Not sure if you've seen this or not, but Ryan Bates has produced a wonderful document regarding:
Separate Role Models
EDIT:
Here's what I am currently using. I believe your 'Assignment' is the same as my 'UserRole'.
user.rb
#--
# Relationship
has_many :user_roles, :dependent => :destroy, :uniq => true
has_many :roles, :through => :user_roles, :uniq => true
#--
# Instance Method
# Determine if the user has a specified role
# You can find this method at: https://github.com/ryanb/cancan/wiki/Separate-Role-Model
# Written by Ryan Bates, I added the downcase though to detect 'Admin' vs 'admin'.
# Example:
# user.has_role? :Admin
# => true
def has_role?(role_sym)
roles.any? { |role| role.name.underscore.to_sym == role_sym.downcase }
end
role.rb
# id :integer(4) not null, primary key
# name :string(255)
#--
# Relationship
has_many :user_roles, :dependent => :destroy, :uniq => true
has_many :users, :through => :user_roles, :uniq => true
user_role.rb
# id :integer(4) not null, primary key
# user_id :integer(4)
# role_id :integer(4)
#--
# Relationship
belongs_to :user
belongs_to :role
Then in my ability.rb
def initialize(user)
user ||= User.new # in case of a guest
if user.has_role? :Admin # The user is an Administrator
can :manage, :all
else
can :read, :all
end
end
Then I can easily assign roles, like in my seed file by doing something like:
# Create Users
...
# Roles
admin = Role.create!(:name => "admin")
standard = Role.create!(:name => "standard")
# UserRoles :Admin
user1.roles << admin
user2.roles << standard
So by calling user.roles << [role_name], I am essentially creating a UserRole, which has a user_id and a role_id.