5

Note: This is a follow up question to Optimising Rspec Tests to Avoid Repeating Complex Setup Proceedures

For reasons that are outside the scope of this question (see the note above), I want to be able to start a Rails database transaction and then rollback that transaction in a different scope. E.g:

def before_callback
  start_transaction # Start the transaction
  # Create/Update some records
end

def after_callback
  rollback_transaction # Rollback changes from before_callback and do_stuff
end

def do_stuff
  before_callback
  # Do some stuff
  after_callback
end

do_stuff

I realize this is a contrived example which could be resolved easily with transaction do .. end and a little refactoring, but in the context have in mind do_stuff is part of an external plugin that I really don't want to mess with. Is there a way to do something similar to what I just described in Rails?

1 Answer 1

6

For a crude quick-and-dirty solution you could just execute the required SQL commands directly on the database connection:

def start_transaction
  ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute("BEGIN")
end

def rollback_transaction
  ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute("ROLLBACK")
end

Also looking at the source of the transaction method might give you some ideas on how to approach this in a more refined manner.

(You can find it in ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::DatabaseStatements in lib/active_record/connection_adapters/abstract/database_statements.rb)

4
  • Will that "quick and dirty" solution break if other transactions exist between start_transaction and end_transaction?
    – Ajedi32
    Oct 1, 2012 at 20:54
  • That depends on the database, but AFAIK most engines support it. They might not necessarily create real nested transactions, though. (i.e. they just ignore the inner commands). Oct 1, 2012 at 21:01
  • Just to put the third method for transactions out there: def end_transaction ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute("COMMIT") end Sep 30, 2014 at 6:26
  • 1
    It doesn't work with sqlite3 -- you get SQLite3::SQLException: cannot start a transaction within a transaction: begin transaction. There's probably a workaround with savepoints, but not a database-agnostic one. Aug 19, 2015 at 17:01

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