- Setup a database in a Sinatra application.
- Create and use a Rakefile to run ActiveRecord migrations.
- Use ActiveRecord in a Sinatra application.
Sinatra doesn't come with database support out of the box, but it's relatively easy to configure. In general, we'll be working from templates that have this pre-built, but it's good to understand what's going on under the hood. We're going to practice adding a database to our Sinatra applications.
Fork and clone this repository to get started! We have a basic sinatra application stubbed out with an app.rb
file acting as the controller.
First, we'll add three gems to allow us to use ActiveRecord: activerecord
version 4.2.5
, sinatra-activerecord
, and rake
. activerecord
gives us access to the magical database mapping and association powers. rake
, short for "ruby make", is a package that lets us quickly create files, folders, and automate tasks such as database creation, and sinatra-activerecord
gives us access to some awesome Rake tasks. Make sure those three gems are in your Gemfile:
gem 'sinatra'
gem 'activerecord', '4.2.5'
gem 'sinatra-activerecord'
gem 'rake'
gem 'thin'
gem 'require_all'
Into our development group, we'll add two other gems: sqlite3
and tux
. sqlite3
is our database adapter gem - it's what allows our Ruby application to communicate with a SQL database. tux
will give us an interactive console that pre-loads our database and ActiveRecord relationships for us. Since we won't use either of these in production, we put them in our :development
group - this way, they won't get installed on our server when we deploy our application.
gem 'sinatra'
gem 'activerecord', '4.2.5'
gem 'sinatra-activerecord'
gem 'thin'
gem 'require_all'
group :development do
gem 'shotgun'
gem 'pry'
gem 'tux'
gem 'sqlite3'
end
Our Gemfile is up to date - awesome! Go ahead and run bundle install
to get your system up to speed.
We now have access to all of the gems that we need, but we still need to setup a connection to our database. Add the following block of code to your environment.rb
file (underneath Bundler.require(:default, ENV['SINATRA_ENV'])
).
configure :development do
set :database, 'sqlite3:db/database.db'
end
This sets up a connection to a sqlite3 database named "database.db", located in a folder called "db." If we wanted our .db
file to be called dogs.db
, we could simply change the name of this file:
configure :development do
set :database, 'sqlite3:db/dogs.db'
end
But for now, database.db
is a great name. Notice that this didn't actually create those files or folders yet - that's how Rake will help us.
As we mentioned, rake
gives us the ability to quickly make files and setup automated tasks. We define these in a file called Rakefile
. First, create a Rakefile
in the root of our project directory. In the Rakefile
, we'll require our config/environment.rb
file to load up our environment, as well as "sinatra/activerecord/rake"
to get Rake tasks from the sinatra-activerecord
gem.
require './config/environment'
require 'sinatra/activerecord/rake'
In the terminal, type rake -T
to view all of the available rake tasks. You should see the following output:
rake db:create # Creates the database from DATABASE_URL or config/database.yml for...
rake db:create_migration # Create a migration (parameters: NAME, VERSION)
rake db:drop # Drops the database from DATABASE_URL or config/database.yml for t...
rake db:fixtures:load # Load fixtures into the current environment's database
rake db:migrate # Migrate the database (options: VERSION=x, VERBOSE=false, SCOPE=blog)
rake db:migrate:status # Display status of migrations
rake db:rollback # Rolls the schema back to the previous version (specify steps w/ S...
rake db:schema:cache:clear # Clear a db/schema_cache.dump file
rake db:schema:cache:dump # Create a db/schema_cache.dump file
rake db:schema:dump # Create a db/schema.rb file that is portable against any DB suppor...
rake db:schema:load # Load a schema.rb file into the database
rake db:seed # Load the seed data from db/seeds.rb
rake db:setup # Create the database, load the schema, and initialize with the see...
rake db:structure:dump # Dump the database structure to db/structure.sql
rake db:structure:load # Recreate the databases from the structure.sql file
rake db:version # Retrieves the current schema version number
Let's test out our handiwork by creating a dogs
table with two columns: name
and breed
. First, let's create our migration:
rake db:create_migration NAME=create_dogs
You should see the following output:
=># db/migrate/20150914201353_create_dogs.rb
The beginning of the file is a timestamp - yours should reflect the time that your create_dogs
file was created! You've now created your first database migration inside of the db
folder.
Inside of the migration file, remove the default change
method (we'll come back to this), and add methods for up
and down
.
class CreateDogs < ActiveRecord::Migration
def up
end
def down
end
end
Our up
method should create our table with name
and breed
columns. Our down method should drop the table.
class CreateDogs < ActiveRecord::Migration
def up
create_table :dogs do |t|
t.string :name
t.string :breed
end
end
def down
drop_table :dogs
end
end
Now, run the migration from the terminal with rake db:migrate
.
rake db:migrate
You should see the following output:
== 20150914201353 CreateDogs: migrating =======================================
-- create_table(:dogs)
-> 0.0019s
== 20150914201353 CreateDogs: migrated (0.0020s) ==============================
The change method is actually a shorter way of writing up
and down
methods. We can refactor our migration to look like this:
class CreateDogs < ActiveRecord::Migration
def change
create_table :dogs do |t|
t.string :name
t.string :breed
end
end
end
While the rollback (down
) method is not included, it's implicit in the change method. Rolling back the database would work in exactly the same way as using the down
method.
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