A tool to build your own filters and sorts with Rails and Active Record!
Include Sift in your controllers, and define some filters.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
include Sift
filter_on :title, type: :string
def index
render json: filtrate(Post.all)
end
endThis will allow users to pass ?filters[title]=foo and get the Posts with the title foo.
Sift will also handle rendering errors using the standard rails errors structure. You can add this to your controller by adding,
before_action :render_filter_errors, unless: :filters_valid?
def render_filter_errors
render json: { errors: filter_errors }, status: :bad_request && return
endto your controller.
These errors are based on the type that you told sift your param was.
Every filter must have a type, so that Sift knows what to do with it. The current valid filter types are:
- int - Filter on an integer column
- decimal - Filter on a decimal column
- boolean - Filter on a boolean column
- string - Filter on a string column
- text - Filter on a text column
- date - Filter on a date column
- time - Filter on a time column
- datetime - Filter on a datetime column
- scope - Filter on an ActiveRecord scope
- jsonb - Filter on a jsonb column (supported only in PostgreSQL)
Just as your filter values are used to scope queries on a column, values you pass to a scope filter will be used as arguments to that scope. For example:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :with_body, ->(text) { where(body: text) }
end
class PostsController < ApplicationController
include Sift
filter_on :with_body, type: :scope
def index
render json: filtrate(Post.all)
end
endPassing ?filters[with_body]=my_text will call the with_body scope with
my_text as the argument.
Scopes that accept no arguments are currently not supported.
Filters with type: :scope have access to the params hash by passing in the desired keys to the scope_params. The keys passed in will be returned as a hash with their associated values.
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :user_posts_on_date, ->(date, options) {
where(user_id: options[:user_id], blog_id: options[:blog_id], date: date)
}
end
class UsersController < ApplicationController
include Sift
filter_on :user_posts_on_date, type: :scope, scope_params: [:user_id, :blog_id]
def show
render json: filtrate(Post.all)
end
endPassing ?filters[user_posts_on_date]=10/12/20 will call the user_posts_on_date scope with
10/12/20 as the the first argument, and will grab the user_id and blog_id out of the params and pass them as a hash, as the second argument.
A filter param can have a different field name than the column or scope. Use internal_name with the correct name of the column or scope.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
include Sift
filter_on :post_id, type: :int, internal_name: :id
endSome parameter types support ranges. Ranges are expected to be a string with the bounding values separated by ...
For example ?filters[price]=3...50 would return records with a price between 3 and 50.
The following types support ranges
- int
- decimal
- boolean
- date
- time
- datetime
Filters can be mutated before the filter is applied using the tap argument. This is useful, for example, if you need to adjust the time zone of a datetime range filter.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
include Sift
filter_on :expiration, type: :datetime, tap: ->(value, params) {
value.split("...").
map do |str|
str.to_date.in_time_zone(LOCAL_TIME_ZONE)
end.
join("...")
}
endUsually JSONB columns stores values as an Array or an Object (key-value), in both cases the parameter needs to be sent in a JSON format
Array
It should be sent an array in the URL Query parameters
?filters[metadata]=[1,2]
key-value
It can be passed one or more Key values:
?filters[metadata]={"data_1":"test"}?filters[metadata]={"data_1":"test","data_2":"[1,2]"}
When the value is an array, it will filter records with those values or more, for example:
?filters[metadata]={"data_2":"[1,2]"}
Will return records with next values stored in the JSONB column metadata:
{ data_2: 1 }
{ data_2: 2 }
{ data_2: [1] }
{ data_2: [2] }
{ data_2: [1,2] }
{ data_2: [1,2,3] }When the null value is included in the array, it will return also all the records without any value in that property, for example:
?filters[metadata]={"data_2":"[false,null]"}
Will return records with next values stored in the JSONB column metadata:
{ data_2: null }
{ data_2: false }
{ data_2: [false] }
{ data_1: {another: 'information'} } # When the JSONB key "data_2" is not set.int type filters support sending the values as an array in the URL Query parameters. For example ?filters[id]=[1,2]. This is a way to keep payloads smaller for GET requests. When URI encoded this will become filters%5Bid%5D=%5B1,2%5D which is much smaller the standard format of filters%5Bid%5D%5B%5D=1&&filters%5Bid%5D%5B%5D=2.
On the server side, the params will be received as:
# JSON array encoded result
"filters"=>{"id"=>"[1,2]"}
# standard array format
"filters"=>{"id"=>["1", "2"]}Note that this feature cannot currently be wrapped in an array and should not be used in combination with sending array parameters individually.
?filters[id][]=[1,2]=> invalid?filters[id][]=[1,2]&filters[id][]=3=> invalid?filters[id]=[1,2]&filters[id]=3=> valid but only 3 is passed through to the server?filters[id]=[1,2]=> valid
JSON arrays contain the reserved characters "," and "[" and "]". When encoding a JSON array in the URL there are two different ways to handle the encoding. Both ways are supported by Rails.
For example, lets look at the following filter with a JSON array ?filters[id]=[1,2]:
?filters%5Bid%5D=%5B1,2%5D?filters%5Bid%5D%3D%5B1%2C2%5D
In both cases Rails will correctly decode to the expected result of
{ "filters" => { "id" => "[1,2]" } }Every sort must have a type, so that Sift knows what to do with it. The current valid sort types are:
- int - Sort on an integer column
- decimal - Sort on a decimal column
- string - Sort on a string column
- text - Sort on a text column
- date - Sort on a date column
- time - Sort on a time column
- datetime - Sort on a datetime column
- scope - Sort on an ActiveRecord scope
Just as your sort values are used to scope queries on a column, values you pass to a scope sort will be used as arguments to that scope. For example:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
scope :order_on_body_no_params, -> { order(body: :asc) }
scope :order_on_body, ->(direction) { order(body: direction) }
scope :order_on_body_then_id, ->(body_direction, id_direction) { order(body: body_direction).order(id: id_direction) }
end
class PostsController < ApplicationController
include Sift
sort_on :order_by_body_ascending, internal_name: :order_on_body_no_params, type: :scope
sort_on :order_by_body, internal_name: :order_on_body, type: :scope, scope_params: [:direction]
sort_on :order_by_body_then_id, internal_name: :order_on_body_then_id, type: :scope, scope_params: [:direction, :asc]
def index
render json: filtrate(Post.all)
end
endscope_params takes an order-specific array of the scope's arguments. Passing in the param :direction allows the consumer to choose which direction to sort in (ex. -order_by_body will sort :desc while order_by_body will sort :asc)
Passing ?sort=-order_by_body will call the order_on_body scope with
:desc as the argument. The direction is the only argument that the consumer has control over.
Passing ?sort=-order_by_body_then_id will call the order_on_body_then_id scope where the body_direction is :desc, and the id_direction is :asc. Note: in this example the user has no control over id_direction. To demonstrate:
Passing ?sort=order_by_body_then_id will call the order_on_body_then_id scope where the body_direction this time is :asc, but the id_direction remains :asc.
Scopes that accept no arguments are currently supported, but you should note that the user has no say in which direction it will sort on.
scope_params can also accept symbols that are keys in the params hash. The value will be fetched and passed on as an argument to the scope.
Filter:
?filters[<field_name>]=<value>
Filters are translated to Active Record wheres and are chained together. The order they are applied is not guarenteed.
Sort:
?sort=-published_at,position
Sort is translated to Active Record order The sorts are applied in the order they are passed by the client.
the - symbol means to sort in desc order. By default, keys are sorted in asc order.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'procore-sift'And then execute:
$ bundleOr install it yourself as:
$ gem install procore-siftWe have some future plans to remove the rails dependency so that other frameworks such as Sinatra could leverage this gem.
Installing gems before running tests:
$ bundle exec appraisal installRunning tests:
$ bundle exec appraisal rake testPublishing is done use the gem commandline tool. You must have permissions to publish a new version. Users with permissions can be seen here https://rubygems.org/gems/procore-sift.
When a bump is desired, the gemspec should have the version number bumped and merged into master.
Step 1: build the new version
gem build sift.gemspec
Successfully built RubyGem
Name: procore-sift
Version: 0.14.0
File: procore-sift-0.14.0.gem
Step2: Push the updated build
gem push procore-sift-0.14.0.gem
Pushing gem to https://rubygems.org...
Successfully registered gem: procore-sift (0.14.0)
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
The Procore Gem is maintained by Procore Technologies.
Procore - building the software that builds the world.
Learn more about the #1 most widely used construction management software at procore.com
