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rails--rails/activemodel
Ryuta Kamizono 6b0a9de906 PERF: 2x ~ 30x faster dirty tracking
Currently, although using both dirty tracking (ivar backed and
attributes backed) on one model is not supported (doesn't fully work at
least), both dirty tracking are being performed, that is very slow.

As long as attributes backed dirty tracking is used, ivar backed dirty
tracking should not need to be performed.

I've refactored to extract new `ForcedMutationTracker` which only tracks
`force_change` to be performed for ivar backed dirty tracking, that
makes dirty tracking on Active Record 2x ~ 30x faster.

https://gist.github.com/kamipo/971dfe0891f0fe1ec7db8ab31f016435

Before:

```
Warming up --------------------------------------
            changed?     4.467k i/100ms
             changed     5.134k i/100ms
             changes     3.023k i/100ms
  changed_attributes     4.358k i/100ms
        title_change     3.185k i/100ms
           title_was     3.381k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
            changed?     42.197k (±28.5%) i/s -    187.614k in   5.050446s
             changed     50.481k (±16.0%) i/s -    246.432k in   5.045759s
             changes     30.799k (± 7.2%) i/s -    154.173k in   5.030765s
  changed_attributes     51.530k (±14.2%) i/s -    252.764k in   5.041106s
        title_change     44.667k (± 9.0%) i/s -    222.950k in   5.040646s
           title_was     44.635k (±16.6%) i/s -    216.384k in   5.051098s
```

After:

```
Warming up --------------------------------------
            changed?    24.130k i/100ms
             changed    13.503k i/100ms
             changes     6.511k i/100ms
  changed_attributes     9.226k i/100ms
        title_change    48.221k i/100ms
           title_was    96.060k i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
            changed?    245.478k (±16.1%) i/s -      1.182M in   5.015837s
             changed    157.641k (± 4.9%) i/s -    796.677k in   5.066734s
             changes     70.633k (± 5.7%) i/s -    358.105k in   5.086553s
  changed_attributes     95.155k (±13.6%) i/s -    470.526k in   5.082841s
        title_change    566.481k (± 3.5%) i/s -      2.845M in   5.028852s
           title_was      1.487M (± 3.9%) i/s -      7.493M in   5.046774s
```
2019-04-11 16:30:40 +09:00
..
bin Use frozen string literal in activemodel/ 2017-07-16 20:11:16 +03:00
lib PERF: 2x ~ 30x faster dirty tracking 2019-04-11 16:30:40 +09:00
test Refactor has_secure_password to extract dedicated attribute module 2019-04-05 01:55:00 +09:00
activemodel.gemspec Fix links in gemspec and docs from http to https. 2019-03-09 19:42:35 +05:30
CHANGELOG.md Tweaks CHANGELOGs and docs [ci skip] 2019-03-31 08:38:37 +09:00
MIT-LICENSE Bump license years for 2019 2018-12-31 10:24:38 +07:00
Rakefile Use frozen string literal in activemodel/ 2017-07-16 20:11:16 +03:00
README.rdoc Merge pull request #35559 from ashishprajapati/ashishprajapati/important_textual_improvements 2019-03-09 22:54:21 +01:00

= Active Model -- model interfaces for Rails

Active Model provides a known set of interfaces for usage in model classes.
They allow for Action Pack helpers to interact with non-Active Record models,
for example. Active Model also helps with building custom ORMs for use outside of
the Rails framework.

You can read more about Active Model in the {Active Model Basics}[https://edgeguides.rubyonrails.org/active_model_basics.html] guide.

Prior to Rails 3.0, if a plugin or gem developer wanted to have an object
interact with Action Pack helpers, it was required to either copy chunks of
code from Rails, or monkey patch entire helpers to make them handle objects
that did not exactly conform to the Active Record interface. This would result
in code duplication and fragile applications that broke on upgrades. Active
Model solves this by defining an explicit API. You can read more about the
API in <tt>ActiveModel::Lint::Tests</tt>.

Active Model provides a default module that implements the basic API required
to integrate with Action Pack out of the box: <tt>ActiveModel::Model</tt>.

    class Person
      include ActiveModel::Model

      attr_accessor :name, :age
      validates_presence_of :name
    end

    person = Person.new(name: 'bob', age: '18')
    person.name   # => 'bob'
    person.age    # => '18'
    person.valid? # => true

It includes model name introspections, conversions, translations and
validations, resulting in a class suitable to be used with Action Pack.
See <tt>ActiveModel::Model</tt> for more examples.

Active Model also provides the following functionality to have ORM-like
behavior out of the box:

* Add attribute magic to objects

    class Person
      include ActiveModel::AttributeMethods

      attribute_method_prefix 'clear_'
      define_attribute_methods :name, :age

      attr_accessor :name, :age

      def clear_attribute(attr)
        send("#{attr}=", nil)
      end
    end

    person = Person.new
    person.clear_name
    person.clear_age

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/AttributeMethods.html]

* Callbacks for certain operations

    class Person
      extend ActiveModel::Callbacks
      define_model_callbacks :create

      def create
        run_callbacks :create do
          # Your create action methods here
        end
      end
    end

  This generates +before_create+, +around_create+ and +after_create+
  class methods that wrap your create method.

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Callbacks.html]

* Tracking value changes

    class Person
      include ActiveModel::Dirty

      define_attribute_methods :name

      def name
        @name
      end

      def name=(val)
        name_will_change! unless val == @name
        @name = val
      end

      def save
        # do persistence work
        changes_applied
      end
    end

    person = Person.new
    person.name             # => nil
    person.changed?         # => false
    person.name = 'bob'
    person.changed?         # => true
    person.changed          # => ['name']
    person.changes          # => { 'name' => [nil, 'bob'] }
    person.save
    person.name = 'robert'
    person.save
    person.previous_changes # => {'name' => ['bob, 'robert']}

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Dirty.html]

* Adding +errors+ interface to objects

  Exposing error messages allows objects to interact with Action Pack
  helpers seamlessly.

    class Person

      def initialize
        @errors = ActiveModel::Errors.new(self)
      end

      attr_accessor :name
      attr_reader   :errors

      def validate!
        errors.add(:name, "cannot be nil") if name.nil?
      end

      def self.human_attribute_name(attr, options = {})
        "Name"
      end
    end

    person = Person.new
    person.name = nil
    person.validate!
    person.errors.full_messages
    # => ["Name cannot be nil"]

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Errors.html]

* Model name introspection

    class NamedPerson
      extend ActiveModel::Naming
    end

    NamedPerson.model_name.name   # => "NamedPerson"
    NamedPerson.model_name.human  # => "Named person"

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Naming.html]

* Making objects serializable

  <tt>ActiveModel::Serialization</tt> provides a standard interface for your object
  to provide +to_json+ serialization.

    class SerialPerson
      include ActiveModel::Serialization

      attr_accessor :name

      def attributes
        {'name' => name}
      end
    end

    s = SerialPerson.new
    s.serializable_hash   # => {"name"=>nil}

    class SerialPerson
      include ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON
    end

    s = SerialPerson.new
    s.to_json             # => "{\"name\":null}"

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Serialization.html]

* Internationalization (i18n) support

    class Person
      extend ActiveModel::Translation
    end

    Person.human_attribute_name('my_attribute')
    # => "My attribute"

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Translation.html]

* Validation support

    class Person
      include ActiveModel::Validations

      attr_accessor :first_name, :last_name

      validates_each :first_name, :last_name do |record, attr, value|
        record.errors.add attr, 'starts with z.' if value.to_s[0] == ?z
      end
    end

    person = Person.new
    person.first_name = 'zoolander'
    person.valid?  # => false

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Validations.html]

* Custom validators

    class HasNameValidator < ActiveModel::Validator
      def validate(record)
        record.errors.add(:name, "must exist") if record.name.blank?
      end
    end

    class ValidatorPerson
      include ActiveModel::Validations
      validates_with HasNameValidator
      attr_accessor :name
    end

    p = ValidatorPerson.new
    p.valid?                  # =>  false
    p.errors.full_messages    # => ["Name must exist"]
    p.name = "Bob"
    p.valid?                  # =>  true

  {Learn more}[link:classes/ActiveModel/Validator.html]


== Download and installation

The latest version of Active Model can be installed with RubyGems:

  $ gem install activemodel

Source code can be downloaded as part of the Rails project on GitHub

* https://github.com/rails/rails/tree/master/activemodel


== License

Active Model is released under the MIT license:

* https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT


== Support

API documentation is at:

* https://api.rubyonrails.org

Bug reports for the Ruby on Rails project can be filed here:

* https://github.com/rails/rails/issues

Feature requests should be discussed on the rails-core mailing list here:

* https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/rubyonrails-core