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- What's this?
Active Record Autosave Association
AutosaveAssociation is a module that takes care of automatically saving associated records when their parent is saved. In addition to saving, it also destroys any associated records that were marked for destruction. (See mark_for_destruction and marked_for_destruction?).
Saving of the parent, its associations, and the destruction of marked associations, all happen inside a transaction. This should never leave the database in an inconsistent state.
If validations for any of the associations fail, their error messages will be applied to the parent.
Note that it also means that associations marked for destruction won’t be destroyed directly. They will however still be marked for destruction.
Note that autosave: false is not same as not declaring :autosave. When the :autosave option is not present then new association records are saved but the updated association records are not saved.
Validation
Children records are validated unless :validate is false.
Callbacks
Association with autosave option defines several callbacks on your model (before_save, after_create, after_update). Please note that callbacks are executed in the order they were defined in model. You should avoid modifying the association content, before autosave callbacks are executed. Placing your callbacks after associations is usually a good practice.
One-to-one Example
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base has_one :author, autosave: true end
Saving changes to the parent and its associated model can now be performed automatically and atomically:
post = Post.find(1) post.title # => "The current global position of migrating ducks" post.author.name # => "alloy" post.title = "On the migration of ducks" post.author.name = "Eloy Duran" post.save post.reload post.title # => "On the migration of ducks" post.author.name # => "Eloy Duran"
Destroying an associated model, as part of the parent’s save action, is as simple as marking it for destruction:
post.author.mark_for_destruction post.author.marked_for_destruction? # => true
Note that the model is not yet removed from the database:
id = post.author.id Author.find_by(id: id).nil? # => false post.save post.reload.author # => nil
Now it is removed from the database:
Author.find_by(id: id).nil? # => true
One-to-many Example
When :autosave is not declared new children are saved when their parent is saved:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base has_many :comments # :autosave option is not declared end post = Post.new(title: 'ruby rocks') post.comments.build(body: 'hello world') post.save # => saves both post and comment post = Post.create(title: 'ruby rocks') post.comments.build(body: 'hello world') post.save # => saves both post and comment post = Post.create(title: 'ruby rocks') post.comments.create(body: 'hello world') post.save # => saves both post and comment
When :autosave is true all children are saved, no matter whether they are new records or not:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base has_many :comments, autosave: true end post = Post.create(title: 'ruby rocks') post.comments.create(body: 'hello world') post.comments[0].body = 'hi everyone' post.comments.build(body: "good morning.") post.title += "!" post.save # => saves both post and comments.
Destroying one of the associated models as part of the parent’s save action is as simple as marking it for destruction:
post.comments # => [#<Comment id: 1, ...>, #<Comment id: 2, ...]> post.comments[1].mark_for_destruction post.comments[1].marked_for_destruction? # => true post.comments.length # => 2
Note that the model is not yet removed from the database:
id = post.comments.last.id Comment.find_by(id: id).nil? # => false post.save post.reload.comments.length # => 1
Now it is removed from the database:
Comment.find_by(id: id).nil? # => true