Do not multiply entities beyond necessity. -- Occam's Razor
Learn OccamsRecord by reading The Book at occams.jordanhollinger.com.
API documentation is available at rubydoc.info/gems/occams-record.
Want OccamsRecord's flexible preloading in ActiveRecord itself? Check out Uberloader!
OccamsRecord is a high-efficiency, advanced query library for use alongside ActiveRecord. It is not an ORM or an ActiveRecord replacement. OccamsRecord can breathe fresh life into your ActiveRecord app by giving it two things:
- 3x-5x faster than ActiveRecord queries, minimum.
- Uses 1/3 the memory of ActiveRecord query results.
- Eliminates the N+1 query problem. (This often exceeds the baseline 3x-5x gain.)
- Customize the SQL used to eager load associations (order them, apply filters, etc)
- Use cursors (Postgres only)
- Use
ORDER BY
withfind_each
/find_in_batches
- Use
find_each
/find_in_batches
with raw SQL - Eager load associations off of raw SQL queries
- Use
pluck
with raw SQL queries
Look over the speed and memory measurements yourself! OccamsRecord achieves all of this by making some very specific trade-offs:
- OccamsRecord results are read-only.
- OccamsRecord results are purely database rows - they don't have any instance methods from your Rails models.
- You must eager load each assocation you intend to use. If you try to use one you didn't eager load, an exception will be raised.
Full documentation is available at rubydoc.info/gems/occams-record. Code lives at at github.com/jhollinger/occams-record. Contributions welcome!
Simply add occams-record
to your Gemfile
:
gem 'occams-record'
Build your queries like normal, using ActiveRecord's excellent query builder. Then pass them off to Occams Record.
q = Order
.completed
.where("order_date > ?", 30.days.ago)
.order("order_date DESC")
orders = OccamsRecord
.query(q)
.run
each
, map
, reduce
, and other Enumerable methods may be used instead of run. find_each
and find_in_batches
are also supported, and unlike in ActiveRecord, ORDER BY
works as you'd expect.
Occams Record has great support for raw SQL queries too, but we'll get to those later.
Eager loading is similiar to ActiveRecord's preload
: each association is loaded in a separate query. Unlike ActiveRecord, nested associations use blocks instead of Hashes. More importantly, if you try to use an association you didn't eager load an exception will be raised. In other words, the N+1 query problem simply doesn't exist.
OccamsRecord
.query(q)
.eager_load(:customer)
.eager_load(:line_items) { |l|
l.eager_load(:product)
l.eager_load(:something_else)
}
.find_each { |order|
puts order.customer.name
order.line_items.each { |line_item|
puts line_item.product.name
puts line_item.product.category.name
OccamsRecord::MissingEagerLoadError: Association 'category' is unavailable on Product because it was not eager loaded! Found at root.line_items.product
}
}
Occams Record allows you to tweak the SQL of any eager load. Pull back only the columns you need, change the order, add a WHERE
clause, etc.
orders = OccamsRecord
.query(q)
# Only SELECT the columns you need. Your DBA will thank you.
.eager_load(:customer, select: "id, name")
# Or use 'scope' to access the full power of ActiveRecord's query builder.
# Here, only 'active' line items will be returned, and in a specific order.
.eager_load(:line_items) { |l|
l.scope { |q| q.active.order("created_at") }
l.eager_load(:product)
l.eager_load(:something_else)
}
.run
Occams Record also supports loading ad hoc associations using raw SQL. We'll get to that in a later section.
find_each_with_cursor
/find_in_batches_with_cursor
work like find_each
/find_in_batches
, except they use cursors. For large data sets, cursors offer a noticible speed boost. Postgres only.
OccamsRecord
.query(q)
.eager_load(:customer)
.find_each_with_cursor do |order|
...
end
The cursor.open
method allows lower level access to cursor behavior. See OccamsRecord::Cursor
for more info.
orders = OccamsRecord
.query(q)
.eager_load(:customer)
.cursor
.open do |cursor|
cursor.move(:forward, 300)
cursor.fetch(:forward, 100)
end
ActiveRecord has raw SQL escape hatches like find_by_sql
and exec_query
, but they give up critical features like eager loading and find_each
/find_in_batches
. Occams Record's escape hatches don't make you give up anything.
Query params
# Supported in all versions of OccamsRecord
OccamsRecord.sql("SELECT * FROM orders WHERE user_id = %{user_id}", {user_id: user.id}).run
# Supported in OccamsRecord 1.9+
OccamsRecord.sql("SELECT * FROM orders WHERE user_id = :user_id", {user_id: user.id}).run
OccamsRecord.sql("SELECT * FROM orders WHERE user_id = ?", [user.id]).run
OccamsRecord.sql("SELECT * FROM orders WHERE user_id = %s", [user.id]).run
Batched loading with cursors
find_each_with_cursor
, find_in_batches_with_cursor
, and cursor.open
are all available.
OccamsRecord
.sql("
SELECT * FROM orders
WHERE order_date > %{date}
ORDER BY order_date DESC, id
", {
date: 10.years.ago
})
.find_each_with_cursor(batch_size: 1000) do |order|
...
end
Batched loading without cursors
If your database doesn't support cursors, you can use find_each
/find_in_batches
. Just provide LIMIT
and OFFSET
(see below), and Occams will plug in the right numbers.
OccamsRecord
.sql("
SELECT * FROM orders
WHERE order_date > %{date}
ORDER BY order_date DESC, id
LIMIT %{batch_limit}
OFFSET %{batch_offset}
", {
date: 10.years.ago
})
.find_each(batch_size: 1000) do |order|
...
end
Eager loading
To use eager_load
with a raw SQL query you must tell Occams what the base model is. (That doesn't apply if you're loading an ad hoc, raw SQL association. We'll get to those next.)
orders = OccamsRecord
.sql("
SELECT * FROM orders
WHERE order_date > %{date}
ORDER BY order_date DESC, id
", {
date: 30.days.ago
})
.model(Order)
.eager_load(:customer)
.run
Let's say we want to load each product with an array of all customers who've ordered it. We could do that by loading various nested associations:
products_with_orders = OccamsRecord
.query(Product.all)
.eager_load(:line_items) { |l|
l.eager_load(:order) { |l|
l.eager_load(:customer)
}
}
.map { |product|
customers = product.line_items.map(&:order).map(&:customer).uniq
[product, customers]
}
But that's very wasteful. Occams gives us better options: eager_load_many
and eager_load_one
.
products = OccamsRecord
.query(Product.all)
.eager_load_many(:customers, {:id => :product_id}, "
SELECT DISTINCT product_id, customers.*
FROM line_items
INNER JOIN orders ON line_items.order_id = orders.id
INNER JOIN customers on orders.customer_id = customers.id
WHERE line_items.product_id IN (%{ids})
", binds: {
# additional bind values (ids will be passed in for you)
})
.run
eager_load_many
is declaring an ad hoc has_many association called customers. The {:id => :product_id}
Hash defines the mapping: id in the parent record maps to product_id in the child records.
The SQL string and binds should be familiar. %{ids}
will be provided for you - just stick it in the right place. Note that it won't always be called ids; the name will be the plural version of the key in your mapping.
eager_load_one
defines an ad hoc has_one
/belongs_to
association. It and eager_load_many
are available with both OccamsRecord.query
and OccamsRecord.sql
.
Occams Records results are just plain rows; there are no methods from your Rails models. (Separating your persistence layer from your domain is good thing!) But sometimes you need a few methods. Occams Record provides two ways of accomplishing this.
You may also specify one or more modules to be included in your results:
module MyOrderMethods
def description
"#{order_number} - #{date}"
end
end
module MyProductMethods
def expensive?
price > 100
end
end
orders = OccamsRecord
.query(Order.all, use: MyOrderMethods)
.eager_load(:line_items) {
eager_load(:product, use: [MyProductMethods, OtherMethods])
}
.run
This is an ugly hack of last resort if you can't easily extract a method from your model into a shared module. Plugins, like carrierwave
, are a good example. When you call a method that doesn't exist on an Occams Record result, it will initialize an ActiveRecord object and forward the method call to it.
The active_record_fallback
option must be passed either :lazy
or :strict
(recommended). :strict
enables ActiveRecord's strict loading option, helping you avoid N+1 queries. :lazy allows them. Note that :strict
is only available for ActiveRecord 6.1 and later.
The following will forward any nonexistent methods for Order
and Product
records:
orders = OccamsRecord
.query(Order.all, active_record_fallback: :strict)
.eager_load(:line_items) {
eager_load(:product, active_record_fallback: :strict)
}
.run
The following ActiveRecord features are under consideration, but not high priority. Pull requests welcome!
- Eager loading
through
associations that involve ahas_and_belongs_to_many
.
The following ActiveRecord features are not supported, and likely never will be. Pull requests are still welcome, though.
- Eager loading
through
associations that involve a polymorphic association. - ActiveRecord serialized types
bundle exec rake bench
will run a suite of speed and memory benchmarks comparing Occams Record to Active Record. You can find an example of a typical run here. These are primarily used during development to prevent performance regressions. An in-memory Sqlite database is used.
If you run your own benchmarks, keep in mind exactly what you're measuring. For example if you're benchmarking a report written in AR vs OR, there are many constants in that measurement: the time spent in the database, the time spent sending the database results over the network, any calculations you're doing in Ruby, and the time spent building your html/json/csv/etc. So if OR is 3x faster than AR, the total runtime of said report won't improve by 3x.
On the other hand, Active Record makes it very easy to forget to eager load associations (the N+1 query problem). Occams Record fixes that. So if your report was missing some associations you could see easily see performance improvements well over 3x.
Tests are run with appraisal
in Docker Compose using the bin/test
or bin/testall
scripts. See test/matrix for the full list of Ruby, ActiveRecord, and database versions that are tested against.
# Run tests against all supported ActiveRecord versions, Ruby versions, and databases
bin/testall
# Run tests only for Ruby 3.1
bin/testall ruby-3.1
# Run tests only for Ruby 3.1 and ActiveRecored 6.1
bin/testall ruby-3.1 ar-6.1
# Run tests against a specific database
bin/testall sqlite3|postgres-14|mysql-8
# Run exactly one set of tests
bin/test ruby-3.1 ar-7.0 postgres-14
# Use Podman Compose
OCCAMS_PODMAN=1 bin/testall
# If all tests complete successfully, you'll be rewarded by an ASCII Nyancat!
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+ o + +
o +
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+ o o + o
-_-_-_-_-_-_-_,------, o
_-_-_-_-_-_-_-| /\_/\
-_-_-_-_-_-_-~|__( ^ .^) + +
_-_-_-_-_-_-_-"" ""
+ o o + o
+ +
o o o o +
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+ + o o +
It's possible to run tests without Docker Compose, but you'll be limited by the Ruby version(s) and database(s) you have on your system.
bundle install
bundle exec appraisal ar-7.0 bundle install
bundle exec appraisal ar-7.0 rake test
MIT License. See LICENSE for details.
Copywrite (c) 2019 Jordan Hollinger.