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Support functions for ActiveRecord models with periodic entries

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PeriodicRecords

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Support functions for ActiveRecord models with periodic entries.

  • Supports periods where the smallest unit is a whole day
  • Adjusts and splits overlapping records
  • Preloads currently active records to avoid N+1 queries
  • Easy querying within history - join returns 0..1 records (no grouping needed) LEFT JOIN ... ON ... AND <date> BETWEEN start_at AND end_at

For example you have employees table and assignments table that stores all the employment history.

Employees:

id name
1 John

Employee assignments:

id employee_id start_at end_at job_title
1 1 2014-01-01 9999-01-01 Developer

Now John is promoted to "Senior Developer" and you create a new employee assignment record and this gem will take care of adjusting and splitting overlapping records. In this case it will adjust the end_at field for the previous assignment.

id employee_id start_at end_at job_title
1 1 2014-01-01 2018-05-04 Developer
2 1 2018-05-05 9999-01-01 Senior Developer

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'periodic_records'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install periodic_records

Preparation

Ensure start_at and end_at date columns on the model that will have periodic versions. Include PeriodicRecords::Model and define siblings method:

class EmployeeAssignment < ActiveRecord::Base
  include PeriodicRecords::Model

  belongs_to :employee

  def siblings
    self.class.where(employee_id: employee_id).where.not(id: id)
  end
end

Include PeriodicRecords::Associations in the model that has periodic associations, and call has_periodic:

class Employee < ActiveRecord::Base
  include PeriodicRecords::Associations

  has_many :employee_assignments, inverse_of: :employee
  has_periodic :employee_assignments, as: :assignments
end

Usage

Look up the currently active record with model.current_association:

employee.current_assignment

Look up records for specific date or period with within_date and within_interval:

employee.employee_assignments.within_date(Date.tomorrow)
employee.employee_assignments.within_interval(Date.current.beginning_of_month, Date.current.end_of_month)

Look up records starting with specific date with from_date

employee.employee_assignments.from_date(Date.tomorrow)

Preload currently active records, to avoid N+1 queries on current_assignment.

employees = Employee.all
Employee.preload_current_assignments(employees)
employees.each do |employee|
  puts employee.current_assignment.to_s
end

Database Constraints

To avoid inconsistent data in race conditions, you can add database constraint that checks overlapping periods.

Postgres:

class AddEmployeeAssignmentsOverlappingDatesConstraint < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def up
    execute "CREATE EXTENSION IF NOT EXISTS btree_gist"
    execute <<-SQL
      ALTER TABLE employee_assignments
      ADD CONSTRAINT employee_assignments_overlapping_dates
      EXCLUDE USING GIST(
        employee_id WITH =,
        DATERANGE(start_at, end_at, '[]') WITH &&
      )
    SQL
  end

  def down
    execute <<-SQL.squish
      ALTER TABLE employee_assignments
      DROP CONSTRAINT employee_assignments_overlapping_dates
    SQL
  end
end

Time sensitive records

If you need your records to be split with time component, then set start_at and end_at columns to datetime type.

Use TSRANGE instead of DATERANGE when creating database constraint.

Gapless records

If you want to avoid gaps between records, you can include also PeriodicRecords::Gapless.

class EmployeeAssignment < ActiveRecord::Base
  include PeriodicRecords::Model
  include PeriodicRecords::Gapless

  belongs_to :employee

  def siblings
    self.class.where(employee_id: employee_id).where.not(id: id)
  end
end

Example:

id employee_id start_at end_at job_title
1 1 0001-01-01 2018-01-15 Junior Developer
2 1 2018-01-16 2018-02-15 Developer
3 1 2018-02-16 9999-01-01 Senior Developer

If you update #2 from 2018-01-16 - 2018-02-15 to 2018-01-20 - 2018-02-10, it will also adjust end at for #1 and start at for #3 to avoid gaps between records.

After (with Gapless):

id employee_id start_at end_at job_title
1 1 0001-01-01 2018-01-19 Junior Developer
2 1 2018-01-20 2018-02-10 Developer
3 1 2018-02-11 9999-01-01 Senior Developer

After (without Gapless):

id employee_id start_at end_at job_title
1 1 0001-01-01 2018-01-15 Junior Developer
2 1 2018-01-20 2018-02-10 Developer
3 1 2018-02-16 9999-01-01 Senior Developer

If you delete #2 then it will adjust end at for #1.

You will not be able to delete entry that is at the beginning (#1) or at the end (#3).

You will not be able to adjust start at for the beginning entry (#1).

You will not be able to adjust end at for the ending entry (#3).

For more examples see gapless_spec.rb.

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release to create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/mak-it/periodic_records/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

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