/bulk_insert

Efficient bulk inserts with ActiveRecord

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

BulkInsert

A little ActiveRecord extension for helping to insert lots of rows in a single insert statement.

Installation

Add it to your Gemfile:

gem 'bulk_insert'

Usage

BulkInsert adds a new class method to your ActiveRecord models:

class Book < ActiveRecord::Base
end

book_attrs = ... # some array of hashes, for instance
Book.bulk_insert do |worker|
  book_attrs.each do |attrs|
    worker.add(attrs)
  end
end

All of those #add calls will be accumulated into a single SQL insert statement, vastly improving the performance of multiple sequential inserts (think data imports and the like).

If you don't like using a block API, you can also simply pass an array of rows to be inserted:

book_attrs = ... # some array of hashes, for instance
Book.bulk_insert values: book_attrs

By default, the columns to be inserted will be all columns in the table, minus the id column, but if you want, you can explicitly enumerate the columns:

Book.bulk_insert(:title, :author) do |worker|
  # specify a row as an array of values...
  worker.add ["Eye of the World", "Robert Jordan"]

  # or as a hash
  worker.add title: "Lord of Light", author: "Roger Zelazny"
end

It will automatically set created_at/updated_at columns to the current date, as well.

Book.bulk_insert(:title, :author, :created_at, :updated_at) do |worker|
  # specify created_at/updated_at explicitly...
  worker.add ["The Chosen", "Chaim Potok", Time.now, Time.now]

  # or let BulkInsert set them by default...
  worker.add ["Hello Ruby", "Linda Liukas"]
end

Similarly, if a value is omitted, BulkInsert will use whatever default value is defined for that column in the database:

# create_table :books do |t|
#   ...
#   t.string "medium", default: "paper"
#   ...
# end

Book.bulk_insert(:title, :author, :medium) do |worker|
  worker.add title: "Ender's Game", author: "Orson Scott Card"
end

Book.first.medium #-> "paper"

By default, the batch is always saved when the block finishes, but you can explicitly save inside the block whenever you want, by calling #save! on the worker:

Book.bulk_insert do |worker|
  worker.add(...)
  worker.add(...)

  worker.save!

  worker.add(...)
  #...
end

That will save the batch as it has been defined to that point, and then empty the batch so that you can add more rows to it if you want. Note that all records saved together will have the same created_at/updated_at timestamp (unless one was explicitly set).

Batch Set Size

By default, the size of the insert is limited to 500 rows at a time. This is called the set size. If you add another row that causes the set to exceed the set size, the insert statement is automatically built and executed, and the batch is reset.

If you want a larger (or smaller) set size, you can specify it in two ways:

# specify set_size when initializing the bulk insert...
Book.bulk_insert(set_size: 100) do |worker|
  # ...
end

# specify it on the worker directly...
Book.bulk_insert do |worker|
  worker.set_size = 100
  # ...
end

License

BulkInsert is released under the MIT license (see MIT-LICENSE) by Jamis Buck (jamis@jamisbuck.org).