I have a legacy SQL schema which looks something like this:
CREATE TABLE `User` (
`id` bigint(20) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`userType` varchar(255) DEFAULT NULL,
`seqNo` int(11) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB AUTO_INCREMENT=30 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
CREATE TABLE `Employee` (
`userType` varchar(255) DEFAULT NULL,
`id` bigint(20) NOT NULL,
`employeeNumber` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `FKB65C8D4DB07F537D` (`id`),
CONSTRAINT `FKB65C8D4DB07F537D` FOREIGN KEY (`id`) REFERENCES `User` (`id`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;
In this design, an Employee is-a User in the domain model. i.e. The employee's "id" field is a foreign key which references User.id.
How would I encode this relationship with Rails 3.0 models and migrations? For example, if I ran
rails g scaffold User userType:string seqNo:integer
it would get me a Rails database migration which would generate a very similar schema, and a model which could access that table. However I am not sure what to do to get the Employee table with Employee.id as a foreign key referring to User.id, as well as getting an Employee model which can access both tables.
How can I accomplish this?