You might also consider using the latest git repository. We try to make sure the current version in git is stable and at the very least all tests should pass.
There is currently no standard way for telling CouchRest Model how it should access your database, this is something we're still working on. For the time being, the easiest way is to set a COUCHDB_DATABASE global variable to an instance of CouchRest Database, and call `use_database COUCHDB_DATABASE` in each model.
By default, attributes without a property will not be updated via the `#attributes=` method. This provents useless data being passed to database, for example from an HTML form. However, if you would like truely
CouchDB views can be quite difficult to get grips with at first as they are quite different from what you'd expect with SQL queries in a normal Relational Database. Checkout some of the [CouchDB documentation on views](http://wiki.apache.org/couchdb/Introduction_to_CouchDB_views) to get to grips with the basics. The key is to remember that CouchDB will only generate indexes from which you can extract consecutive rows of data, filtering other than between two points in a data set is not possible.
CouchRest Model has great support for views, and since version 1.1.0 we added support for a View objects that make accessing your data even easier.
### The Old Way
Here's an example of adding a view to our Cat class:
class Cat <CouchRest::Model::Base
property :name, String
property :toys, [CatToy]
view_by :name
end
The `view_by` method will create a view in the Cat's design document called "by_name". This will allow searches to be made for the Cat's name attribute. Calling `Cat.by_name` will send a query of to the database and return an array of all the Cat objects available. Internally, a map function is generated automatically and stored in CouchDB's design document for the current model, it'll look something like the following:
function(doc) {
if (doc['couchrest-type'] == 'Cat' && doc['name']) {
emit(doc.name, null);
}
}
By default, a special view called `all` is created and added to all couchrest models that allows you access to all the documents in the database that match the model. By default, these will be ordered by each documents id field.
It is also possible to create views of multiple keys, for example:
view_by :birthday, :name
This will create an view of all the cats' birthdays and their names called `by_birthday_and_name`.
Sometimes the automatically generate map function might not be sufficient for more complicated queries. To customize, add the :map and :reduce functions when creating the view:
view_by :tags,
:map =>
"function(doc) {
if (doc['model'] == 'Post' && doc.tags) {
doc.tags.forEach(function(tag){
emit(doc.tag, 1);
});
}
}",
:reduce =>
"function(keys, values, rereduce) {
return sum(values);
}"
Calling a view will return document objects by default, to get access to the raw CouchDB result add the `:raw => true` option to get a hash instead. Custom views can also be queried with `:reduce => true` to return reduce results. The default is to query with `:reduce => false`.
Views are generated (on a per-model basis) lazily on first-access. This means that if you are deploying changes to a view, the views for
that model won't be available until generation is complete. This can take some time with large databases. Strategies are in the works.
### View Objects
Since CouchRest Model 1.1.0 it is now possible to create views that return objects chainable objects, similar to those you'd find in the Sequel Ruby library or Rails 3's Arel. Heres an example of creating a few views:
class Post <CouchRest::Model::Base
property :title
property :body
property :posted_at, DateTime
property :tags, [String]
design do
view :by_title
view :by_posted_at_and_title
view :tag_list,
:map =>
"function(doc) {
if (doc['model'] == 'Post' && doc.tags) {
doc.tags.forEach(function(tag){
emit(doc.tag, 1);
});
}
}",
:reduce =>
"function(keys, values, rereduce) {
return sum(values);
}"
end
You'll see that this new syntax requires all views to be defined inside a design block. Unlike the old version, the keys to be used in a query are determined from the name of the view, not the other way round. Acessing data is the fun part:
The view objects have built in support for pagination based on the [kaminari](https://github.com/amatsuda/kaminari) gem. Methods are provided to match those required by the library to peform pagination.
For your view to support paginating the results, it must use a reduce function that provides a total count of the documents in the result set. By default, auto-generated views include a reduce function that supports this.
This is a somewhat controvesial feature of CouchRest Model that some document database purists may cringe at. CouchDB does not yet povide many features to support relationships between documents but the fact of that matter is that its a very useful paradigm for modelling data systems.
In the near future we hope to add support for a `has_many` relationship that takes of the _Linked Documents_ feature that arrived in CouchDB 0.11.
### Belongs To
Creates a property in the document with `_id` added to the end of the name of the foreign model with getter and setter methods to access the model.
Example:
class Cat <CouchRest::Model::Base
belongs_to :mother
property :name
end
kitty = Cat.new(:name => "Felix")
kitty.mother = Mother.find_by_name('Sophie')
Providing a object to the setter, `mother` in the example will automagically update the `mother_id` attribute. Retrieving the data later is just as expected:
kitty = Cat.find_by_name "Felix"
kitty.mother.name == 'Sophie'
Belongs_to accepts a few options to add a bit more felxibility:
*`:class_name` - the camel case string name of the class used to load the model.
*`:foreign_key` - the name of the property to use instead of the attribute name with `_id` on the end.
*`:proxy` - a string that when evaluated provides a proxy model that responds to `#get`.
The last option, `:proxy` is a feature currently in testing that allows objects to be loaded from a proxy class, such as `ClassProxy`. For example:
A project instance in this scenario would need to be loaded by calling `#get(project_id)` on `self.company.projects` in the scope of an instance of the Invoice. We hope to document and work on this powerful feature in the near future.
### Collection Of
A collection_of relationship is much like belongs_to except that rather than just one foreign key, an array of foreign keys can be stored. This is one of the great features of a document database. This relationship uses a proxy object to automatically update two arrays; one containing the objects being used, and a second with the foreign keys used to the find them.
See the belongs_to relationship for the options that can be used. Note that this isn't especially efficient, a `get` is performed for each model in the array. As with a has_many relationship, we hope to be able to take advantage of the Linked Documents feature to avoid multiple requests.
CouchRest Model automatically includes the new ActiveModel validations, so they should work just as the traditional Rails validations. For more details, please see the ActiveModel::Validations documentation.
Given that the uniqueness check performs a request to the database, it is also possible to include a `:proxy` parameter. This allows you to call a method on the document and provide an alternate proxy object.
A really interesting use of `:proxy` and `:view` together could be where you'd like to ensure the ID is unique between several types of document. For example:
The most complete documentation is the spec/ directory. To validate your CouchRest install, from the project root directory run `rake`, or `autotest` (requires RSpec and optionally ZenTest for autotest support).
Please post bugs, suggestions and patches to the bug tracker at [http://github.com/couchrest/couchrest_model/issues](http://github.com/couchrest/couchrest_model/issues).