Lightrail is a minimalist Ruby on Rails stack for apps that serve primarily JSON APIs. If Sinatra doesn't give you enough, but Rails is still too much, Lightrail is for you.
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Lightrail::ActionController::Metal
is a lightweight ActionController::Base
replacement designed for when APIs are your main concern. It removes several irrelevant modules, and also provides following additional behaviors:
-
halt
stops rendering at any point using Ruby's throw/catch mechanism. Any option passed tohalt
is forwarded to therender
method -
render :errors
is a renderer extension that allows you to easily render an error as JSON. It is simply a convenience method forrender :json => errors, :status => 422
. With thehalt
mechanism above, this ends up being a common pattern in the source code:halt :errors => { :request => "invalid" }
.
Lightrail::Wrapper provides a wrapper functionality to make it easier to generate JSON responses. It is divided in three main parts:
Each model needs to have a wrapper in order to be rendered as JSON. Instead of using several options (like :only
, :method
and friends), it expects you to explicitly define the hash to returned through the view
method. Here is an example:
class AccountWrapper < Lightrail::Wrapper::Model
has_one :credit_card
has_one :subscription
def view
attrs = [:id, :name, :user_id]
if owner?
attrs.concat [:billing_address, :billing_country]
end
# Shortcut for account.attributes.slice()
hash = account.slice(*attrs)
hash[:owner] = owner?
hash
end
# Whenever an association method is defined explicitly
# it is given higher preference. That said, whenever
# including a credit_card, it will invoke this method
# instead of calling account.credit_card directly.
def credit_card
account.credit_card if owner?
end
protected
def owner?
account.owners.include?(scope)
end
end
A wrapper is initialized with two arguments: the resource
, which is the account
in this case, and a scope
. In most cases, the scope is the current_user
. The idea of having a scope inside the wrapper is to be able to properly handle permissions when exposing a resource. In the example above, you can notice that a credit_card
is only exposed if the user actually owns the account being showed. Billing information is also hidden except when the user is an owner?
.
Another convenience is that the wrapper can automatically handle associations. Associations, when exposed, are not nested exposed but rather flat in the JSON, here is an example:
{
"account": {
"id": 1,
"name": "Main",
"user_id": null,
"credit_card_id": 1
},
"credit_cards": {
"id": 1,
"last_4": "3232"
}
}
In order to render a wrapper with its associations, you can use the render
method and pass the associations explicitly:
AccountWrapper.new(@account, current_user).render :include => [:credit_card]
Although most of the times, this will be done automatically by the controller.
Lightrail::Wrapper::Controller
provides several facilities to use wrappers from the controller:
-
json(resources)
is the main method. Given a resource (or an array of resources), it will find the proper wrapper and render it. Any include given atparams[:include]
will be validated and passed to the underlying wrapper. Consider the following action:def last json Account.last end
When accessed as
/accounts/last
, it won't return any credit card or subscription resource in the JSON, unless it is given explicitly as/accounts/last?include=credit_cards,subscriptions
(in plural).In order for the
json
method to work, awrapper_scope
needs to be defined. You can usually define it in yourApplicationController
as follow:def wrapper_scope current_user end
-
errors(resource)
is a method that makes pair withjson(resource)
. It basically receives a resource and render its errors. For instance,errors(account)
will return:errors => { :account => account.errors }
; -
wrap_array(resources)
as thejson
method accepts extra associations to be included throughparams[:include]
, we need to be careful to not end up doingN+1
queries in the database. This can be fixed by using thewrap_array
method that will automatically wrap the given array and preload all associations. For instance, you want will to do this in yourindex
actions:def index json wrap_array(current_user.accounts.active.all) end
Lightrail::Wrapper provides one Active Record extension method called slice
. In order to understand what it does, it is easier to look at the source:
def slice(*attrs)
attrs.map! { |a| a.to_s }
attributes.slice(*attrs)
end
This method was used in the example showed above.
Lightrail adds a config.lightrail namespace to your application with two main methods:
-
remove_session_middlewares!
removesActionDispatch::Cookies
,ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore
andActionDispatch::Flash
middlewares; -
remove_browser_middlewares!
removes theActionDispatch::BestStandardsSupport
middleware.