Serega Ruby Serializer
The Serega Ruby Serializer provides easy and powerful DSL to describe your objects and to serialize them to Hash or JSON.
📌 Serega does not depend on any gem and works with any framework
It has some great features:
- Manually select serialized fields
- Solutions for N+1 problem (via batch, preloads or activerecord_preloads plugins)
- Built-in object presenter (presenter plugin)
- Adding custom metadata (via metadata or context_metadata plugins)
- Attributes formatters (formatters plugin)
Installation
bundle add serega
Define serializers
Most apps should define base serializer with common plugins and settings to not repeat them in each serializer. Children serializers will inherit everything (plugins, config, attributes) from parent.
class AppSerializer < Serega
# plugin :one
# plugin :two
# config.one = :one
# config.two = :two
end
class UserSerializer < AppSerializer
# attribute :one
# attribute :two
end
class CommentSerializer < AppSerializer
# attribute :one
# attribute :two
end
Adding attributes
class UserSerializer < Serega
# Regular attribute
attribute :first_name
# Option :key specifies method in object
attribute :first_name, key: :old_first_name
# Block is used to define attribute value
attribute(:first_name) { |user| user.profile&.first_name }
# Option :value can be used with callable object to define attribute value
attribute :first_name, value: proc { |user| user.profile&.first_name }
# Option :delegate can be used to define attribute value. Sub-option :allow_nil by default is false
attribute :first_name, delegate: { to: :profile, allow_nil: true }
# Option :delegate can be used with :key sub-option to change method called on delegated object
attribute :first_name, delegate: { to: :profile, key: :fname }
# Option :const specifies attribute with specific constant value
attribute(:type, const: 'user')
# Option :hide specifies attributes that should not be serialized by default
attribute :tags, hide: true
# Option :serializer specifies nested serializer for attribute
# We can specify serializer as Class, String or Proc.
# Use String or Proc if you have cross references in serializers.
attribute :posts, serializer: PostSerializer
attribute :posts, serializer: "PostSerializer"
attribute :posts, serializer: -> { PostSerializer }
# Option `:many` specifies a has_many relationship
# Usually it is defined automatically by checking `is_a?(Enumerable)`
attribute :posts, serializer: PostSerializer, many: true
# Option `:preload` can be specified when enabled `:preloads` plugin
# It allows to specify associations to preload to attribute value
attribute :email, preload: :emails, value: proc { |user| user.emails.find(&:verified?) }
# Option `:hide_nil` can be specified when enabled `:hide_nil` plugin
# It is literally hides attribute if its value is nil
attribute :email, hide_nil: true
# Option `:format` can be specified when enabled `:formatters` plugin
# It changes attribute value
attribute :created_at, format: :iso_time
attribute :updated_at, format: :iso_time
# Option `:format` also can be used as Proc
attribute :created_at, format: proc { |time| time.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")}
end
Serializing
We can serialize objects using class methods .to_h
, .to_json
, .as_json
and same instance methods #to_h
, #to_json
, #as_json
.
to_h
method is also aliased as call
.
user = OpenStruct.new(username: 'serega')
class UserSerializer < Serega
attribute :username
end
UserSerializer.to_h(user) # => {username: "serega"}
UserSerializer.to_h([user]) # => [{username: "serega"}]
UserSerializer.to_json(user) # => '{"username":"serega"}'
UserSerializer.to_json([user]) # => '[{"username":"serega"}]'
UserSerializer.as_json(user) # => {"username":"serega"}
UserSerializer.as_json([user]) # => [{"username":"serega"}]
⚠️ When you serialize Struct
object, specify manually many: false
. As Struct is Enumerable and we check object.is_a?(Enumerable)
to detect if we should return array.
UserSerializer.to_h(user_struct, many: false)
Selecting Fields
By default all attributes are serialized (except marked as hide: true
).
We can provide modifiers to select only needed attributes:
- only - lists attributes to serialize;
- except - lists attributes to not serialize;
- with - lists attributes to serialize additionally (By default all attributes are exposed and will be serialized, but some attributes can be hidden when they are defined with
hide: true
option, more on this below.with
modifier can be used to expose such attributes).
Modifiers can be provided as Hash, Array, String, Symbol or their combinations.
With plugin string_modifiers we can provide modifiers as single String
with attributes split by comma ,
and nested values inside brackets ()
, like: username,enemies(username,email)
. This can be very useful to accept list of field in GET requests.
When provided non-existing attribute, Serega::AttributeNotExist
error will be raised. This error can be muted with check_initiate_params: false
parameter.
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :string_modifiers # to send all modifiers in one string
attribute :username
attribute :first_name
attribute :last_name
attribute :email, hide: true
attribute :enemies, serializer: UserSerializer, hide: true
end
joker = OpenStruct.new(username: 'The Joker', first_name: 'jack', last_name: 'Oswald White', email: '[email protected]', enemies: [])
bruce = OpenStruct.new(username: 'Batman', first_name: 'Bruce', last_name: 'Wayne', email: '[email protected]', enemies: [])
joker.enemies << bruce
bruce.enemies << joker
# Default
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce) # => {:username=>"Batman", :first_name=>"Bruce", :last_name=>"Wayne"}
# With `:only` modifier
# Next 3 lines are identical:
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, only: [:username, { enemies: [:username, :email] }])
UserSerializer.new(only: [:username, { enemies: [:username, :email] }]).to_h(bruce)
UserSerializer.new(only: 'username,enemies(username,email)').to_h(bruce)
# => {:username=>"Batman", :enemies=>[{:username=>"The Joker", :email=>"[email protected]"}]}
# With `:except` modifier
# Next 3 lines are identical:
UserSerializer.new(except: %i[first_name last_name]).to_h(bruce)
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, except: %i[first_name last_name])
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, except: 'first_name,last_name')
# => {:username=>"Batman"}
# With `:with` modifier
# Next 3 lines are identical:
UserSerializer.new(with: %i[email enemies]).to_h(bruce)
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, with: %i[email enemies])
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, with: 'email,enemies')
# => {:username=>"Batman", :first_name=>"Bruce", :last_name=>"Wayne", :email=>"[email protected]", :enemies=>[{:username=>"The Joker", :first_name=>"jack", :last_name=>"Oswald White"}]}
# With not existing attribute
# Next 3 lines are identical:
UserSerializer.new(only: %i[first_name enemy]).to_h(bruce)
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, only: %i[first_name enemy])
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, only: 'first_name,enemy')
# => raises Serega::AttributeNotExist, "Attribute 'enemy' not exists"
# With not existing attribute and disabled validation
# Next 3 lines are identical:
UserSerializer.new(only: %i[first_name enemy], check_initiate_params: false).to_h(bruce)
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, only: %i[first_name enemy], check_initiate_params: false)
UserSerializer.to_h(bruce, only: 'first_name,enemy', check_initiate_params: false)
# => {:first_name=>"Bruce"}
Using Context
Sometimes you can decide to use some context during serialization, like current_user or any.
class UserSerializer < Serega
attribute(:email) do |user, ctx|
user.email if ctx[:current_user] == user
end
end
user = OpenStruct.new(email: '[email protected]')
UserSerializer.(user, context: {current_user: user}) # => {:email=>"[email protected]"}
UserSerializer.new.to_h(user, context: {current_user: user}) # same
Configuration
This is initial config options, other config options can be added by plugins
class AppSerializer < Serega
# Configure adapter to serialize to JSON.
# It is `JSON.dump` by default. When Oj gem is loaded then default is `Oj.dump(data, mode: :compat)`
config.to_json = ->(data) { Oj.dump(data, mode: :compat) }
# Configure adapter to de-serialize JSON. De-serialization is used only for `#as_json` method.
# It is `JSON.parse` by default. When Oj gem is loaded then default is `Oj.load(data)`
config.from_json = ->(data) { Oj.load(data) }
# Disable/enable validation of modifiers params `:with`, `:except`, `:only`
# By default it is enabled. After disabling, when provided not existed attribute it will be just skipped.
config.check_initiate_params = false # default is true, enabled
# Stores in memory prepared `maps` of serialized attributes during serialization.
# Next time serialization happens with same modifiers (`:only, :except, :with`), we will use already prepared `map`.
# Setting defines storage size (count of stored `maps` with different modifiers).
config.max_cached_map_per_serializer_count = 50 # default is 0, disabled
end
Plugins
Plugin :preloads
Allows to define :preloads
to attributes and then allows to merge preloads
from serialized attributes and return single associations hash.
Plugin accepts options:
auto_preload_attributes_with_delegate
- default falseauto_preload_attributes_with_serializer
- default falseauto_hide_attributes_with_preload
- default false
This options are very handy if you want to forget about finding preloads manually.
Preloads can be disabled with preload: false
attribute option option.
Also automatically added preloads can be overwritten with manually specified preload: :another_value
.
Some examples, please read comments in the code below
class AppSerializer < Serega
plugin :preloads,
auto_preload_attributes_with_delegate: true,
auto_preload_attributes_with_serializer: true,
auto_hide_attributes_with_preload: true
end
class UserSerializer < AppSerializer
# No preloads
attribute :username
# Specify `preload: :user_stats` manually
attribute :followers_count, preload: :user_stats, value: proc { |user| user.user_stats.followers_count }
# Automatically `preloads: :user_stats` as `auto_preload_attributes_with_delegate` option is true
attribute :comments_count, delegate: { to: :user_stats }
# Automatically `preloads: :albums` as `auto_preload_attributes_with_serializer` option is true
attribute :albums, serializer: 'AlbumSerializer'
end
class AlbumSerializer < AppSerializer
attribute :images_count, delegate: { to: :album_stats }
end
# By default preloads are empty, as we specify `auto_hide_attributes_with_preload = true`,
# and attributes with preloads will be not serialized
UserSerializer.new.preloads # => {}
UserSerializer.new.to_h(OpenStruct.new(username: 'foo')) # => {:username=>"foo"}
UserSerializer.new(with: :followers_count).preloads # => {:user_stats=>{}}
UserSerializer.new(with: %i[followers_count comments_count]).preloads # => {:user_stats=>{}}
UserSerializer.new(with: [:followers_count, :comments_count, { albums: :images_count }]).preloads # => {:user_stats=>{}, :albums=>{:album_stats=>{}}}
One tricky case, that you will probably never see in real life:
Manually you can preload multiple associations, like this:
attribute :image, serializer: ImageSerializer, preload: { attachment: :blob }, value: proc { |record| record. }
In this case we mark last element (in this case it will be blob
) as main,
so nested associations, if any, will be preloaded to this blob
.
If you need to preload them to attachment
,
please specify additionally :preload_path
option like this:
attribute :image, serializer: ImageSerializer, preload: { attachment: :blob }, preload_path: %i[attachment], value: proc { |record| record. }
📌 Plugin :preloads
only allows to group preloads together in single Hash, but they should be preloaded manually. For now there are only activerecord_preloads plugin that can automatically preload associations.
Plugin :activerecord_preloads
(depends on preloads plugin, that must be loaded first)
Automatically preloads associations to serialized objects.
It takes all defined preloads from serialized attributes (including attributes from serialized relations), merges them into single associations hash and then uses ActiveRecord::Associations::Preloader to preload associations to serialized objects.
class AppSerializer < Serega
plugin :preloads,
auto_preload_attributes_with_delegate: true,
auto_preload_attributes_with_serializer: true,
auto_hide_attributes_with_preload: false
plugin :activerecord_preloads
end
class UserSerializer < AppSerializer
attribute :username
attribute :comments_count, delegate: { to: :user_stats }
attribute :albums, serializer: AlbumSerializer
end
class AlbumSerializer < AppSerializer
attribute :title
attribute :downloads_count, preload: :downloads, value: proc { |album| album.downloads.count }
end
UserSerializer.to_h(user) # => preloads {users_stats: {}, albums: { downloads: {} }}
Plugin :batch
Adds ability to load attributes values in batches.
It can be used to omit N+1, to calculate counters for different objects in single query, to request any data from external storage.
Added new :batch
attribute option, example:
attribute :name, batch: { key: :id, loader: :name_loader, default: '' }
:batch
option must be a hash with this keys:
- :key (required) [Symbol, Proc, callable] - Defines identifier of current object
- :loader (required) [Symbol, Proc, callable] - Defines how to fetch values for batch of keys. Accepts 3 parameters: keys, context, point.
- :default (optional) - Default value used when loader does not return value for current key. By default it is
nil
or[]
when attribute has additional optionmany: true
(attribute :name, many: true, batch: { ... }
).
If :loader
was defined via Symbol then batch loader must be defined using config.batch_loaders.define(:loader_name) { ... }
method.
Result of this block must be a Hash where keys are - provided keys, and values are - batch loaded values for according keys.
Batch loader works well with activerecord_preloads
plugin.
class PostSerializer < Serega
plugin :batch
# Define batch loader via callable class, it must accept three args (keys, context, nested_attributes)
attribute :comments_count, batch: { key: :id, loader: PostCommentsCountBatchLoader, default: 0}
# Define batch loader via Symbol, later we should define this loader via config.batch_loaders.define(:posts_comments_counter) { ... }
attribute :comments_count, batch: { key: :id, loader: :posts_comments_counter, default: 0}
# Define batch loader with serializer
attribute :comments, serializer: CommentSerializer, batch: { key: :id, loader: :posts_comments, default: []}
# Resulted block must return hash like { key => value(s) }
config.batch_loaders.define(:posts_comments_counter) do |keys|
Comment.group(:post_id).where(post_id: keys).count
end
# We can return objects that will be automatically serialized if attribute defined with :serializer
# Parameter `context` can be used when loading batch
# Parameter `point` can be used to find nested attributes that will be serialized
config.batch_loaders.define(:posts_comments) do |keys, context, point|
# point.nested_points - if you need to manually check all nested attributes that will be serialized
# point.preloads - if you need to find nested preloads (works with :preloads plugin only)
Comment
.preload(point.preloads) # Can be skipped when used :activerecord_preloads plugin
.where(post_id: keys)
.where(is_spam: false)
.group_by(&:post_id)
end
end
Plugin :root
Allows to add root key to your serialized data
Accepts options:
- :root - specifies root for all responses
- :root_one - specifies root for single object serialization only
- :root_many - specifies root for multiple objects serialization only
Adds additional config options:
- config.root.one
- config.root.many
- config.root.one=
- config.root_many=
Default root is :data
.
Root also can be changed per serialization.
Also root can be removed for all responses by providing root: nil
. In this case no root will be added to response, but
you still can to add it per serialization
#@example Define plugin
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root # default root is :data
end
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root, root: :users
end
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root, root_one: :user, root_many: :people
end
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root, root: nil # no root by default
end
# @example Change root per serialization:
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root
end
UserSerializer.to_h(nil) # => {:data=>nil}
UserSerializer.to_h(nil, root: :user) # => {:user=>nil}
UserSerializer.to_h(nil, root: nil) # => nil
Plugin :metadata
Depends on: :root
plugin, that must be loaded first
Adds ability to describe metadata and adds it to serialized response
Added class-level method :meta_attribute
, to define metadata, it accepts:
- *path [Array
] - nested hash keys beginning from the root object. - **options [Hash] - defaults are
hide_nil: false, hide_empty: false
- &block [Proc] - describes value for current meta attribute
class AppSerializer < Serega
plugin :root
plugin :metadata
(:version) { '1.2.3' }
(:ab_tests, :names) { %i[foo bar] }
(:meta, :paging, hide_nil: true) do |records, ctx|
next unless records.respond_to?(:total_count)
{ page: records.page, per_page: records.per_page, total_count: records.total_count }
end
end
AppSerializer.to_h(nil) # => {:data=>nil, :version=>"1.2.3", :ab_tests=>{:names=>[:foo, :bar]}}
Plugin :context_metadata
Depends on: :root
plugin, that must be loaded first
Allows to provide metadata and attach it to serialized response.
Accepts option :context_metadata_key
with name of keyword that must be used to provide metadata. By default it is :meta
Key can be changed in children serializers using config config.context_metadata.key=(value)
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :root, root: :data
plugin :context_metadata, context_metadata_key: :meta
# Same:
# plugin :context_metadata
# config.context_metadata.key = :meta
end
UserSerializer.to_h(nil, meta: { version: '1.0.1' })
# => {:data=>nil, :version=>"1.0.1"}
Plugin :formatters
Allows to define formatters
and apply them on attributes.
Config option config.formatters.add
can be used to add formatters.
Attribute option :format
now can be used with name of formatter or with callable instance.
class AppSerializer < Serega
plugin :formatters, formatters: {
iso8601: ->(value) { time.iso8601.round(6) },
on_off: ->(value) { value ? 'ON' : 'OFF' },
money: ->(value) { value.round(2) }
}
end
class UserSerializer < Serega
# Additionally we can add formatters via config in subclasses
config.formatters.add(
iso8601: ->(value) { time.iso8601.round(6) },
on_off: ->(value) { value ? 'ON' : 'OFF' },
money: ->(value) { value.round(2) }
)
# Using predefined formatter
attribute :commission, format: :money
attribute :is_logined, format: :on_off
attribute :created_at, format: :iso8601
attribute :updated_at, format: :iso8601
# Using `callable` formatter
attribute :score_percent, format: PercentFormmatter # callable class
attribute :score_percent, format: proc { |percent| "#{percent.round(2)}%" }
end
Plugin :presenter
Helps to write clear code by adding attribute names as methods to Presenter
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :presenter
attribute :name
attribute :address
class Presenter
def name
[first_name, last_name].compact_blank.join(' ')
end
def address
[country, city, address].join("\n")
end
end
end
Plugin :string_modifiers
Allows to specify modifiers as strings.
Serialized attributes must be split with ,
and nested attributes must be defined inside brackets (
, )
.
Modifiers can still be provided old way with nested hashes or arrays.
PostSerializer.plugin :string_modifiers
PostSerializer.new(only: "id,user(id,username)").to_h(post)
PostSerializer.new(except: "user(username,email)").to_h(post)
PostSerializer.new(with: "user(email)").to_h(post)
# Modifiers can still be provided old way with nested hashes or arrays.
PostSerializer.new(with: {user: %i[email, username]}).to_h(post)
Plugin :hide_nil
Allows to hide attributes with nil
values
class UserSerializer < Serega
plugin :hide_nil
attribute :email, hide_nil: true
end
Errors
Serega::SeregaError
is a base error raised by this gem.Serega::AttributeNotExist
error is raised when validating attributes in:only, :except, :with
modifiers
Release
To release a new version, read RELEASE.md.
Development
bundle install
- install dependenciesbin/console
- open irb console with loaded gemsbundle exec rspec
- run testsbundle exec rubocop
- check code standardsyard stats --list-undoc --no-cache
- view undocumented codeyard server --reload
- view code documentation
Contributing
Bug reports, pull requests and improvements ideas are very welcome!
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.