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Add data mart and pivoting functionality to Active Record models

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Martyr

A multi-dimensional semantic layer on top of ActiveRecord that allows running pivot table queries and rendering them as CSV, HTML, or KickChart-ready hashes. Supports time dimensions, cohort analysis, custom rollups, and drilling through to the underlying ActiveRecord objects.

Designed predominantly to allow staff members and site owners to slice and dice data and easily produce reports.

Warning: This gem is not production ready.

More to come...

The problem

The following simple queries demonstrate a core issue with relational data:

# Fetch count of all posts that were created 3 days ago
Post.where('created_at > ?', 3.days.ago)

# Fetch count of all posts that were created by the author whose email is [email protected]
Post.joins(:author).where('authors.email' => '[email protected]')

These two queries represent similar requests from the perspective of a human user. However, fulfilling these requests requires knowledge about the structure of the database. This limits the ability to provide "free form" slicing and dicing of data.

Compare these queries with Martyr standard query interface:

# Fetch count of all posts that were created 3 days ago
PostCube.slice('post.created_at', gt: 3.days.ago)

# Fetch count of all posts that were created by the author whose email is [email protected]
PostCube.slice('author.email', with: '[email protected]')

# As a compound hash format:
PostCube.slice('author.email' => {with: '[email protected]'}, 'post.created_at' => {gt: 3.days.ago})

The last example demonstrates an important aspect of Martyr. A simple standard hash - which can be easily serialized over HTTP requests - represents a slice of data that can be further manipulated. This means you can have one standard controller action for displaying tables and graphs of any data you like.

Martyr keeps track of the slice of every element you query:

pivot_table = PostCube.slice('post.created_at', gt: 3.days.ago).pivot.on_columns('post_count').on_rows('authors.email')
first_row = pivot_table.rows.first
cell = first_row.cell_at['post_count']
cell.coordinates
# => { 'metric' => 'posts_cube.post_count', 'post.created_at' => {gt: 3.days.ago}, 'authors.email' => {with: '[email protected]'} }

So an ERB partial that renders this cell as a link to another report - number of comments per post-type for that particular author and created_at constraints - may look like this:

<% data = Base64.urlsafe_encode64 {current_slice: cell.coordinates,
                                   on_rows: ['post.type'],
                                   on_columns: ['comment.type'],
                                   view: 'my_drill_down_report' }.to_json %>

<%= link_to cell.value, standard_report_action_path(data: data) %>

And the standard (non-secure) controller action can be as simple as:

def standard_drill_down
  hash = JSON.parse(Base64.urlsafe_decode64(params[:data]}
  query = PostCube.slice(hash['current_slice']).granulate(hash['on_rows'] + hash['on_columns'])
  @pivot_table = query.pivot.on_columns(hash['on_columns']).on_rows(hash['on_rows'])
  render hash['view']
end

The examples that follow refer to the open source Chinook database schema.

Semantic layer DSL

class SharedDimensions < Martyr::Cube
  define_dimension :genres do
    degenerate_level :name
  end

  define_dimension :media_types do
    degenerate_level :name
  end

  define_dimension :customers do
    degenerate_level :country
    degenerate_level :state
    degenerate_level :city
    query_level :last_name, -> { Customer.all }, fact_key: 'customers.id'
  end
end

class MyCube < SharedDimensions
  has_dimension_level :genres, :name
  has_dimension_level :media_types, :name
  has_dimension_level :customers, :last_name

  has_sum_metric :units_sold, 'SUM(invoice_lines.quantity)'
  has_sum_metric :amount, 'SUM(invoice_lines.unit_price * invoice_lines.quantity)'

  has_custom_metric :commission, ->(fact) { (fact['amount'] * 0.3) }

  has_custom_rollup :avg_transaction, ->(fact_set) { fact_set['amount'] / fact_set['units_sold'] }
  has_custom_rollup :usa_amount, ->(fact_set) { fact_set.locate('customers.country', with: 'USA')['amount'] }
  has_custom_rollup :cross_country_avg_transaction, ->(fact_set) { fact_set.locate(reset: 'customers.*')['avg_transaction'] }
  has_custom_rollup :usa_avg_transaction, ->(fact_set) { fact_set.locate('customers.country', with: 'USA')['avg_transaction'] }

  main_query do
    InvoiceLine.joins(track: [:genre, :media_type], invoice: :customer)
  end
end

Query interface

Use #granulate to perform group by:

q = MyCube.granulate('genres.name', 'customers.city').pivot.on_columns(:metrics).on_rows('genres.name', 'customers.city')
q.to_csv
q.to_chart      # => Kick chart format

Use #select to choose metrics and #slice to perform where:

MyCube.select('units_sold', 'amount').
       granulate('genres.name', 'customers.city').
       slice('customers.country', with: 'USA').
       pivot.on_columns(:metrics).on_rows('genres.name', 'customers.city').to_csv

The same thing can be done in stages:

query = MyCube.select('units_sold', 'amount').
                  granulate('genres.name', 'customers.city').
                  slice('customers.country', with: 'USA').build

query.pivot.on_columns(:metrics).on_rows('genres.name', 'customers.city').to_csv

Which allows further slicing in memory - in the same standard way - rather than in SQL:

query = MyCube.select('units_sold', 'amount').granulate('genres.name', 'customers.city').build
usa_slice = query.slice('customers.country', with: 'USA')
france_slice = query.slice('customers.country', with: 'France')

# One DB query, two reports
usa_slice.pivot.on_columns('genres.name').on_rows('customers.city').in_cells('units_sold').to_csv
france_slice.pivot.on_columns('genres.name').on_rows(:metrics).to_csv

Virtual cubes DSL

Virtual cubes allow referring to two or more cubes, each with different granularity, on the same report.

class MyOtherCube < SharedDimensions
  define_dimension :playlists do
    query_level :name, -> { Playlist.all }, label_key: 'name'
  end

  has_dimension_level :genres, :name
  has_dimension_level :media_types, :name
  has_dimension_level :playlists, :name, fact_key: 'playlists.id'

  has_sum_metric :tracks_count, 'COUNT(playlists.id)'

  main_query do
    Playlist.joins(tracks: [:genre, :media_type])
  end
end

class MyVirtualCube < Martyr::VirtualCube
  use_cube 'MyCube'
  use_cube 'MyOtherCube'
end

Using virtual cubes

Usage is the same as regular cubes.

query = MyVirtualCube.granulate('genres.name').on_columns('genres.name').on_rows('my_other_cube.tracks_count', 'my_cube.units_sold')

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'martyr'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install martyr

Usage

TODO: Write usage instructions here

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/[my-github-username]/martyr/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

Limitations:

  • If you want to connect degenerate levels directly to the fact, make sure that they are unique across the entire dimension.

    For example, consider a simple dimension 'customers.country', 'customers.city', 'customers.name', and that 'customers.name' is a query level, and the other levels are degenerates.

    Problem: If the cube connects with 'customers.city', the grain is 'customers.city', and the slice is 'customers.city' => 'Dover', When you run facts.first['customers.country'] you may receive either US or UK (if Dover appears once for each in the dimension).

    The reason is that Martyr needs a query level in order to resolve higher degenerate levels that do not connect to the fact. To do that, it maintains one "representative" 'customers.name' record for each degenerate 'customers.city' value. It then asks this representative to fetch its 'customers.country', which could be either US or UK, depending on the randomly chosen representative.

    Workaround 1: Connect 'customers.country' to the fact. Martyr always prefer to take degenerates from the facts if they are available.

    Workaround 2: Connect 'customers.name' to the cube and add it to the grain. Martyr will prefer to use the query level 'customers.name' when resolving for 'customers.country'.

    Reproduce: c = Customer.create first_name: 'Amit', last_name: 'Aharoni', city: 'Paris', country: 'Hungary', email: '[email protected]' i = Invoice.create customer_id: c.id, invoice_date: Time.now, billing_country: 'Hungary', billing_city: 'Paris', total: 100 InvoiceLine.create invoice_id: i.id, track_id: 1, unit_price: 1, quantity: 100

    sub_cube1 = MartyrSpec::DegeneratesAndNoQueryLevel.granulate('customers.city', 'genres.name').slice('customers.city', with: 'Paris').build.sub_cubes.first sub_cube2 = MartyrSpec::DegeneratesAndAllLevels.granulate('customers.city', 'genres.name').slice('customers.city', with: 'Paris').build.sub_cubes.first sub_cube3 = MartyrSpec::NoHighLevels.granulate('customers.last_name', 'genres.name').slice('customers.city', with: 'Paris').build.sub_cubes.first

    sub_cube1.elements(levels: ['customers.city', 'customers.country']).count

    => 1

    sub_cube2.elements(levels: ['customers.city', 'customers.country']).count

    => 2

    sub_cube3.elements(levels: ['customers.city', 'customers.country']).count

    => 2

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