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Support combining scopes when loading records, use Arel instead of SQL #717

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@mamhoff mamhoff commented Jun 28, 2021

This refactors the ActiveRecordAdapter to use Arel/ActiveRecord to merge conditions. The advantage is that we can finally merge scopes from different abilities!

This only works with Rails versions 5.2+, so this PR would drop support for prior versions. Given that Rails 7 is about to come out, that's something at least worth considering.

I think this PR makes the ActiveRecord Adapter quite a bit more readable, which should make future contributions easier.

I know it's a big change. Thank you for your hard work on this gem.

coorasse and others added 10 commits June 21, 2021 10:45
This breaks all kinds of things for now, but will open up using the
`accessible_by` on scopes.
Rails 5.1 has been EOL for a long while, and the code hoops we'd have to
jump through to keep supporting it are really quite large.
This passes all the conditions we have into ActiveRecord's `where`
method and joins them using `or` and leaves the SQL generation to
ActiveRecord/Arel.
The conditions array is really an artefact of the old implementation and
should IMO not be tested. Let's instead test where the rubber hits the
road: Which database records are returned.
Now that we're using ActiveRecord to generate and merge conditions, we
do not need a lot of code any longer.
This extracts a lot of stuff into methods. I sure am hopeful this makes
the code more readable!
@mamhoff mamhoff force-pushed the refactor-activerecord-adapter branch from f1c244e to 4f8bc1c Compare June 28, 2021 14:36
mamhoff added 2 commits June 28, 2021 17:26
IDs have primary key constraints, and we cannot know when our test runs
respective to other tests.
Ok, so Postgres can't order by a column that's not on the select list.
Let's put the column on the select list if that's what we want to order
by!
Comment on lines +24 to 27
if @model_class.respond_to?(:where) && @model_class.respond_to?(:joins)
build_relation
else
@model_class.all(conditions: conditions, joins: joins)
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This looks like support for old AR

Comment on lines 14 to +19
@compressed_rules = RulesCompressor.new(@rules.reverse).rules_collapsed.reverse
StiNormalizer.normalize(@compressed_rules)
ConditionsNormalizer.normalize(model_class, @compressed_rules)
end

# Returns conditions intended to be used inside a database query. Normally you will not call this
# method directly, but instead go through ModelAdditions#accessible_by.
#
# If there is only one "can" definition, a hash of conditions will be returned matching the one defined.
#
# can :manage, User, :id => 1
# query(:manage, User).conditions # => { :id => 1 }
#
# If there are multiple "can" definitions, a SQL string will be returned to handle complex cases.
#
# can :manage, User, :id => 1
# can :manage, User, :manager_id => 1
# cannot :manage, User, :self_managed => true
# query(:manage, User).conditions # => "not (self_managed = 't') AND ((manager_id = 1) OR (id = 1))"
#
def conditions
conditions_extractor = ConditionsExtractor.new(@model_class)
if @compressed_rules.size == 1 && @compressed_rules.first.base_behavior
# Return the conditions directly if there's just one definition
conditions_extractor.tableize_conditions(@compressed_rules.first.conditions).dup
else
extract_multiple_conditions(conditions_extractor, @compressed_rules)
end
end

def extract_multiple_conditions(conditions_extractor, rules)
rules.reverse.inject(false_sql) do |sql, rule|
merge_conditions(sql, conditions_extractor.tableize_conditions(rule.conditions).dup, rule.base_behavior)
ConditionsNormalizer.normalize(@model_class, @compressed_rules)
# run the extractor on the reversed set of rules to fill the cache properly
@conditions_extractor = ConditionsExtractor.new(@model_class).tap do |extractor|
@compressed_rules.reverse_each { |rule| extractor.tableize_conditions(rule.conditions) }
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I wonder if these reverse's are necessary (line 14, then re-reversed on line 19)

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They are, because the RulesCompressor has an implicit requirement on the ordering of the conditions, unfortunately.

@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ module ClassMethods
# Here only the articles which the user can update are returned.
def accessible_by(ability, action = :index, strategy: CanCan.accessible_by_strategy)
CanCan.with_accessible_by_strategy(strategy) do
ability.model_adapter(self, action).database_records
ability.model_adapter(all, action).database_records
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What if this is already being called from a scope?

User.active.accessible_by(ability, :read)

I think that switching this to all causes accessible_by to return a new scope ignore all previous filters

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The opposite is true: current behavior is to ignore all previous filters, and this change will take them into account.

Try in any project you have:

User.active.all.count vs
User.active.klass.all.count - using klass (or self in the above code) will unscope the relation, whereas all will not.

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Gotcha, I thought self in that context was a AR relation.

@23tux
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23tux commented Sep 26, 2022

Is there any news on this?

@coorasse
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I am ready to reconsider this when Rails 8 is out Septemeber this year. I will then drop support for Rails 5 and this PR can be simplified. Thanks for the amazing work you did here!

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4 participants