The mapping gem is a structured system for mapping one model to another, using an intermediate model which represents the transformation to apply.
I've been thinking (and designing) versioned APIs which serve their data primarily from ActiveRecord
models. Initially we have been using as_json/serializable_hash/to_json
where it made sense.
records.as_json
This was fine for really simple models and APIs. However, as things get more complex, this approach gets cumbersome:
records.as_json(
only: [:id, :name, :image, :longitude, :latitude],
include: [:major_category, :categories],
)
We need versioned, internationalized APIs which don't always directly match up to the underlying database models, or in some cases the underlying models change but the API should remain stable (e.g. column renamed, tables changed).
# image attribute was renamed to image_url, how do we version the response?
records.as_json(
only: [:id, :name, :image_url, :longitude, :latitude],
include: [:major_category, :categories],
)
It's also not obvious how to inject methods that take arguments, or even handle per-request state (e.g. Accept-Language
). Even if it is possible (e.g. using a lambda) I'm not sure that this approach is really desirable - the argument list is becoming impossibly complex: Possibly buggy, hard to reuse, test and difficult to document.
ActiveModel::Serializers looks awesome at first but ultimately seems like an over-engineered version of as_json
. It directly depends on globally defined models which makes versioning hard and doesn't provide any obvious way to inject per-request state (e.g. language). It clutters up existing models and splits serialization concerns over multiple classes. It's implementation is difficult to understand, it has a large surface area, and it doesn't really address the major concerns regarding versioning, stability and (per-request) state.
I've implemented a framework for Objective-C many years ago which exposes a single primary concept: a mapping model. A mapping model is an object which describes the process mapping an input model (e.g. an ActiveRecord
model) to an output model (e.g. a hash suitable for JSON::generate
). A mapping model is entirely isolated from state which is not directly related to the mapping process itself. Because of this, multiple models can co-exist, and the models themselves can be versioned, localized, or whatever else necessary to perform a suitable mapping. It's easy to remove a model if it's no longer being used as all the code is in one place. It's easy to test a mapping model in isolation. Models can be documented like normal code. They can be reused and composed together easily.
The design of this library is centered around being explicit where being explicit makes life easier in the long term.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'mapping'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install mapping
A mapping model is required for mapping data from one format to another:
# Your database model:
module Human
Person = Struct.new(:name, :age, :posessions)
Possession = Struct.new(:name, :value)
end
# Your mapping model:
class APIv1 < Mapping::ObjectModel
map(Human::Person) do |object|
{
name: object.name,
age: object.age,
}
end
end
class APIv2 < APIv1
map(Human::Person) do |object|
super.merge(
posessions: self.map(object.posessions)
)
end
map(Human::Possession) do |object|
{
name: object.name,
value: object.value,
}
end
end
A simple use case would be something like the following:
model = APIv1.new
person = Human::Person.new('Bob Jones', 200, [])
person.posessions << Human::Possession.new('Vase', '$20')
expect(model.map(person)).to be == {
name: 'Bob Jones',
age: 200
}
The base Mapping::Model
class provides only the basic structure required to create and invoke mapping methods. The Mapping::ObjectModel
provides a few default mappings for true
, false
, nil
, Array
and Hash
.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Released under the MIT license.
Copyright, 2016, by Samuel G. D. Williams.
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