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https://github.com/aasm/aasm
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518 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
518 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# AASM - Ruby state machines
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<a href="http://badge.fury.io/rb/aasm"><img src="https://badge.fury.io/rb/aasm@2x.png" alt="Gem Version" height="18"></a>
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[![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/aasm/aasm.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/aasm/aasm)
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[![Code Climate](https://codeclimate.com/github/aasm/aasm.png)](https://codeclimate.com/github/aasm/aasm)
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[![Coverage Status](https://coveralls.io/repos/aasm/aasm/badge.png?branch=master)](https://coveralls.io/r/aasm/aasm)
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This package contains AASM, a library for adding finite state machines to Ruby classes.
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AASM started as the *acts_as_state_machine* plugin but has evolved into a more generic library
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that no longer targets only ActiveRecord models. It currently provides adapters for
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[ActiveRecord](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Base.html) and
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[Mongoid](http://mongoid.org/), but it can be used for any Ruby class, no matter what
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parent class it has (if any).
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## Usage
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Adding a state machine is as simple as including the AASM module and start defining
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**states** and **events** together with their **transitions**:
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```ruby
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class Job
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include AASM
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aasm do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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state :cleaning
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event :run do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running
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end
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event :clean do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :cleaning
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end
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event :sleep do
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transitions :from => [:running, :cleaning], :to => :sleeping
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end
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end
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end
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```
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This provides you with a couple of public methods for instances of the class `Job`:
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```ruby
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job = Job.new
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job.sleeping? # => true
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job.may_run? # => true
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job.run
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job.running? # => true
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job.sleeping? # => false
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job.may_run? # => false
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job.run # => raises AASM::InvalidTransition
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```
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If you don't like exceptions and prefer a simple `true` or `false` as response, tell
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AASM not to be *whiny*:
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```ruby
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class Job
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...
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aasm :whiny_transitions => false do
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...
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end
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end
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job.running? # => true
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job.may_run? # => false
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job.run # => false
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```
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When firing an event, you can pass a block to the method, it will be called only if
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the transition succeeds :
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```ruby
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job.run do
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job.user.notify_job_ran # Will be called if job.may_run? is true
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end
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```
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### Callbacks
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You can define a number of callbacks for your transitions. These methods will be
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called, when certain criteria are met, like entering a particular state:
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```ruby
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class Job
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include AASM
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aasm do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true, :before_enter => :do_something
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state :running
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event :run, :after => Proc.new { |user| notify_somebody(user) } do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running, :on_transition => Proc.new {|obj, *args| obj.set_process(*args) }
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end
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event :sleep do
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after do
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...
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end
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error do |e|
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...
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end
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping
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end
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end
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def set_process(name)
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...
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end
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def do_something
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...
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end
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def notify_somebody(user)
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...
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end
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end
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```
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In this case `do_something` is called before actually entering the state `sleeping`,
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while `notify_somebody` is called after the transition `run` (from `sleeping` to `running`)
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is finished.
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Here you can see a list of all possible callbacks, together with their order of calling:
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```ruby
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event:before
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previous_state:before_exit
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new_state:before_enter
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...update state...
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previous_state:after_exit
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new_state:after_enter
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event:after
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```
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Also, you can pass parameters to events:
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```ruby
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job = Job.new
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job.run(:running, :defragmentation)
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```
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In this case the `set_process` would be called with `:defagmentation` argument.
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In case of an error during the event processing the error is rescued and passed to `:error`
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callback, which can handle it or re-raise it for further propagation.
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During the `:on_transition` callback (and reliably only then) you can access the
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originating state (the from-state) and the target state (the to state), like this:
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```ruby
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def set_process(name)
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logger.info "from #{aasm.from_state} to #{aasm.to_state}"
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end
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```
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### Guards
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Let's assume you want to allow particular transitions only if a defined condition is
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given. For this you can set up a guard per transition, which will run before actually
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running the transition. If the guard returns `false` the transition will be
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denied (raising `AASM::InvalidTransition` or returning `false` itself):
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```ruby
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class Job
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include AASM
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aasm do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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state :cleaning
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event :run do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running
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end
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event :clean do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :cleaning
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end
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event :sleep do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping, :guard => :cleaning_needed?
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end
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end
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def cleaning_needed?
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false
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end
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end
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job = Job.new
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job.run
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job.may_sleep? # => false
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job.sleep # => raises AASM::InvalidTransition
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```
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You can even provide a number of guards, which all have to succeed to proceed
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```ruby
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def walked_the_dog?; ...; end
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event :sleep do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping, :guards => [:cleaning_needed?, :walked_the_dog?]
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end
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```
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If you want to provide guards for all transitions withing an event, you can use event guards
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```ruby
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event :sleep, :guards => [:walked_the_dog?] do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping, :guards => [:cleaning_needed?]
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transitions :from => :cleaning, :to => :sleeping
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end
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```
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### ActiveRecord
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AASM comes with support for ActiveRecord and allows automatical persisting of the object's
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state in the database.
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm do # default column: aasm_state
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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event :run do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running
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end
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event :sleep do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping
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end
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end
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end
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```
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You can tell AASM to auto-save the object or leave it unsaved
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```ruby
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job = Job.new
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job.run # not saved
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job.run! # saved
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```
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Saving includes running all validations on the `Job` class. If you want make sure
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the state gets saved without running validations (and thereby maybe persisting an
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invalid object state), simply tell AASM to skip the validations:
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm :skip_validation_on_save => true do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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event :run do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running
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end
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event :sleep do
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transitions :from => :running, :to => :sleeping
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end
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end
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end
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```
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### Mongoid
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AASM also supports persistence to Mongodb if you're using Mongoid. Make sure
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to include Mongoid::Document before you include AASM.
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```ruby
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class Job
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include Mongoid::Document
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include AASM
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field :aasm_state
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aasm do
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...
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end
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end
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```
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### Automatic Scopes
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AASM will automatically create scope methods for each state in the model.
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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state :cleaning
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end
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def sleeping
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"This method name is in already use"
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end
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end
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```
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```ruby
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class JobsController < ApplicationController
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def index
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@running_jobs = jobs.running
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@recent_cleaning_jobs = jobs.cleaning.where('created_at >= ?', 3.days.ago)
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# @sleeping_jobs = jobs.sleeping #=> "This method name is in already use"
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end
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end
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```
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If you don't need scopes (or simply don't want them), disable their creation when
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defining the `AASM` states, like this:
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm :create_scopes => false do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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state :cleaning
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end
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end
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```
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### Transaction support
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Since version *3.0.13* AASM supports ActiveRecord transactions. So whenever a transition
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callback or the state update fails, all changes to any database record are rolled back.
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Mongodb does not support transactions.
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If you want to make sure a depending action happens only after the transaction is committed,
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use the `after_commit` callback, like this:
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm do
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state :sleeping, :initial => true
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state :running
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event :run, :after_commit => :notify_about_running_job do
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transitions :from => :sleeping, :to => :running
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end
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end
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def notify_about_running_job
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...
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end
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end
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```
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If you want to encapsulate state changes within an own transaction, the behavior
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of this nested transaction might be confusing. Take a look at
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[ActiveRecord Nested Transactions](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Transactions/ClassMethods.html)
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if you want to know more about this. Nevertheless, AASM by default requires a new transaction
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`transaction(:requires_new => true)`. You can override this behavior by changing
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the configuration
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm :requires_new_transaction => false do
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...
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end
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...
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end
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```
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which then leads to `transaction(:requires_new => false)`, the Rails default.
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### Column name & migration
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As a default AASM uses the column `aasm_state` to store the states. You can override
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this by defining your favorite column name, using `:column` like this:
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```ruby
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class Job < ActiveRecord::Base
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include AASM
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aasm :column => 'my_state' do
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...
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end
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end
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```
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Whatever column name is used, make sure to add a migration to provide this column
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(of type `string`):
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```ruby
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class AddJobState < ActiveRecord::Migration
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def self.up
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add_column :jobs, :aasm_state, :string
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end
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def self.down
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remove_column :jobs, :aasm_state
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end
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end
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```
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### Inspection
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AASM supports a couple of methods to find out which states or events are provided or permissible.
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Given the `Job` class from above:
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```ruby
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job = Job.new
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job.aasm.states
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=> [:sleeping, :running, :cleaning]
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job.aasm.states(:permissible => true)
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=> [:running]
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job.run
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job.aasm.states(:permissible => true)
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=> [:cleaning, :sleeping]
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job.aasm.events
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=> [:run, :clean, :sleep]
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```
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## <a id="installation">Installation ##
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### Manually from RubyGems.org ###
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```sh
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% gem install aasm
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```
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### Or if you are using Bundler ###
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```ruby
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# Gemfile
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gem 'aasm'
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```
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### Building your own gems ###
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```sh
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% rake build
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% sudo gem install pkg/aasm-x.y.z.gem
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```
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## Latest changes ##
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Take a look at the [CHANGELOG](https://github.com/aasm/aasm/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) for details about recent changes to the current version.
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## Questions? ##
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Feel free to
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* [create an issue on GitHub](https://github.com/aasm/aasm/issues)
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* [ask a question on StackOverflow](http://stackoverflow.com) (tag with `aasm`)
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* send us a tweet [@aasm](http://twitter.com/aasm)
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## Maintainers ##
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* [Scott Barron](https://github.com/rubyist) (2006–2009, original author)
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* [Travis Tilley](https://github.com/ttilley) (2009–2011)
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* [Thorsten Böttger](http://github.com/alto) (since 2011)
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## Warranty ##
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This software is provided "as is" and without any express or
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implied warranties, including, without limitation, the implied
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warranties of merchantibility and fitness for a particular
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purpose.
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## License ##
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Copyright (c) 2006-2014 Scott Barron
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
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a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
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"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
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without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
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distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
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permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
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the following conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
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MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE
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LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
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OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
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WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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