Octoshark is a simple ActiveRecord connection manager. It provides connection switching mechanisms that can be used in various scenarios like master-slave, sharding or multi-tenant architecture.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'octoshark'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install octoshark
Octoshark has two connection managers: ConnectionPoolsManager
for managing connection pools using persistent connections and ConnectionManager
for managing non-persistent connections. It depends on your application performance and scaling requirements which one to use.
-
If you have a limited number of consumers (application and worker servers),
ConnectionPoolsManager
would be the preferred option. Standard Rails application has a single connection pool, andConnectionPoolsManager
just makes it possible for application models to work with multiple connection pools. -
If you have a very big infrastructure with lots of consumers (application and worker servers) and you are hitting max connections limit on database servers, i.e. you need to scale horizontally,
ConnectionManager
is the option to use. Because it uses non-persistent connections it comes up with a performance penalty because connections are re-established over and over again. Some ActiveRecord plugins that depend on having an active database connection all the time might need a change in order to work with non-persistent connections.
ConnectionPoolsManager
and ConnectionManager
can be combined together and many of them can be used at the same time.
Here is how to create connection pools manager:
CONN_MANAGER = Octoshark::ConnectionPoolsManager.new({ c1: config1, c2: config2 })
config1
and config2
are standard ActiveRecord database configs:
config = {
adapter: 'mysql2',
host: 'localhost',
port: 3306,
database: 'database',
username: 'root',
password: 'pass',
pool: 1,
encoding: 'utf8',
}
To switch a connection using a specific pool:
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(:c1) do |connection|
connection.execute("SELECT 1")
end
Multiple with_connection
blocks can be nested:
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(config1) do
# run queries on connection specified with config1
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(config2) do
# run queries on connection specified with config2
end
# run queries on connection specified with config1
end
If you establish a connection to database server instead of to database, then you can use the second optional argument database_name
to tell the connection manager to switch the connection to that database within the same connection. This is useful when you want to have fewer connection pools and keep number of active connection per database server under control. This option is only MySQL specific for now, it uses USE database_name
statement to switch the connection.
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(:c1, database_name) do |connection|
connection.execute("SELECT 1")
end
Using non-persistent connections with Octoshark::ConnectionManager
has the same API:
CONN_MANAGER = Octoshark::ConnectionManager.new
Opening a new connection, executing query and closing the connection:
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(config) do |connection|
connection.execute("SELECT 1")
end
To tell an ActiveRecord model to use the Octoshark connection we can override the Model.connection
method.
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
class << self
def connection
CONN_MANAGER.current_connection
end
# For Rails 7.2+ we need to override the following methods too:
def lease_connection
connection
end
def with_connection
yield connection
end
def schema_cache
connection.schema_cache
end
end
end
To use a specific database connection:
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(:c1) do
# run queries on c1
Post.first
end
This connection switching in Rails applications is usually done from within an around_filter
for controllers and in a similar way for other application "entry-points" like background jobs:
around_filter :select_shard
def select_shard(&block)
CONN_MANAGER.with_connection(current_user.shard, &block)
end
CONN_MANAGER.current_connection
returns the active connection while the execution is in the with_connection
block or raises Octoshark::Error::NoCurrentConnection
outside of the with_connection
block. In some cases, falling back to the default database connection for the Rails app might be preferable which can be done using CONN_MANAGER.current_or_default_connection
.
When using Octoshark::ConnectionPoolsManager
, whenever ActiveRecord::Base calls establish_connection
(usually by an ancestor process that must have subsequently forked), Octoshark.reset_connection_managers!
is automatically called to re-establish the Octoshark connections. It prevents ActiveRecord::ConnectionNotEstablished
in the scenarios like:
- Unicorn before/after fork
- Spring prefork/serve
- Some rake tasks like
rake db:test:prepare
For Octoshark::ConnectionPoolsManager
, we can use DatabaseCleaner and RSpec like:
config.before(:suite) do
setup_database_cleaner
DatabaseCleaner.clean_with(:truncation)
end
config.before(:each) do
setup_database_cleaner
DatabaseCleaner.start
end
config.after(:each) do
DatabaseCleaner.clean_with(:transaction)
end
def setup_database_cleaner
DatabaseCleaner[:active_record, {connection: ActiveRecord::Base.connection_pool}]
Octoshark::ConnectionPoolsManager.connection_managers.each do |manager|
manager.connection_pools.each_pair do |connection_name, connection_pool|
DatabaseCleaner[:active_record, {connection: connection_pool}]
end
end
end
For Octoshark::ConnectionManager
where connections and databases are dynamically created and cannot be configured in the test setup, we can write a custom database cleaner inspired by DatabaseRewinder. The example below is for a multi-tenant test setup with a main (core) database and a tenant database for the CURRENT_USER
in the test suite. CustomDatabaseCleaner.clean_all
cleans all core database tables before test suite and CustomDatabaseCleaner.clean
cleans used tables in both core and tenant databases after each test.
module CustomDatabaseCleaner
INSERT_REGEX = /\AINSERT(?:\s+IGNORE)?\s+INTO\s+(?:\.*[`"]?(?<table>[^.\s`"]+)[`"]?)*/i
@@tables_with_inserts = []
class << self
def record_inserted_table(connection, sql)
match = sql.match(INSERT_REGEX)
if match && match[:table] && tables_with_inserts.exclude?(match[:table])
tables_with_inserts << match[:table]
end
end
def clean_all
with_core_db_connection do |connection|
clean_tables(connection)
end
reset_tables_with_inserts
end
def clean
with_core_db_connection do |connection|
clean_tables(connection, { 'users' => [CURRENT_USER.id] })
end
CURRENT_USER.with_tenant do |connection|
clean_tables(connection)
end
reset_tables_with_inserts
end
private
def with_core_db_connection(&block)
CoreDBManager.with_connection(ActiveRecord::Base.configurations[Rails.env].symbolize_keys, &block)
end
def clean_tables(connection, keep_data = {})
tables_to_clean = connection.tables.reject { |t| t == ActiveRecord::Migrator.schema_migrations_table_name }
tables_to_clean = tables_to_clean & tables_with_inserts if tables_with_inserts.present?
tables_to_clean.each do |table|
connection.disable_referential_integrity do
table_name = connection.quote_table_name(table)
keep_ids = keep_data[table]
if keep_ids
connection.execute("DELETE FROM #{table_name} WHERE id NOT IN (#{keep_ids.join(',')});")
else
connection.execute("DELETE FROM #{table_name};")
end
end
end
end
def reset_tables_with_inserts
@@tables_with_inserts = []
end
def tables_with_inserts
@@tables_with_inserts
end
end
end
module CustomDatabaseCleaner
module InsertRecorder
def execute(sql, *)
CustomDatabaseCleaner.record_inserted_table(self, sql)
super
end
def exec_query(sql, *)
CustomDatabaseCleaner.record_inserted_table(self, sql)
super
end
end
end
require 'active_record/connection_adapters/abstract_mysql_adapter'
ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::AbstractMysqlAdapter.send(:prepend, CustomDatabaseCleaner::InsertRecorder)
Setup database config and create databases:
cp spec/support/config.yml.template spec/support/config.yml
rake db:create
Run specs:
bundle exec rspec spec
Install different active record versions defined in Appraisals
and run specs for all of them:
bundle exec appraisal
bundle exec appraisal rspec spec
Thanks to @saschamt for Octoshark logo design. :)
- Fork it ( http://github.com/dalibor/octoshark/fork )
- 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