Adds group and membership functionality to Rails models. Defines a polymorphic
relationship between a Group model and any member model. Don't need a Group
model? Use named groups instead to add members to named groups such as
:admin
or "Team Rocketpants"
.
The following ORMs are supported:
- ActiveRecord 3.2, 4.1, 4.2, 5.0
- Mongoid 3.1, 4.0+, 5.0+, 6
The following Rubies are supported:
- MRI Ruby 1.9.3, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3
- JRuby 1.7, 9000
The following databases are supported:
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- SQLite
- MongoDB
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'groupify'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install groupify
Execute:
$ rails generate groupify:active_record:install
This will generate an initializer, Group
model, GroupMembership
model, and migrations.
Modify the models and migrations as needed, then run the migration:
$ rake db:migrate
Set up your member models:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
groupify :group_member
groupify :named_group_member
end
class Assignment < ActiveRecord::Base
groupify :group_member
end
Execute:
$ rails generate groupify:mongoid:install
Set up your member models:
class User
include Mongoid::Document
groupify :group_member
groupify :named_group_member
end
The default model names for groups and group memberships are configurable. Add the following
configuration in config/initializers/groupify.rb
to change the model names for all classes:
Groupify.configure do |config|
config.group_class_name = 'MyCustomGroup'
# ActiveRecord only
config.group_membership_class_name = 'MyCustomGroupMembership'
end
The group name can also be set on a model-by-model basis for each group member by passing
the group_class_name
option:
class Member < ActiveRecord::Base
groupify :group_member, group_class_name: 'MyOtherCustomGroup'
end
Note that each member model can only belong to a single type of group (or child classes of that group).
Your group class can be configured to create associations for each expected member type.
For example, let's say that your group class will have users and assignments as members.
The following configuration adds users
and assignments
associations on the group model:
class Group < ActiveRecord::Base
groupify :group, members: [:users, :assignments], default_members: :users
end
The default_members
option sets the model type when accessing the members
association.
In the example above, group.members
would return the users who are members of this group.
If you are using single table inheritance, child classes inherit the member associations
of the parent. If your child class needs to add more members, use the has_members
method.
Example:
class Organization < Group
has_members :offices, :equipment
end
Mongoid works the same way by creating Mongoid relations.
group = Group.new
user = User.new
user.groups << group
# or
group.add user
user.in_group?(group)
# => true
# Add multiple members at once
group.add(user, widget, task)
user.named_groups << :admin
user.in_named_group?(:admin) # => true
users.groups.destroy(group) # Destroys this user's group membership for this group
group.users.delete(user) # Deletes this group's group membership for this user
user1.shares_any_group?(user2) # Returns true if user1 and user2 are in any of the same groups
user2.shares_any_named_group?(user1) # Also works for named groups
User.in_group(group) # Find all users in this group
User.in_named_group(:admin) # Find all users in this named group
Group.with_member(user) # Find all groups with this user
User.shares_any_group(user) # Find all users that share any groups with this user
User.shares_any_named_group(user) # Find all users that share any named groups with this user
User.in_any_group(group1, group2) # Find users that belong to any of these groups
User.in_all_groups(group1, group2) # Find users that belong to all of these groups
Widget.in_only_groups(group2, group3) # Find widgets that belong to only these groups
widget.in_any_named_group?(:foo, :bar) # Check if widget belongs to any of these named groups
user.in_all_named_groups?(:manager, :poster) # Check if user belongs to all of these named groups
user.in_only_named_groups?(:employee, :worker) # Check if user belongs to only these named groups
# Moves the members of source into destination, and destroys source
destination_group.merge!(source_group)
Membership types allow a member to belong to a group in a more specific way. For example, you can add a user to a group with membership type of "manager" to specify that this user has the "manager role" on that group.
This can be used to implement role-based authorization combined with group authorization, which could be used to mass-assign roles to groups of resources.
It could also be used to add users and resources to the same "sub-group" or "project" within a larger group (say, an organization).
# Add user to group as a specific membership type
group.add(user, as: 'manager')
# Works with named groups too
user.named_groups.add user, as: 'manager'
# Query for the groups that a user belongs to with a certain role
user.groups.as(:manager)
user.named_groups.as('manager')
Group.with_member(user).as('manager')
# Remove a member's membership type from a group
group.users.delete(user, as: 'manager') # Deletes this group's 'manager' group membership for this user
user.groups.destroy(group, as: 'employee') # Destroys this user's 'employee' group membership for this group
user.groups.destroy(group) # Destroys any membership types this user had in this group
# Find all members that have a certain membership type in a group
User.in_group(group).as(:manager)
# Find all members of a certain membership type regardless of group
User.as(:manager) # Find users that are managers, we don't care what group
# Check if a member belongs to any/all groups with a certain membership type
user.in_all_groups?(group1, group2, as: 'manager')
# Find all members that share the same group with the same membership type
Widget.shares_any_group(user).as("Moon Launch Project")
# Check is one member belongs to the same group as another member with a certain membership type
user.shares_any_group?(widget, as: 'employee')
Note that adding a member to a group with a specific membership type will automatically
add them to that group without a specific membership type. This way you can still query
groups
and find the member in that group. If you then remove that specific membership
type, they still remain in the group without a specific membership type.
Removing a member from a group will bulk remove any specific membership types as well.
group.add(manager, as: 'manager')
manager.groups.include?(group) # => true
manager.groups.delete(group, as: 'manager')
manager.groups.include?(group) # => true
group.add(employee, as: 'employee')
employee.groups.delete(group)
employee.in_group?(group) # => false
employee.in_group?(group, as: 'employee') # => false
Groupify was originally created to help implement user authorization, although it can be used generically for much more than that. Here are some examples of how to do it.
class Ability
include CanCan::Ability
def initialize(user)
# Implements group-based authorization
# Users can only manage assignment which belong to the same group.
can [:manage], Assignment, Assignment.shares_any_group(user) do |assignment|
assignment.shares_any_group?(user)
end
end
end
# Whatever class represents a logged-in user in your app
class User
groupify :named_group_member
include Authority::UserAbilities
end
class Widget
groupify :named_group_member
include Authority::Abilities
end
class WidgetAuthorizer < ApplicationAuthorizer
# Implements group-based authorization using named groups.
# Users can only see widgets which belong to the same named group.
def readable_by?(user)
user.shares_any_named_group?(resource)
end
# Implements combined role-based and group-based authorization.
# Widgets can only be updated by users that are employees of the same named group.
def updateable_by?(user)
user.shares_any_named_group?(resource, as: :employee)
end
# Widgets can only be deleted by users that are managers of the same named group.
def deletable_by?(user)
user.shares_any_named_group?(resource, as: :manager)
end
end
user = User.create!
user.named_groups.add(:team1, as: :employee)
widget = Widget.create!
widget.named_groups << :team1
widget.readable_by?(user) # => true
user.can_update?(widget) # => true
user.can_delete?(widget) # => false
class PostPolicy < Struct.new(:user, :post)
# User can only update a published post if they are admin of the same group.
def update?
user.shares_any_group?(post, as: :admin) || !post.published?
end
class Scope < Struct.new(:user, :scope)
def resolve
if user.admin?
# An admin can see all the posts in the group(s) they are admin for
scope.shares_any_group(user).as(:admin)
else
# Normal users can only see published posts in the same group(s).
scope.shares_any_group(user).where(published: true)
end
end
end
end
Groupify 0.8+ changed the ActiveRecord adapter to support configuring the same
model as both a group and a group member. To accomplish this, the internal group_memberships
association was renamed to be different for groups and members. If you were
using it, please be aware that you will need to change your code. This
association is considered to be an internal implementation details and not part
of the public API, so please don't rely on it if you can avoid it.
Groupify < 0.7 required a single Group
model used for all group memberships.
Groupify 0.7+ supports using multiple models as groups by implementing polymorphic associations.
Upgrading requires adding a new group_type
column to the group_memberships
table and
populating that column with the class name of the group. Create the migration by executing:
$ rails generate groupify:active_record:upgrade
And then run the migration:
$ rake db:migrate
Please note that this migration may block writes in MySQL if your group_memberships
table is large.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
See a list of contributors here.