end result in MySQL will be something like this:
CREATE TRIGGER account_users_after_insert_row_tr AFTER INSERT ON account_users
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
UPDATE accounts SET user_count = user_count + 1 WHERE id = NEW.account_id;
END;
CREATE TRIGGER account_users_after_update_on_name_row_tr AFTER UPDATE ON account_users
FOR EACH ROW
BEGIN
IF NEW.name <> OLD.name OR (NEW.name IS NULL) <> (OLD.name IS NULL) THEN
INSERT INTO user_changes(id, name) VALUES(NEW.id, NEW.name);
END IF;
END;
Note that these auto-generated create_trigger
statements in the migration
contain the :generated => true
option, indicating that they were created
from the model definition. This is important, as the rake task will also
generate appropriate drop/create statements for any model triggers that get
removed or updated. It does this by diffing the current model trigger
declarations and any auto-generated triggers in schema.rb (and subsequent
migrations).
Triggers are built by chaining several methods together, ending in a block that specifies the SQL to be run when the trigger fires. Supported methods include:
Optional, inferred from other calls.
Ignored in models, required in migrations.
Defaults to :row
, PostgreSQL allows :statement
.
Shorthand for timing(:before).events(*events)
.
Shorthand for timing(:after).events(*events)
.
Optional, SQL snippet limiting when the trigger will fire. Supports delayed interpolation of variables.
Only fire the update trigger if at least one of the columns is specified in the statement. Platforms that support it use a native OF
clause, others will have an inferred IF ...
statement in the trigger body. Note the former will fire even if the column's value hasn't changed; the latter will not.
Permissions/role to check when calling trigger. PostgreSQL supports :invoker
(default) and :definer
, MySQL supports :definer
(default) and arbitrary users (syntax: 'user'@'host'
).
Required (but may be satisified by before
/after
). Possible values are :before
/:after
.
Required (but may be satisified by before
/after
). Possible values are :insert
/:update
/:delete
/:truncate
. MySQL/SQLite only support one action per trigger, and don't support :truncate
.
PostgreSQL-specific option to prevent the trigger action from being wrapped in a CREATE FUNCTION
. This is useful for executing existing triggers/functions directly, but is not compatible with the security
setting nor can it be used with pre-9.0 PostgreSQL when supplying a where
condition.
Example: trigger.after(:update).nowrap { "tsvector_update_trigger(...)" }
PostgreSQL-specific option for declaring variables for use in the trigger function. Declarations should be separated by semicolons, e.g.
trigger.after(:insert).declare("user_type text; status text") do
<<-SQL
IF (NEW.account_id = 1 OR NEW.email LIKE '%company.com') THEN
user_type := 'employee';
ELSIF ...
SQL
end
Noop, useful for trigger groups (see below).
Trigger groups allow you to use a slightly more concise notation if you have several triggers that fire on a given model. This is also important for MySQL, since it does not support multiple triggers on a table for the same action and timing. For example:
trigger.after(:update) do |t|
t.all do # every row
# some sql
end
t.of("foo") do
# some more sql
end
t.where("OLD.bar != NEW.bar AND NEW.bar != 'lol'") do
# some other sql
end
end
For MySQL, this will just create a single trigger with conditional logic (since it doesn't support multiple triggers). PostgreSQL and SQLite will have distinct triggers. This same notation is also used within trigger migrations. MySQL does not currently support nested trigger groups.
Because of these differences in how the triggers are created, take care
when setting the name
for triggers or groups. In other words,
PostgreSQL/SQLite will use the name
s specified on the individual
triggers; MySQL will use the name
specified on the group.
Although HairTrigger aims to be totally db-agnostic, at times you do need a
little more control over the body of the trigger. You can tailor it for
specific databases by returning a hash rather than a string. Make sure to set
a :default
value if you aren't explicitly specifying all of them.
For example, MySQL generally performs poorly with subselects in UPDATE
statements, and it has its own proprietary syntax for multi-table UPDATE
s. So
you might do something like the following:
trigger.after(:insert) do
{:default => <<-DEFAULT_SQL, :mysql => <<-MYSQL}
UPDATE users SET item_count = item_count + 1
WHERE id IN (SELECT user_id FROM buckets WHERE id = NEW.bucket_id)
DEFAULT_SQL
UPDATE users, buckets SET item_count = item_count + 1
WHERE users.id = user_id AND buckets.id = NEW.bucket_id
MYSQL
end
You can also manage triggers manually in your migrations via create_trigger
and
drop_trigger
. They are a little more verbose than model triggers, and they can
be more work since you need to figure out the up/down create/drop logic when
you change things. A sample trigger:
create_trigger(:compatibility => 1).on(:users).after(:insert) do
"UPDATE accounts SET user_count = user_count + 1 WHERE id = NEW.account_id;"
end
Because create_trigger
may drop an existing trigger of the same name,
you need to actually implement up
/down
methods in your migration
(rather than change
) so that it does the right thing when
rolling back.
As bugs are fixed and features are implemented in HairTrigger, it's possible that the generated trigger SQL will change (this has only happened once so far). If you upgrade to a newer version of HairTrigger, it needs a way of knowing which previous version generated the original trigger. You only need to worry about this for manual trigger migrations, as the model ones automatically take care of this. For your manual triggers you can either:
- pass
:compatibility => x
to yourcreate_trigger
statement, where x is whatever HairTrigger::Builder.compatibility is (1 for this version). - set
HairTrigger::Builder.base_compatibility = x
in an initializer, where x is whatever HairTrigger::Builder.compatibility is. This is like doing the first option on everycreate_trigger
. Note that once the compatibility changes, you'll need to set:compatibility
on new triggers (unless you just redo all your triggers and bump thebase_compatibility
).
If you upgrade to a newer version of HairTrigger and see that the SQL compatibility has changed, you'll need to set the appropriate compatibility on any new triggers that you create.
HairTrigger hooks into rake db:schema:dump
(and rake tasks that call it) to
make it trigger-aware. A newly generated schema.rb will contain:
create_trigger
statements for any database triggers that exactly match acreate_trigger
statement in an applied migration or in the previous schema.rb file. this includes both generated and manualcreate_trigger
calls.- adapter-specific
execute('CREATE TRIGGER..')
statements for any unmatched database triggers.
As long as you don't delete old migrations and schema.rb prior to running
rake db:schema:dump
, the result should be what you expect (and portable).
If you have deleted all trigger migrations, you can regenerate a new
baseline for model triggers via rake db:generate_trigger_migration
.
To stay on top of things, it's strongly recommended that you add a test or spec to ensure your migrations/schema.rb match your models. This is as simple as:
assert HairTrigger::migrations_current?
This way you'll know if there are any outstanding migrations you need to create.
There are a couple classes of errors: declaration errors and generation errors/warnings.
Declaration errors happen if your trigger declaration is obviously wrong, and
will cause a runtime error in your model or migration class. An example would
be trigger.after(:never)
, since :never
is not a valid event.
Generation errors happen if you try something that your adapter doesn't
support. An example would be something like trigger.security(:invoker)
for
MySQL. These errors only happen when the trigger is actually generated, e.g.
when you attempt to run the migration.
Generation warnings are similar but they don't stop the trigger from being
generated. If you do something adapter-specific supported by your database,
you will still get a warning (to $stderr) that your trigger is not portable. You
can silence warnings via HairTrigger::Builder.show_warnings = false
You can validate your triggers beforehand using the Builder#validate!
method.
It will throw the appropriate errors/warnings so that you know what to fix,
e.g.
User.triggers.each(&:validate!)
HairTrigger does not validate your SQL, so be sure to test it in all databases you want to support.
When running a trigger migration, you might notice some PostgreSQL NOTICEs like so:
NOTICE: trigger "foo_bar_baz" for table "quux" does not exist, skipping
NOTICE: function foo_bar_baz() does not exist, skipping
This happens because HairTrigger will attempt to drop the existing trigger/function if it already exists. These notices are safe to ignore. Note that this behavior may change in a future release, meaning you'll first need to explicitly drop the existing trigger if you wish to redefine it.
-
As is the case with
ActiveRecord::Base.update_all
or any direct SQL you do, be careful to reload updated objects from the database. For example, the following code will display the wrong count since we aren't reloading the account:a = Account.find(123) a.account_users.create(:name => 'bob') puts "count is now #{a.user_count}"
-
For repeated chained calls, the last one wins, there is currently no merging.
-
If you want your code to be portable, the trigger actions should be limited to
INSERT
/UPDATE
/DELETE
/SELECT
, and conditional logic should be handled through the:where
option/method. Otherwise you'll likely run into trouble due to differences in syntax and supported features. -
Manual
create_trigger
statements have some gotchas. See the section "Manual triggers and :compatibility"
- Ruby 1.8.7+
- Rails 2.3+
- PostgreSQL 8.0+
- MySQL 5.0.10+
- SQLite 3.3.8+
Copyright (c) 2011-2018 Jon Jensen. See LICENSE.txt for further details.