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I was asked to make some kind of reporting (logging) service. The employee has locally installed web application (just some dynamic website, written in PHP) in many companies. This web app is some kind of survey. All data is saved on local database, but now the requirement is that this data (result of survey) will also be sent to central server after every form submit.

There are four types of surveys. They have organised it this way, that there are many Projects, and each Project can have only one Survey of each type (STI here?) and Survey belongs to one Project. Each Survey will receive a report from local app, so it will have many Reports. The Rails 3 app that logs this reports should mimic somehow this logic. First question is: does this AR structure make sense for you?

  Project-1--------1-Survey-1-------*-Report

  Project
    has_one :survey
    has_many :reports, :through => :survey

  Survey
    belongs_to :project
    has_many :reports

  Report
    belongs_to :survey

Second question is about having multiple tables for one AR Model. If all data will be stored in reports table, the table will become huge very quickly, and efficient querying for reports that belong to specific survey might be a problem after some time. Maybe it would be better to have separate tables for each Survey? Like reports_<survey_id>. Is this possible?

Also, I am somehow forced to use MySQL, but if there is another, much better solution for this, I could try to push it through.

If you are still here, thank you for reading this :)

2 Answers 2

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+50

Second question is about having multiple tables for one AR Model. If all data will be stored in reports table, the table will become huge very quickly, and efficient querying for reports that belong to specific survey might be a problem after some time. Maybe it would be better to have separate tables for each Survey? Like reports_. Is this possible?

Yes, it is possible.

You can do it this way:

class Report < AR::Base
  table_name_suffix = ''
end

Report.table_name_suffix = 'foo'

UPDATE


# simple example of sharding model

class Survey < AR::Base
  has_many :reports

  def shard_reports
    Report.table_name_suffix = "_survey_#{self.id}"
    returning(reports){ Report.table_name_suffix = "" }
  end

end

Survey.first.reports_shard
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  • Thank you, looks easy. I hope this will not cause any problems.
    – Ernest
    May 17, 2011 at 12:27
  • Problems will be ;) Because, you should control this manually. And create new report table when you create survey
    – Anton
    May 17, 2011 at 14:13
  • @Anton What? This sounds like a mess. See stackoverflow.com/questions/44145/database-sharding-and-rails
    – coreyward
    May 17, 2011 at 19:23
  • @Anton So this would require to mess with raw SQL?
    – Ernest
    May 19, 2011 at 11:22
  • @Ernest No this don't require raw SQL. This require select table before you manipulate of data. See update.
    – Anton
    May 19, 2011 at 13:49
5

Put an index on each of your foreign keys (e.g. Reports.survey_id) and take a breather. You're worrying entirely too much about the performance right now. You will need at least millions of records in your Reports table before you will see any performance problems from MySQL.

1
  • Yes, maybe I am worrying too much. See my last comment to Anton's answer. Thanks again for your tips.
    – Ernest
    May 21, 2011 at 20:33

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