Module: ActiveRecord::Serialization
- Extended by:
- ActiveSupport::Concern
- Includes:
- ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON, ActiveModel::Serializers::Xml
- Defined in:
- lib/active_record/serialization.rb,
lib/active_record/serializers/xml_serializer.rb
Overview
Active Record Serialization
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #serializable_hash(options = nil) ⇒ Object
-
#to_xml(options = {}, &block) ⇒ Object
Builds an XML document to represent the model.
Instance Method Details
#serializable_hash(options = nil) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/active_record/serialization.rb', line 7 def serializable_hash( = nil) = .try(:clone) || {} [:except] = Array.wrap([:except]).map { |n| n.to_s } [:except] |= Array.wrap(self.class.inheritance_column) hash = super() serializable_add_includes() do |association, records, opts| hash[association] = records.is_a?(Enumerable) ? records.map { |r| r.serializable_hash(opts) } : records.serializable_hash(opts) end hash end |
#to_xml(options = {}, &block) ⇒ Object
Builds an XML document to represent the model. Some configuration is available through options
. However more complicated cases should override ActiveRecord::Base#to_xml.
By default the generated XML document will include the processing instruction and all the object’s attributes. For example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<topic>
<title>The First Topic</title>
<author-name>David</author-name>
<id type="integer">1</id>
<approved type="boolean">false</approved>
<replies-count type="integer">0</replies-count>
<bonus-time type="datetime">2000-01-01T08:28:00+12:00</bonus-time>
<written-on type="datetime">2003-07-16T09:28:00+1200</written-on>
<content>Have a nice day</content>
<author-email-address>[email protected]</author-email-address>
<parent-id></parent-id>
<last-read type="date">2004-04-15</last-read>
</topic>
This behavior can be controlled with :only
, :except
, :skip_instruct
, :skip_types
, :dasherize
and :camelize
. The :only
and :except
options are the same as for the attributes
method. The default is to dasherize all column names, but you can disable this setting :dasherize
to false
. Setting :camelize
to true
will camelize all column names - this also overrides :dasherize
. To not have the column type included in the XML output set :skip_types
to true
.
For instance:
topic.to_xml(:skip_instruct => true, :except => [ :id, :bonus_time, :written_on, :replies_count ])
<topic>
<title>The First Topic</title>
<author-name>David</author-name>
<approved type="boolean">false</approved>
<content>Have a nice day</content>
<author-email-address>[email protected]</author-email-address>
<parent-id></parent-id>
<last-read type="date">2004-04-15</last-read>
</topic>
To include first level associations use :include
:
firm.to_xml :include => [ :account, :clients ]
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<firm>
<id type="integer">1</id>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>37signals</name>
<clients type="array">
<client>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>Summit</name>
</client>
<client>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>Microsoft</name>
</client>
</clients>
<account>
<id type="integer">1</id>
<credit-limit type="integer">50</credit-limit>
</account>
</firm>
Additionally, the record being serialized will be passed to a Proc’s second parameter. This allows for ad hoc additions to the resultant document that incorporate the context of the record being serialized. And by leveraging the closure created by a Proc, to_xml can be used to add elements that normally fall outside of the scope of the model – for example, generating and appending URLs associated with models.
proc = Proc.new { |options, record| options[:builder].tag!('name-reverse', record.name.reverse) }
firm.to_xml :procs => [ proc ]
<firm>
# ... normal attributes as shown above ...
<name-reverse>slangis73</name-reverse>
</firm>
To include deeper levels of associations pass a hash like this:
firm.to_xml :include => {:account => {}, :clients => {:include => :address}}
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<firm>
<id type="integer">1</id>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>37signals</name>
<clients type="array">
<client>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>Summit</name>
<address>
...
</address>
</client>
<client>
<rating type="integer">1</rating>
<name>Microsoft</name>
<address>
...
</address>
</client>
</clients>
<account>
<id type="integer">1</id>
<credit-limit type="integer">50</credit-limit>
</account>
</firm>
To include any methods on the model being called use :methods
:
firm.to_xml :methods => [ :calculated_earnings, :real_earnings ]
<firm>
# ... normal attributes as shown above ...
<calculated-earnings>100000000000000000</calculated-earnings>
<real-earnings>5</real-earnings>
</firm>
To call any additional Procs use :procs
. The Procs are passed a modified version of the options hash that was given to to_xml
:
proc = Proc.new { |options| options[:builder].tag!('abc', 'def') }
firm.to_xml :procs => [ proc ]
<firm>
# ... normal attributes as shown above ...
<abc>def</abc>
</firm>
Alternatively, you can yield the builder object as part of the to_xml
call:
firm.to_xml do |xml|
xml.creator do
xml.first_name "David"
xml.last_name "Heinemeier Hansson"
end
end
<firm>
# ... normal attributes as shown above ...
<creator>
<first_name>David</first_name>
<last_name>Heinemeier Hansson</last_name>
</creator>
</firm>
As noted above, you may override to_xml
in your ActiveRecord::Base subclasses to have complete control about what’s generated. The general form of doing this is:
class IHaveMyOwnXML < ActiveRecord::Base
def to_xml( = {})
[:indent] ||= 2
xml = [:builder] ||= Builder::XmlMarkup.new(:indent => [:indent])
xml.instruct! unless [:skip_instruct]
xml.level_one do
xml.tag!(:second_level, 'content')
end
end
end
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# File 'lib/active_record/serializers/xml_serializer.rb', line 174 def to_xml( = {}, &block) XmlSerializer.new(self, ).serialize(&block) end |