populate-me 0.0.33 → 0.1.0
Sign up to get free protection for your applications and to get access to all the features.
- checksums.yaml +5 -5
- data/.gitignore +1 -0
- data/LICENSE +1 -1
- data/README.md +399 -4
- data/Rakefile +14 -0
- data/example/config.ru +67 -0
- data/lib/populate_me.rb +2 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin.rb +143 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/__assets__/css/main.css +174 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/__assets__/js/columnav.js +82 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/__assets__/js/main.js +251 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/__assets__/js/mustache.js +578 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/__assets__/js/sortable.js +2 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/admin/views/page.erb +163 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/api.rb +124 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/attachment.rb +182 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document.rb +178 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/admin_adapter.rb +131 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/callbacks.rb +104 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/outcasting.rb +49 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/persistence.rb +92 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/schema.rb +99 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/typecasting.rb +60 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/document_mixins/validation.rb +44 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/file_system_attachment.rb +40 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/grid_fs_attachment.rb +127 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo.rb +98 -3
- data/lib/populate_me/variation.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/version.rb +4 -0
- data/populate-me.gemspec +20 -12
- data/test/helper.rb +37 -0
- data/test/test_admin.rb +161 -0
- data/test/test_api.rb +246 -0
- data/test/test_attachment.rb +155 -0
- data/test/test_document.rb +120 -0
- data/test/test_document_admin_adapter.rb +43 -0
- data/test/test_document_callbacks.rb +107 -0
- data/test/test_document_persistence.rb +56 -0
- data/test/test_document_typecasting.rb +121 -0
- data/test/test_mongo.rb +217 -0
- data/test/test_variation.rb +91 -0
- data/test/test_version.rb +11 -0
- metadata +115 -66
- data/lib/populate_me/control.rb +0 -196
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/main.css +0 -207
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/plugin.asmselect.css +0 -63
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_flat_30_cccccc_40x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_flat_50_5c5c5c_40x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_glass_20_555555_1x400.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_glass_40_0078a3_1x400.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_glass_40_ffc73d_1x400.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_gloss-wave_25_333333_500x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_highlight-soft_80_eeeeee_1x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_inset-soft_25_000000_1x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-bg_inset-soft_30_f58400_1x100.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-icons_222222_256x240.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-icons_4b8e0b_256x240.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-icons_a83300_256x240.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-icons_cccccc_256x240.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/images/ui-icons_ffffff_256x240.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/css/ui-darkness/jquery-ui-1.8.17.custom.css +0 -430
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/grip.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/icons-cms-solarized.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/icons-cms.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/placeholder.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/placeholder.stash_thumb.gif +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/placeholder.stash_thumb.png +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/img/small-loader.gif +0 -0
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/addon.timepicker.js +0 -20
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/jquery-ui.js +0 -114
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/jquery.js +0 -167
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/jquery.mustache.js +0 -559
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/main.js +0 -144
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/plugin.asmselect.js +0 -407
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/plugin.form.js +0 -11
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/plugin.quicksearch.js +0 -1
- data/lib/populate_me/control/_public/js/plugin.underwood.js +0 -4
- data/lib/populate_me/control/views/populate_me_layout.erb +0 -75
- data/lib/populate_me/ext.rb +0 -16
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo/backend_api_plug.rb +0 -78
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo/crushyform.rb +0 -243
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo/mutation.rb +0 -324
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo/plug.rb +0 -134
- data/lib/populate_me/mongo/stash.rb +0 -171
- data/test/spec_ext.rb +0 -29
- data/test/spec_mongo_mutation.rb +0 -279
checksums.yaml
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metadata.gz:
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SHA1:
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metadata.gz: 5046f2abc8d311d2dedd3c31fac2ac90f6ae0f36
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data.tar.gz: 2df84aed8c576a8a2908977fde658f2ad85ae2e7
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metadata.gz: 0f4d57c7dfc72de5c4dc08e027c498e7cee4bd4de3fa2b3cc5facb74c28aaa006e8270d5f79baa1fc0af2b48aec0b297bb0dd9ecc211a28018d37b1ca415c109
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data.tar.gz: 71dd5a2221caa8d1e9d3761c2651e2542f1182ea30f00d50f4b0bb9d5e010d1d8f46df5695b941544aac4af5f83a306cd27243ba03e28a6a2cb4018619446081
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data/.gitignore
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data/LICENSE
CHANGED
data/README.md
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Populate Me
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===========
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Overview
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--------
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-
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`PopulateMe` is a modular system which provides an admin backend for any
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Ruby/Rack web application. It is made with Sinatra but you can code your
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frontend with any other Framework like Rails.
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Table of contents
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----------------
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- [Overview](#overview)
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- [Table of contents](#table-of-contents)
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- [Documents](#documents)
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- [Schema](#schema)
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- [Validations](#validations)
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- [Relationships](#relationships)
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- [Callbacks](#callbacks)
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- [Single Documents](#single-documents)
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- [Mongo documents](#mongo-documents)
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- [Admin](#admin)
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- [API](#api)
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Documents
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---------
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The `Document` class is a prototype. It contains all the code that is
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not specific to a database system. When using this class, documents are
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just kept in memory and therefore are lost when you restart the app.
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Obviously, in a real application, you would not use this class, but
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a persistent one instead. But since the purpose is to have a common
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interface for any database system, then the following examples are
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written using the basic `Document` class.
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For the moment, `PopulateMe` only ships with a [MongoDB](#mongo-documents) document, but we hope there will be others in the future, including some for SQL databases.
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### Schema
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Here is an example of a document class:
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```ruby
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require 'populate_me/document'
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class BlogArticle < PopulateMe::Document
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field :title, default: 'New blog article', required: true
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field :content, type: :text
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field :created_on, type: :datetime, default: proc{Time.now}
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field :published, type: :boolean
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sort_by :created_on, :desc
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end
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```
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Quite common so far.
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The `field` method allows you to record anything about the field
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itself, but here are the keys used by `PopulateMe`:
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- `:type` Defines the type of field (please find the list of types below).
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- `:form_field` Set to `false` if you do not want this field in the default form.
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- `:label` What the label in the form says (defaults to a human-friendly version of the field name)
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- `:wrap` Set it to false if you do not want the form field to be wrapped in a `div` with a label.
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- `:default` Either a default value or a `proc` to run to get the default value.
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- `:required` Set to true if you want the field to be marked as required in the form.
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As you can see, most of the options are made for you to tailor the form
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which `PopulateMe` will generate for you in the admin.
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Available types are:
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- `:string` Short text.
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- `:text` Multiline text.
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- `:boolean` Which is `true` or `false`.
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- `:select` Dropdown list of options (records a string).
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A `:list` type exists as well for nested documents, but it is not
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fully working yet.
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### Validations
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In its simplest form, validations are done by overriding the `#validate` method and declaring errors with the `#error_on` method.
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```ruby
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class Person < PopulateMe::Document
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field :name
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def validate
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error_on(:name, 'Cannot be fake') if self.name=='John Doe'
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end
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end
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```
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If you don't use the `PopulateMe` interface and create a document
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programmatically, here is what it could look like:
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```ruby
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person = Person.new(name: 'John Doe')
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person.new? # returns true
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person.save # fails
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person.valid? # returns false
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person.errors # returns { name: ['Cannot be fake'] }
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```
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### Relationships
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In its simplest form, when using the modules convention, relationships
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can be declared this way:
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```ruby
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class BlogArticle < PopulateMe::Document
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field :title
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relationship :comments
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end
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class BlogArticle::Comment < PopulateMe::Document
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field :author
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field :blog_article_id, type: :hidden
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position_field scope: :blog_article_id
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end
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```
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### Callbacks
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There are some classic hooks which trigger the callbacks you declare.
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Here is a basic example:
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```ruby
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require 'populate_me/document'
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class Person < PopulateMe::Document
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field :firstname
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field :lastname
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field :fullname, form_field: false
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before :save do
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self.fullname = "#{self.firstname} #{self.lastname}"
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end
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after :delete, :goodbye
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def goodbye
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puts "So long and thanks for all the fish"
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end
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end
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```
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First you can note that the field option `form_field: false` makes it a field
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that does not appear in the form. This is generally the case for fields that
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are generated from other fields.
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Anyway, here we define a callback which `PopulateMe` runs each time a document
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is saved. And with the second one, you can see that we can pass the name of
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a method instead of a block.
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The list of hooks is quite common but here it is as a reminder:
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- `before :validation`
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- `after :validation`
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- `before :create`
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- `after :create`
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- `before :update`
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- `after :update`
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- `before :save` (both create or update)
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- `after :save` (both create or update)
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- `before :delete`
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- `after :delete`
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Now you can register many callbacks for the same hook. They will be chained in
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the order you register them. However, if for any reason you need to register a
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callback and make sure it runs before the others, you can add `prepend: true`.
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```ruby
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before :save, prepend: true do
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puts 'Shotgun !!!'
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end
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```
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If you want to go even further and create your own hooks, this is very easy.
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You can create a hook like this:
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```ruby
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document.exec_callback(:my_hook)
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```
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And you would then register a callback like this:
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```ruby
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register_callback :my_hook do
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# Do something...
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end
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```
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You can use `before` and `after` as well. In fact this:
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```ruby
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after :lunch do
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# Do something...
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end
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```
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Is equivalent to:
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```ruby
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register_callback :after_lunch do
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# Do something...
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end
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```
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### Single Documents
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Sometimes you want a collection with only one document, like for recording
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settings for example. In this case you can use the `::is_unique` class method.
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```ruby
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require 'populate_me/document'
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class GeneralWebsiteSettings < PopulateMe::Document
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field :main_meta_title
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field :main_meta_description
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field :google_analytics_ref
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end
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GeneralWebsiteSettings.is_unique
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```
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It just creates the document if it does not exist yet with the ID `unique`.
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If you want a different ID, you can pass it as an argument.
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Just make sure that if you have fields with `required: true`, they also have
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a `:default` value. Otherwise the creation of the document will fail because it
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is not `self.valid?`.
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### Mongo Documents
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Note: the current version works with the mongo driver version 2
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Now let's declare a real document class which can persist on a database,
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the `MongoDB` kind of document. The first thing we need to clarify is the
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setup. Here is a classic setup:
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```ruby
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# lib/db.rb
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require 'mongo'
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require 'populate_me/mongo'
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client = Mongo::Client.new([ '127.0.0.1:27017' ], :database => 'your-database-name')
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PopulateMe::Mongo.set :db, client.database
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require 'person'
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```
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Then the document is pretty much the same as the prototype except that it
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subclasses `PopulateMe::Mongo` instead.
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```ruby
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# lib/person.rb
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require 'populate_me/mongo'
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class Person < PopulateMe::Mongo
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field :firstname
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field :lastname
|
276
|
+
end
|
277
|
+
```
|
278
|
+
|
279
|
+
As you can see in setup, you can define inheritable settings on
|
280
|
+
`PopulateMe::Mongo`, meaning that any subclass after this will have the `:db`
|
281
|
+
and you can set it only once.
|
282
|
+
|
283
|
+
Nevertheless it is obviously possible to set a different `:db` for each class.
|
284
|
+
|
285
|
+
```ruby
|
286
|
+
# lib/person.rb
|
287
|
+
require 'populate_me/mongo'
|
288
|
+
|
289
|
+
class Person < PopulateMe::Mongo
|
290
|
+
|
291
|
+
set :db, $my_db
|
292
|
+
|
293
|
+
field :firstname
|
294
|
+
field :lastname
|
295
|
+
|
296
|
+
end
|
297
|
+
```
|
298
|
+
|
299
|
+
This is particularly useful if you keep a type of documents in a different
|
300
|
+
location for example. Otherwise it is more convenient to set it once
|
301
|
+
and for all.
|
302
|
+
|
303
|
+
You can also set `:collection_name`, but in most cases you would let `PopulateMe`
|
304
|
+
defaults it to the dasherized class name. So `BlogArticle::Comment` would be
|
305
|
+
in the collection called `blog-article--comment`.
|
306
|
+
|
307
|
+
Whatever you choose, you will have access to the collection object with the
|
308
|
+
`::collection` class method. Which allows you to do anything the driver does.
|
309
|
+
|
310
|
+
```ruby
|
311
|
+
first_pedro = Person.collection.find({ 'firstname' => 'Pedro' }).first
|
312
|
+
mcs = Person.collection.find({ 'lastname' => /^Mc/i })
|
313
|
+
```
|
314
|
+
|
315
|
+
Although since these are methods from the driver, `first_pedro` returns a hash,
|
316
|
+
and `mcs` returns a `Mongo::Collection::View`. If you want document object, you can use
|
317
|
+
the `::cast` class method which takes a block in the class context/scope and
|
318
|
+
casts either a single hash into a full featured document, or casts the items of
|
319
|
+
an array (or anything which responds to `:map`).
|
320
|
+
|
321
|
+
```ruby
|
322
|
+
first_pedro = Person.cast{ collection.find_one({ 'firstname' => 'Pedro' }) }
|
323
|
+
mcs = Person.cast{ collection.find({ 'lastname' => /^Mc/i }) }
|
324
|
+
first_pedro.class # returns Person
|
325
|
+
mcs[0].class # returns Person
|
326
|
+
```
|
327
|
+
|
328
|
+
Admin
|
329
|
+
-----
|
330
|
+
|
331
|
+
A basic admin would look like this:
|
332
|
+
|
333
|
+
```ruby
|
334
|
+
# lib/admin.rb
|
335
|
+
require "populate_me/admin"
|
336
|
+
|
337
|
+
class Admin < PopulateMe::Admin
|
338
|
+
# Since we are in lib we use this to move
|
339
|
+
# the root one level up.
|
340
|
+
# Not mandatory but useful if you plan to have
|
341
|
+
# custom views in the main views folder
|
342
|
+
set :root, ::File.expand_path('../..', __FILE__)
|
343
|
+
# Only if you use Rack::Cerberus for authentication
|
344
|
+
# you can pass the settings
|
345
|
+
set :cerberus, {company_name: 'Nintendo'}
|
346
|
+
# Build menu and sub-menus
|
347
|
+
set :menu, [
|
348
|
+
['Settings', '/admin/form/settings/unique'],
|
349
|
+
['Articles', '/admin/list/article'],
|
350
|
+
['Staff', [
|
351
|
+
['Designers', '/admin/list/staff-member?filter[job]=Designer'],
|
352
|
+
['Developers', '/admin/list/staff-member?filter[job]=Developer'],
|
353
|
+
]]
|
354
|
+
]
|
355
|
+
end
|
356
|
+
```
|
357
|
+
|
358
|
+
So the main thing you need is to define your menu. Then mount it in
|
359
|
+
your `config.ru` whereever you want.
|
360
|
+
|
361
|
+
```ruby
|
362
|
+
# config.ru
|
363
|
+
require 'admin'
|
364
|
+
|
365
|
+
map '/admin' do
|
366
|
+
run Admin
|
367
|
+
end
|
368
|
+
```
|
369
|
+
|
370
|
+
Most of the URLs in your menu will probably be for the admin itself and use
|
371
|
+
the admin URL patterns, but this is not mandatory. A link to an external page
|
372
|
+
would load in a new tab. Whereas admin URLs create columns in the `PopulateMe`
|
373
|
+
user interface. Many things are possible with these patterns but here are
|
374
|
+
the main ones:
|
375
|
+
|
376
|
+
- `/:path_to_admin/list/:dasherized_document_class` This gives you the list of
|
377
|
+
documents from the desired class. They are ordered as specified by `sort_by`.
|
378
|
+
You can also filter like in the example to get only specific documents.
|
379
|
+
- `:path_to_admin/form/:dasherized_document_class/:id` You would rarely use this
|
380
|
+
one which directly opens the form of a specific document, since all this is
|
381
|
+
generally accessed from the list page. It doesn't need to be coded. The only is
|
382
|
+
probably for [single documents](#single-documents) because they are not part of
|
383
|
+
a list. The ID would then be litterally `unique`, or whatever ID you declared
|
384
|
+
instead.
|
385
|
+
|
386
|
+
API
|
387
|
+
---
|
388
|
+
|
389
|
+
In a normal use, you most likely don't have anything to do with the `API` module.
|
390
|
+
It is just another middleware automatically mounted under `/api` on your `Admin`.
|
391
|
+
So if your `Admin` path is `/admin`, then your `API` path is `/admin/api`.
|
392
|
+
|
393
|
+
The purpose of the `API` module is to provide all the path patterns for creating,
|
394
|
+
deleting and updating documents. The interface does all the job for you. But if
|
395
|
+
you end up building your all custom interface, you probably want to [have a look
|
396
|
+
at the implementation](lib/populate_me/api.rb).
|
397
|
+
|
398
|
+
Another aspect of the `API` is that it relies on document methods. So if you
|
399
|
+
want to create a subclass of `Document`, make sure that you override everything
|
400
|
+
that the `API` or the `Admin` may need.
|
401
|
+
|
402
|
+
This module is derived from a Gem I did called [rack-backend-api](https://github.com/mig-hub/backend-api). It is not maintained any more since `PopulateMe` is the evolution
|
403
|
+
of this Gem.
|
9
404
|
|
data/Rakefile
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
|
|
1
|
+
require 'rake/testtask'
|
2
|
+
|
3
|
+
task :default => :test
|
4
|
+
|
5
|
+
Rake::TestTask.new do |t|
|
6
|
+
t.libs << "test"
|
7
|
+
t.pattern = 'test/test_*.rb'
|
8
|
+
unless ENV['TESTONLY'].nil?
|
9
|
+
t.pattern = t.pattern.sub(/\*/, ENV['TESTONLY'])
|
10
|
+
end
|
11
|
+
t.options = '--pride'
|
12
|
+
t.warning = false
|
13
|
+
end
|
14
|
+
|