Supports only Rails 4 and 5
This gem helps you insert/update records easily. For now, it only accepts CSV file. This also helps you monitor how many rows are imported, and how many rows failed. This gem also allows you to easily import to any model with few configurations.
I'll release an update to enable this on background job.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'active_record_importer'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install active_record_importer
For the newest version (0.4.0), you don't have to create Import table/model and controller.
I already fixed the errors when there's no Import table/model on version 0.3.0.
You just need to add the acts_as_importable
in your model you want to be importable, and you may now run:
User.import!(file: File.open(PATH_TO_FILE))
insert
will be the default insert method for this
If you want to use upsert
or error_duplicate
, define it in your importer options:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_importable insert_method: 'upsert',
find_options: [:email]
end
Or you may use in your console:
User.acts_as_importable insert_method: 'error_duplicate', find_options: ['email']
I'll add a generator on my next release
class ActiveRecordImporterMigration < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
create_table :imports do |t|
t.attachment :file
t.attachment :failed_file
t.text :properties
t.string :resource, null: false
t.integer :imported_rows, default: 0
t.integer :failed_rows, default: 0
t.timestamps
end
end
end
class Import < ActiveRecord::Base
extend Enumerize
store :properties, accessors: %i(insert_method find_options batch_size)
enumerize :insert_method,
in: %w(insert upsert error_duplicate),
default: :upsert
has_attached_file :file
has_attached_file :failed_file
attr_accessor :execute_on_create
validates :resource, presence: true
validate :check_presence_of_find_options
validates_attachment :file,
content_type: {
content_type: %w(text/plain text/csv)
}
validates_attachment :failed_file,
content_type: {
content_type: %w(text/plain text/csv)
}
# I'll add import options in the next major release
# accepts_nested_attributes_for :import_options, allow_destroy: true
### THIS IS VERSION 0.2.1 and below
def execute
resource_class.import!(self, execute_on_create)
end
### THIS IS VERSION 0.2.1 and below
def execute
resource_class.import!(object: self, execute: execute_on_create)
end
### THIS IS VERSION 0.2.1 and below
def execute!
resource_class.import!(self, true)
end
### THIS IS VERSION 0.3.0
def execute!
resource_class.import!(object: self, execute: true)
end
def resource_class
resource.safe_constantize
end
def batch_size
super.to_i
end
##
# Override this if you prefer have
# private permissions or you have
# private methods for reading files
##
def import_file
local_path?(file) ? file.path : file.url
end
##
# Override this method if you have
# private permissions or you have private methods
# for reading/writing uploaded files
##
def failed_file_path
local_path?(failed_file) ? failed_file.path : failed_file.url
end
private
def check_presence_of_find_options
return if insert_method.insert?
errors.add(:find_options, "can't be blank") if find_options.blank?
end
def local_path?(f)
File.exist? f.path
end
end
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_importable
end
You may also add import options:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_importable default_attributes: { first_name: 'Juan',
last_name: 'dela Cruz' },
find_options: %i(email),
before_save: Proc.new { |user| user.password = 'temporarypassword123' }
after_save: Proc.new { |user| puts "THIS IS CALLED AFTER OBJECT IS SAVED" }
end
If you're using ActiveRecord::Store, you may import values to your accessors by including them in the configuration:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
store :properties, accessors: [:first_key, :second_key]
acts_as_importable store_accessors: [:first_key, :second_key]
end
This is a sample import HAML form:
# resource is your Model name
= f.input :resource
# batch_size is useful for large csv file
= f.input :batch_size
# insert_methods: [:upsert, :insert, :error_on_duplicate]
= f.input :insert_method, collection: insert_methods, class: 'form-control insert-method'
# `find_options` are the list of columns you want to use to update a certain instance or
# error when a duplicate is found. This is not required when your insert_method is `:insert`
= f.input :find_options
= f.input :file, as: :file,
input_html: { accept: '.csv' }
You may also add some options from the SmarterCSV gem:
| Option | Default
--------------------------------------------------------------
| :convert_values_to_metric | nil
| :value_converters | nil
| :remove_empty_values | false
| :comment_regexp | Regexp.new(/^#=>/)
| :force_utf8 | true
| :chunk_size | 500
| :col_sep | ","
https://github.com/tilo/smarter_csv
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_importable csv_opts: {
chunk_size: 2000,
col_sep: '|',
convert_values_to_numeric: { only: [:age, :salary] }
}
end
I'll add more options SOON!
class ImportsController < ApplicationController
def create
@import = Import.create!(import_params)
@import.execute!
end
private
def import_params
params.require(:import).permit(:file, :resource, :insert_method, :batch_size)
end
end
File.open(PATH_TO_CSV_FILE) do |file|
@import = Import.create!(
resource: 'User',
file: file,
insert_method: 'upsert',
find_options: 'first_name,last_name'
)
end
@import.execute!
###REMINDER: Headers of your csv file should be formatted/transformed to column names of your IMPORTABLE model
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also 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
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/michaelnera/active_record_importer. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.