A Bridgetown plugin to make it easy to integrate and use Sequel, a popular database toolkit for Ruby.
It's been tested only with PostgreSQL, but it should support any of the databases supported by Sequel.
Tip
If you're like me and you greatly prefer YARD's UI to RDoc, check out Sequel on Gemdocs.
Run these commands to add this plugin along with the database adapter of your choice to your site's Gemfile:
bundle add pg # or sqlite3, etc.
bundle add bridgetown_sequelThen add the database URI and initializer to your configuration in config/initializers.rb (note that the initializer must be excepted from the sequel_tasks context):
database_uri ENV.fetch("DATABASE_URL", "postgres://localhost/your_database_name_here_#{Bridgetown.env}")
except :sequel_tasks do
init :bridgetown_sequel
end(For a Unix socket, your hostname in the connection string should be something like %2Fvar%2Frun%2Fpostgresql instead of localhost)
You'll also want to add this plugin's Rake tasks to your Rakefile:
# This is at the top of your Rakefile already:
Bridgetown.load_tasks
# Now add this:
require "bridgetown_sequel"
BridgetownSequel.load_tasksFinally, you'll want to create a models folder at the top-level of your site repo, as well as a migrations folder.
There's a bug on macOS which will crash Bridgetown & Sequel unless you disable PostgreSQL's GSSAPI support (not needed for local development). You'll need to update your configuration as follows:
init :bridgetown_sequel do
connection_options do
if RUBY_PLATFORM.include?("darwin")
driver_options { gssencmode "disable" }
end
end
endIn production, Bridgetown's Puma server configuration is set to "clustered mode" which forks the server process several times. This will result in Sequel connection errors if you don't shut down the database connection first. Update your config/puma.rb file so the production config looks like this:
if ENV["BRIDGETOWN_ENV"] == "production"
workers ENV.fetch("BRIDGETOWN_CONCURRENCY") { 4 }
before_fork do
Bridgetown.db.disconnect if defined?(Bridgetown) && Bridgetown.respond_to?(:db)
end
endTo add your first database table & model, first you'll want to add a model file to your new models folder. It can look as simple as this:
# models/project.rb
class Project < Sequel::Model
# you can add optional model configuration along with your own Ruby code here later...
endLet's set up the database now. Run this command (you only need to do this once for your repo):
bin/bridgetown db:setupNext, you'll want to create a migration. Run the following command:
bin/bridgetown db:migrations:new filename=create_projectsAnd modify the new migrations/001_create_projects.rb file to look something like this:
Sequel.migration do
change do
create_table(:projects) do
primary_key :id
String :name, null: false
String :category
Integer :order, default: 0
DateTime :created_at
DateTime :updated_at
end
end
endFinally, run migrations:
bin/bridgetown db:migrateThis will create the projects table and annotate your models/project.rb file with comments showing the table schema.
Now let's test your model. Run bin/bridgetown console (or bin/bt c for short):
> Project.create(name: "My new project")
> project = Project[1]You should now see that you can save and load project records in your database.
Note
If you ever need to drop your database and start over, run bin/bridgetown db:drop.
You can pass various options to the bridgetown_sequel initializer to customize the behavior of Sequel:
init :bridgetown_sequel do
connection_options do # pass options to Sequel's `connect` method
# This adds a nice console debugging feature, aka `Project.dataset.print`
extensions [:pretty_table]
end
skip_autoload true # only set to `true` if you're manually configuring your autoload settings
models_dir "another_folder" # change the default `models` to something else
model_setup ->(model) do # here you can add `Sequel::Model` plugins to apply to all your models
model.plugin :update_or_create
end
endAt any time after the initializer is run, you can access Bridgetown.database (aliased db) anywhere in your Ruby code to access the Sequel connection object. (This is equivalent to the DB constant you see in a lot of Sequel documentation.) For example, in your console:
> db = Bridgetown.db
> db.fetch("SELECT * FROM projects ORDER BY name desc LIMIT 1").first
> db["SELECT COUNT(*) FROM projects"].first[:count]Raw SQL statements won't be logged out-of-the-box, but you can attach Bridgetown's logger to Sequel. Just add this statement right after your initializer:
Bridgetown.db.loggers << Bridgetown.loggerTip
For a quick reference on what you can do with the Sequel DSL, check out this handy cheat sheet.
Also read Sequel on Gemdocs, and check out all the plugins & database extensions you can add to Sequel models.
- Fork it (https://github.com/bridgetownrb/bridgetown_sequel/fork)
- Clone the fork using
git cloneto your local development machine. - Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create a new Pull Request
- Run
script/testto run the test suite. - Or run
script/cibuildto validate with Rubocop and Minitest together.