8

I have a SaaS application, where accounts want to save different types of information on a User model. So for example, one account may want to save age, and birthdate, but in another account, they won't be using those columns and will want to save info on hair color, and height.

These are just examples, but how would I structure my model and db so that it works well with "customized, dynamic" columns without creating too many empty attributes.

2
  • jc, where'd you end up going with this? Mar 4, 2015 at 14:52
  • 1
    @mmcrae I ended up using postgresql's .json data structure, and dumped any custom column into this .json data field.
    – kibaekr
    Mar 5, 2015 at 9:37

6 Answers 6

8

Here are the two options. 1. NoSQL database. 2. Rails 4 Store feature.

1
  • 1
    Rails Store looks really interesting and suitable for many cases where you want to stick with your usual database and models, and "when you don't care about being able to query that store outside the context of a single record" - to quote from the documentation. Perfect for me.
    – DannyB
    Dec 16, 2015 at 12:21
5

To me this sound like a perfect example were you want to use a schema free NoSQL database.

Or (if you want to stick with SQL) you can have a base User model with a has_many :attributes association. In which a attribute is just a combination of a key ('age', 'birthday', 'hair color') and a value. Complexity comes with different datatypes and queries covering multiple attributes at the same time.

2

If you're using Postgresql you can take a look at hstore then you can save the information serialized and actually you can make some queries against those hashes btw Rails 4 has included this feature but if you are using an older Rails version you can include this gem. https://github.com/diogob/activerecord-postgres-hstore in your Gemfile and you should be able to start playing like:

user = User.new
user.preferences = {
  email: "[email protected]",
  github: "heridev"
}

user.save!
user.reload

# Searching
User.where("preferences @> hstore(:key, :value)", key: "email", value: "[email protected]").first
2

Made a gem for that, if you wanna keep using relational DB

https://github.com/Liooo/dynabute

0

Your schema could be like:

create_table "accounts", :force => true do |t|
  t.integer  "user_id"
  t.string   "data_key"
  t.string   "data_value"
end

Account model

belongs_to :user    
DATA_KEYS = ['age', 'birthdate', 'hair_color', 'height' ] # etc..

User model

has_many :accounts
Account::DATA_KEYS.each do |method|
  # getter method
  define_method(method) do
    accounts.find_by_data_key(method).try(:data_value)
  end

  # setter method
  define_method("#{method}=") do |value|
    data = accounts.find_or_initialize_by_data_key(method)
    data.data_value = value.strip
    data.save
  end
end

You can get and set account data values

E.g. user.age => will return age of user

user.hair_color = 'brown' => will set hair color

5
  • Would this code change at all if User belonged to many Accounts? And Accounts would select whether they want to support a certain data_key, and the users in that account would have data_values on those data_keys
    – kibaekr
    Sep 26, 2014 at 0:29
  • I am getting this error: "NoMethodError: undefined method `find_by_data_key' for #<User:0x00000109a7da00>"
    – kibaekr
    Sep 26, 2014 at 4:30
  • @kibaekr, User model has has_many :accounts And find_by_data_key method is not for User object but it is for Account model.
    – shweta
    Sep 26, 2014 at 5:08
  • Yes, so i modified your example a bit, to get it working without account first. this is what i did gist.github.com/kibaekr/3225f20dbcb0858a0558
    – kibaekr
    Sep 26, 2014 at 5:22
  • @kibaekr, data_key column is in accounts table and not in users table.
    – shweta
    Sep 26, 2014 at 7:08
0

I would suggest going for a NoSQL database. They are designed specifically for such cases and so you won't have to do crazy stuff to make things work. MongoDB combined with MongoID is a very solid solution.

The only downside might be the hosting as it tends to be slightly, at least, more expensive.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.