A set of tools to make the Sorbet typechecker work with Ruby on Rails seamlessly.
This gem adds a few Rake tasks to generate Ruby Interface (RBI) files for dynamic methods generated by Rails. It also includes signatures for related Rails classes. The RBI files are added to a sorbet/rails-rbi/
folder.
sorbet-rails
supports Rails 5+ or later.
Notice: we no longer support Rails 4.2. Version 0.5.6 is the last version supporting Rails 4.2.
-
Follow the steps here to set up the latest version of Sorbet, up to being able to run
srb tc
. -
Add
sorbet-rails
to your Gemfile and install them with Bundler.
# -- Gemfile --
gem 'sorbet-rails'
Add sorbet-rails
to the :default
group because of "Features Provided at Runtime" below.
❯ bundle install
- Generate RBI files for your routes, models, etc
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:routes
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:models
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:helpers
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:mailers
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:jobs
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:custom
# or run them all at once
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:all
- Update hidden-definition files and automatically upgrade each file's typecheck level:
❯ srb rbi hidden-definitions
❯ srb rbi suggest-typed
Because we've generated RBI files for routes, models, and helpers, a lot more files should be typecheckable now. Many methods in hidden.rbi
may be removed because they are now typed.
This Rake task generates RBI files for all models in the Rails application (all descendants of ActiveRecord::Base
):
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:models
You can also regenerate RBI files for specific models. To accommodate for STI, this will generate rbi for all the subclasses of the models included.
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:models[ModelName,AnotherOne,...]
The generation task currently creates the following signatures:
- Column getters & setters
- Associations getters & setters
- Enum values, checkers & scopes
- Named scopes
- Model
Relation
class- Scopes on
Relation
, but not class methods
- Scopes on
It is possible to add custom RBI generation logic for your custom module or gems via the plugin system. Check out the plugins section below if you are interested.
We also add following methods to make type-checking more easily:
The pluck
method in Rails is a performant way to query value without instantiating ActiveRecord objects. However, it doesn't have any type information: it doesn't have type information (or name) of the attribute plucked. Sorbet-rails provides pluck_to_tstruct
method as a replacement that returns an array of T::Struct
instead. The attributes plucked is based on props defined in the T::Struct
# -- API
Arel.pluck_to_tstruct(TA[ <TStructSubClass> ].new)
# -- example
class WizardStruct < T::Struct
const :name, String
const :house, T.nilable(String)
end
Wizard.pluck_to_tstruct(TA[WizardStruct].new) # T::Array[WizardStruct]
Wizard.all.pluck_to_tstruct(TA[WizardStruct].new) # T::Array[WizardStruct]
You can also pass a keyword argument called associations
that represents a mapping of a T::Struct
's keys to an associated table's columns.
# -- API
Arel.pluck_to_tstruct(TA[ <TStructSubclass> ].new, associations: < Hash<Symbol, String> >)
# -- example
class WizardWithWandStruct < T::Struct
const :name, String
const :house, T.nilable(String)
const :wand_wood_type, String
end
Wizard.joins(:wand).pluck_to_tstruct(
TA[WizardWithWandStruct].new,
associations: { wand_wood_type: "wands.wood_type" }
)
Wizard.all.joins(:wand).pluck_to_tstruct(
TA[WizardWithWandStruct].new,
associations: { wand_wood_type: "wands.wood_type" }
)
This method is based on pluck_to_hash gem.
If you use Rails enum
, sorbet-rails
will generate a corresponding T::Enum
. It will also include getters, setters, and scope methods in the rbi file it generates.
ie.
enum house: {
Gryffindor: 0,
Hufflepuff: 1,
Ravenclaw: 2,
Slytherin: 3,
}
Will generate this enum:
class Wizard
class House < T::Enum
enums do
Gryffindor = new('Gryffindor')
Hufflepuff = new('Hufflepuff')
Ravenclaw = new('Ravenclaw')
Slytherin = new('Slytherin')
end
end
end
And these methods:
sig { returns(T.nilable(String)) }
def house; end
sig { params(value: T.nilable(T.any(Integer, String, Symbol))).void }
def house=(value); end
sig { returns(T.nilable(Wizard::House)) }
def typed_house; end
sig { params(value: T.nilable(Wizard::House)).void }
def typed_house=(value); end
Alternatively, you can replace your call to enum
with typed_enum
. This will hide the Rails methods (house
) from Sorbet static-check (they are still usable in un-checked files).
typed_enum house: {
Gryffindor: 0,
Hufflepuff: 1,
Ravenclaw: 2,
Slytherin: 3,
}
Generates only typed enum setter & getter:
sig { returns(T.nilable(Wizard::House)) }
def typed_house; end
sig { params(value: T.nilable(Wizard::House)).void }
def typed_house=(value); end
There are several kinds of relations of a model: User::ActiveRecord_Relation
, User::ActiveRecord_AssociationRelation
and User::ActiveRecord_Associations_CollectionProxy
. Usually the code may need just any relation type. We add a Model::RelationType
type alias for every model to use it.
class User
RelationType = T.type_alias do
T.any(
User::ActiveRecord_Relation,
User::ActiveRecord_AssociationRelation,
User::ActiveRecord_Associations_CollectionProxy
)
end
end
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:custom
sorbet-rails
adds TypedParams
to extact typed controller parameters.
TypedParams takes a parameter definition, which is a subclass of T::Struct
and coerces the params
object into an instance of that subclass using sorbet-coerce:
class MyCoolController < ApplicationController
class MyActionParams < T::Struct
const :id, T.nilable(Integer)
const :show, T.nilable(T::Boolean)
const :wands, T::Array[Integer]
end
sig { void }
def my_action
typed_params = TypedParams[MyActionParams].new.extract!(params)
# T.reveal_type(typed_params) => MyActionParams
# T.reveal_type(typed_params.show) => T.nilable(T::Boolean)
end
end
If it fails to coerce the params into the right type, an ActionController::BadRequest
exception will be raised with the coercion context for debugging.
Note: The API TypedParams[...].new.extract!
may seem verbose, but necessary to support this feature. Ideally, the API can be simply TypedParams.extract!(...)
. However, sorbet
doesn't support defining a method that accept a type and return an instance of the type. If this feature is supported by sorbet
in the future, it will be easy to codemod to be TypedParams.extract(...)!
part from your code.
Note: require_typed
and fetch_typed
are deprecated in favor of TypedParams
. They will be removed in v0.7.
This Rake task generates an RBI file defining _path
and _url
methods for all named routes in routes.rb
:
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:routes
This Rake task generates a helpers.rbi
file that includes a basic module definition which includes the Kernel
module and ActionView::Helpers
, to allow for some basic Ruby methods to be used in helpers without Sorbet complaining.
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:helpers
If you have additional modules that are included in all your helpers and you want helpers.rbi
to reflect this, you can configure it:
# -- config/initializers/sorbet_rails.rb
SorbetRails.configure do |config|
config.extra_helper_includes = ['ApplicationHelper', 'Devise::Controllers::Helpers']
end
This Rake task generates RBI files for all mailer classes in the Rails application (all descendants of ActionMailer::Base
)
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:mailers
Since mailing action methods are based on instance methods defined in a mailer class, the signature of a mailing action method will be dependent on the signature the instance method has
- If there is a (sorbet) sig written for the instance method, it generates a matching sig for the mailing action method
- If not, all the params in the mailing action method will be T.untyped.
- For return type though, the mailing action method will return
ActionMailer::MessageDelivery
instead of the return type of the instance method.
This Rake task generates RBI files for all jobs classes in the Rails application (all descendants of ActiveJob::Base
).
❯ bundle exec rake rails_rbi:jobs
It will generate perform_later
and perform_now
methods for
the job classes matching the signature of the perform
method of the job. If there is a (sorbet) sig written for perform
, it will use the same sig for perform_*
methods.
In addition to features provided by the static generator, sorbet-rails
can
provide additional features when require
d. This is why the installation
instructions specify that sorbet-rails
should be placed in the :default
group of the Gemfile
, not a
specific environment group (eg. development
only).
-
Model: The gem provides some helper method to a model to make type-checking easier:
find_n
,first_n
,last_n
pluck_to_tstruct
typed_enum
-
Model Relation:
- Make relation classes public. By default, relation classes like
User::ActiveRecord_Relation
,User::ActiveRecord_AssociationRelation
are private - Add type alias, eg
Model::RelationType
, to represents any type of relation of a model.
- Make relation classes public. By default, relation classes like
-
Controller: use
TypedParams
to convert controller parameters to a typed structure
In addition to require
ing sorbet-rails
, you must also run
bundle exec rake rails_rbi:custom
, which will produce the RBI for these runtime features.
Because Sorbet's initial setup tries to flag files at whichever typecheck level generates 0 errors, there may be files in your repository that are # typed: ignore
. This is because sometimes Rails allows very dynamic code that Sorbet does not believe it can typecheck.
It is worth going through the list of files that is ignored and resolve them (and auto upgrade the types of other files; see initial setup above). Usually this will make many more files able to be typechecked.
sorbet-rails
relies on Rails reflection to generate signatures. There are features this gem doesn't support yet such as serialize and attribute custom types. The gem also doesn't know the signature of any methods you have overridden. However, it is possible to override the signatures that sorbet-rails
generates.
For example, here is how to override the signature for a method in a model:
# -- app/models/model_name.rbi --
# typed: strong
class ModelName
sig { returns(T::Hash[...]) }
def field_name; end
sig { params(obj: T::Hash[....]).void }
def field_name=(obj); end
end
When using url helpers like _url or _path methods outside of a controller,
we usually have to add include Rails.application.routes.url_helpers
in the class.
However, Sorbet does not allow code that
includes dynamic module.
Sorbet Rails provides a drop-in replacement module for the dynamic url_helpers module, called GeneratedUrlHelpers
.
Following code change should resolve the sorbet type-check error:
class MyClass
- include Rails.application.routes.url_helpers
+ include GeneratedUrlHelpers
end
These 3 methods can either return a single nilable record or an array of records. Sorbet does not allow us to define multiple signatures for a function (except stdlib). It doesn't support defining one function signature that has varying returning value depending on the input parameter type. We opt to define the most commonly used signature for these methods, and monkey-patch new functions for the secondary use case.
In short:
- Use
find
,first
andlast
to fetch a single record. - Use
find_n
,first_n
,last_n
to fetch an array of records.
Rails supports dynamic methods based on attribute names, such as find_by_<attribute>
, <attribute>_changed?
, etc. They all have static counterparts. Instead of generating all possible dynamic methods that Rails support, we recommend to use of the static version of these methods instead (also recommended by RuboCop).
Following are the list of attribute dynamic methods and their static counterparts. The static methods have proper signatures:
find_by_<attributes>
->find_by(<attributes>)
find_by_<attributes>!
->find_by!(<attributes>)
<attribute>_changed?
->attribute_changed?(<attribute>)
<attribute>_was
->attribute_was(<attribute>)
saved_change_to_<attribute>?
->saved_change_to_attribute?(<attribute>)
<attribute>_before_type_cast
->read_attribute_before_type_cast(<attribute>)
Consider converting after_commit
callbacks to use instance method functions. Sorbet doesn't support binding an optional block with a different context. Because of this, when using a callback with a custom block, the block is evaluated in the wrong context (Class-level context). Refer to this page for a full list of callbacks available in Rails.
Before:
after_commit do ... end
After:
after_commit :after_commit
def after_commit
...
end
If you wanted to make these changes using Codemod, try these commands:
# from methods like after_commit do <...> end
❯ codemod -d app/models/ --extensions rb \
'(\s*)(before|after)_(validation|save|create|commit|find|initialize|destroy) do' \
'\1\2_\3 :\2_\3\n\1def \2_\3'
# from methods like after_commit { <...> }
❯ codemod -d app/models/ --extensions rb \
'(\s*)(before|after)_(validation|save|create|commit|find|initialize|destroy) \{ (.*) \}' \
'\1\2_\3 :\2_\3\n\1def \2_\3\n\1\1\4\n\1end'
Note that Codemod's preview may show that the indentation is off, but it works.
The unscoped
method returns a Relation
when no block is provided. When a block is provided, unscoped
calls the block and returns its result, which could be any type.
sorbet-rails
chooses to define unscoped
as returning a Relation
because it's more common and more useful. If you want to use a block, either override the unscoped
definition, or replace:
Model.unscoped do … end
with:
Model.unscoped.scoping do … end
The select
method in Rails has two modes: it can be given a list of symbols, in which case rails will only return the given columns from the database, or it can be given a block, in which case it acts like Enumerable.select
and returns an array. We have chosen to support the first use case. If you want to pass a block to select
, you can simply call to_a
before you do. Note that this would be done within the select
call anyway, so the performance penalty will be minimal.
When you call flatten
on an array of ActiveRecord::Relation, sorbet doesn't recognize that it will flatten the relation and return an array of model. The work around is to call to_a
on the relation first.
# doesn't work
arr = [Model.recent, Model.old].flatten # T::Array[Model::ActiveRecord_Relation]
# work around
arr = [Model.recent, Model.old].map(&:to_a).flatten # T::Array[Model]
If you run into the following issue when running rspec, it's likely because you're using expect(:method_name).and_call_original
to mock a method in RSpec. We've found the double mock doesn't interact well with Sorbet's sig wrapper and caused flaky spec. The spec should be rewritten to expect the outcome of the method instead. (It still works with expect(:method_name)
and expect(:method_name).and_return(...)
RuntimeError:
`sig` not present for method `:method_name` but you're trying to run it anyways. This should
only be executed if you used `alias_method` to grab a handle to a method after `sig`ing it, but
that clearly isn't what you are doing. Maybe look to see if an exception was thrown in your `sig`
lambda or somehow else your `sig` wasn't actually applied to the method. Contact #dev-productivity
if you're really stuck.
sorbet-rails
support a customizable plugin system that you can use to generate additional RBI for each model. This will be useful to generate RBI for methods dynamically added by gems or private concerns. If you write plugins for public gems, please feel free to contribute it to this repo.
A custom plugin should be a subclass of SorbetRails::ModelPlugins::Base
. Each plugin would implement a generate(root)
method that generate additional rbi for the model.
At a high level, here is the structure of a plugin:
# -- lib/my_custom_plugin.rb
class MyCustomPlugin < SorbetRails::ModelPlugins::Base
sig { override.params(root: Parlour::RbiGenerator::Namespace).void }
def generate(root)
# TODO: implement the generation logic
# You can use @model_class and @available_classes here
end
end
During the generation phase, the system will create a new instance of the plugin, with the model_class
to be generated and a set of all available_classes
(available models) detected in the Rails App.
We use Parlour gem to generate the RBI for a model. Please check out Parlour wiki for guide to add RBI, eg create a new module, class, or method in the generated file.
At a high level, you'd usually want to create a model-scoped module for your methods, and include or extend it in the base model class. The generation logic usually looks like this:
def generate(root)
# Make sure this is only run for relevant class
return unless @model_class.include?(CustomModule)
custom_module_name = self.model_module_name("CustomModule")
custom_module_rbi = root.create_module(custom_module_name)
# here we re-create the model class!
model_class_rbi = root.create_class(self.model_class_name)
model_class_rbi.create_extend(custom_module_name)
# then create custom methods, constants, etc. for this module.
custom_module_rbi.create_method(...)
# this is allowed but not recommended, because it limit the ability to override the method.
model_class_rbi.create_method(...)
end
Notice that we re-create model_class_rbi
here. Parlour's ConflictResolver will merge the classes or modules with the same name together to generate 1 beautiful RBI file. It'll also flag and skip if any method is created multiple times with conflict signatures. Check-out useful predefined module names & helper methods in model_utils.
It is also allowed to put methods into a model class directly. However, it is not recommended because it'll be harder to override the method. sorbet
will enforce that the overriding method match the signature generated. It also makes the generated RBI file less modularized.
However, sometimes this is required to make sorbet
recognize the signature. This is the case for class methods added by ActiveRecord::Concerns
. Because ActiveSupport::Concern
class methods will be inserted to the class directly, you need to also put the sig in the model class rbi directly.
It is also recommended to check if the generated methods are detected by sorbet
as a gem method (in sorbet/rbi/gem/gem_name.rbi
) or hidden methods (in sorbet/rbi/hidden-definitions/hidden.rbi
). If so, you may need to re-run srb rbi hidden-definition
or put method in the model class directly.
Check out the plugins written for sorbet-rails
's own model RBI generation logic for examples.
You can register your plugins in an initializer:
# -- config/initializers/sorbet_rails.rb
SorbetRails::ModelRbiFormatter.register_plugin(MyCustomPlugin)
sorbet-rails comes with a handful of gem plugins that can be enabled in an initializer. You can pass enabled gem plugins to config.enabled_gem_plugins
, like so:
# -- config/initializers/sorbet_rails.rb
SorbetRails.configure do |config|
config.enabled_gem_plugins = [
:kaminari
]
end
These are the currently-supported gems and their symbolized names:
Gem | Symbol |
---|---|
ElasticSearch | :elastic_search |
FriendlyId | :friendly_id |
Kaminari | :kaminari |
PgSearch | :pg_search |
Shrine | :shrine |
active_flag | :active_flag |
Paperclip | :paperclip |
AttrJson | :attr_json |
You can also configure the core model plugins if needed. The default plugins are defined in the config. For the full list of plugin symbols, check out here.
For mailer and job rbi generation, you can customize the logic by setting the generation class in the config:
SorbetRails.configure do |config|
config.job_generator_class = CustomJobRbiGenerator
config.mailer_generator_class = CustomMailerRbiGenerator
end
The custom generator can subclass the provided generators and override the populate_rbi method. For example:
class CustomJobRbiGenerator < SorbetRails::JobRbiFormatter
def populate_rbi
rbi_generator.root.add_comment("== Custom Generator ==")
super
end
end
Contributions and ideas are welcome! Please see our contributing guide and don't hesitate to open an issue or send a pull request to improve the functionality of this gem.
This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to opensource@chanzuckerberg.com.