gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/app/models/concerns/atomic_internal_id.rb

47 lines
1.7 KiB
Ruby

# Include atomic internal id generation scheme for a model
#
# This allows us to atomically generate internal ids that are
# unique within a given scope.
#
# For example, let's generate internal ids for Issue per Project:
# ```
# class Issue < ActiveRecord::Base
# has_internal_id :iid, scope: :project, init: ->(s) { s.project.issues.maximum(:iid) }
# end
# ```
#
# This generates unique internal ids per project for newly created issues.
# The generated internal id is saved in the `iid` attribute of `Issue`.
#
# This concern uses InternalId records to facilitate atomicity.
# In the absence of a record for the given scope, one will be created automatically.
# In this situation, the `init` block is called to calculate the initial value.
# In the example above, we calculate the maximum `iid` of all issues
# within the given project.
#
# Note that a model may have more than one internal id associated with possibly
# different scopes.
module AtomicInternalId
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
module ClassMethods
def has_internal_id(column, scope:, init:, presence: true) # rubocop:disable Naming/PredicateName
before_validation :"ensure_#{scope}_#{column}!", on: :create
validates column, presence: presence
define_method("ensure_#{scope}_#{column}!") do
scope_value = association(scope).reader
if read_attribute(column).blank? && scope_value
scope_attrs = { scope_value.class.table_name.singularize.to_sym => scope_value }
usage = self.class.table_name.to_sym
new_iid = InternalId.generate_next(self, scope_attrs, usage, init)
write_attribute(column, new_iid)
end
read_attribute(column)
end
end
end
end