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Mongoid Enumerable

Unit Tests Lint Maintainability Test Coverage Gem Version

Define enumerable fields in your Mongoid documents.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'mongoid_enumerable'

And then execute:

bundle

Or install it yourself as:

gem install mongoid_enumerable

Usage

Simply include MongoidEnumerable in your document. After add enumerable with:

  • Field name
  • An array with possible values
  • Options (default, prefix and callbacks)

Example:

class Task
  include Mongoid::Document
  include MongoidEnumerable

  enumerable :status, %w[completed running failed waiting], default: "waiting"
end

Now we have methods in this document's instance:

task = Task.new

task.status   # "waiting"
task.waiting? # true

task.running! # changes status field to "running"
task.running? # true
task.waiting? # false

Options

Default

Defines which value is the default for new documents. If not specified the first value is used as default.

enumerable :status, %w[completed running failed waiting], default: "waiting"

Prefix

You can define a prefix for your methods that could be useful if you have more than one enumerable with the same values.

enumerable :build_status,
           %w[completed running failed waiting],
           default: "waiting",
           prefix: "build_"

enumerable :deploy_status,
           %w[completed running failed waiting],
           default: "waiting",
           prefix: "deploy_"

task.build_completed?
task.build_failed!
task.deploy_running?
task.deploy_failed!

Callbacks

Before Change

You can define a before_change callback that runs before each change. If the method returns a falsey value (nil or false) then the change will be aborted.

The method must receive two parameters: the old and the new value, respectively.

Example:

class Task
  include Mongoid::Document
  include MongoidEnumerable

  enumerable :status, %w[completed running failed waiting], default: "waiting", before_change: :can_status_change?

  def can_status_change?(old_value, new_value)
    new_value != "waiting"
  end
end

task = Task.new
task.status # "waiting"

task.running!
task.status # "running"

task.waiting!
task.status # "running"
After Change

You can define an after_change callback that runs after each change. The method must receive two parameters: the old and the new value, respectively.

Example:

class Task
  include Mongoid::Document
  include MongoidEnumerable

  enumerable :status, %w[completed running failed waiting],
    default: "waiting",
    after_change: :status_changed

  def status_changed(old_value, new_value)
    puts "Status changed from #{old_value} to #{new_value}."
  end
end

task = Task.new
task.running!
# Console output: "Status changed from waiting to running."

Scopes/Criterias

All values are added as scopes/criterias to your document class:

Task.waiting # Returns all tasks with waiting status
Task.running # Returns all tasks with running status

If prefixed, the scopes/criterias are prefixed too:

Task.build_waiting # Returns all tasks with build waiting status
Task.deploy_running # Returns all tasks with deploy running status

Development

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.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/douglaslise/mongoid_enumerable.

Releasing a New Version

After change version in file lib/mongoid_enumerable/version.rb it is needed only to run this command in terminal:

rake release