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In one of my Rails apps' AR classes, I ended up with an array of many newly initialised ActiveRecord objects.

I want to be able to save them to the DB in an efficient way, ideally, in one method call. At the moment, i have them wrapped inside a transaction.

Something like:

Object.transaction do
  @objects.map(&:save)
end

is there a more efficient solution to create/update an array of records?

2 Answers 2

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You do right with wrapping everything into a transaction, becuase then the database flushes and updates indices only once.

You cannot insert many objects in a single SQL statement in standard SQL. MySQL can do that, but this is non-default. I doubt there is a huge performance advantage to this.

If this code is really time critical, you could run it asynchronously (by either moving it into a background thread - note there are issues with ActiveRecord and multithreading - or let it be executed by a worker. Or you could generate the SQL by hand - AR is not extremely efficient in doing so. However, I would go that way only if this is extremely critical, and would consider it a hack then.

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  • Agreeing there. Just needed to make sure i wasn't missing anything there. I also corrected DB call to method call because that's the aim. I checked the class method update_all and was wondering if there's something similar to use while creating new records.
    – cnikolaou
    Jun 10, 2011 at 10:30
  • You can use a gem like activerecord-import to bulk insert.
    – user427390
    Nov 16, 2014 at 5:03
  • @Corey: You should add a separate answer. After all a separate gem could really introduce a number of per-database optimizations into mass-import. (Even though I am not convinced that activerecord-import actually does that; I would like to see some benchmarks on it.)
    – radiospiel
    Nov 18, 2014 at 8:15
  • Good point-- added an answer since it's an alternative solution :)
    – user427390
    Nov 18, 2014 at 10:17
2

I suggest using the activerecord-import gem until the mainline activerecord has support for bulk inserts.

It's fairly simple to use, for instance bulk inserting a bunch of "Rating" records:

# Example database record/model
class Rating < ActiveRecord::Base

end

ratings = []

# Create some fake data here..
100.times do |i|
    ratings << Rating.new({ stars: (rand * 5).to_i }) # random star rating
end

# Bulk import ratings (single query)
Rating.import(ratings) 

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