Arboreal is yet another extension to ActiveRecord to support tree-shaped data structures.
Arboreal surfaces relationships within the tree like children
, ancestors
, descendants
, and siblings
as scopes, so that additional filtering/pagination can be performed.
It delegates as much work as possible to the underlying DBMS, making it efficient to:
-
fetch all ancestors, descendants or siblings of a node
-
move nodes (or subtrees) around
-
prevent loops
-
rebuild the hierarchy
First, install the “arboreal” gem, and add it to your Rails project’s config/environment.rb
.
Next, you’ll need a migration to add parent_id
and ancestry_string
columns, and indices:
class MakeThingsArboreal < ActiveRecord::Migration def self.up add_column "things", "parent_id", :integer add_index "things", ["parent_id"] add_column "things", "ancestry_string", :string add_index "things", ["ancestry_string"] end def self.down remove_index "things", ["ancestry_string"] remove_column "things", "ancestry_string" remove_index "things", ["parent_id"] remove_column "things", "parent_id" end end
Finally, you can declare your model arboreal:
class Thing < ActiveRecord::Base acts_arboreal # .. etc etc ... end
Arboreal adds the basic relationships you’d expect:
-
parent
-
children
In addition, it provides the following handy methods on each tree-node:
-
ancestors
-
descendants
-
subtree
(the node itself, plus descendants) -
siblings
-
root
(the topmost ancestor)
The first four return scopes, to which additional filtering, ordering or limits may be applied.
At the class-level:
-
roots
is a named-scope returning all the nodes without parents -
rebuild_ancestry
rebuilds the ancestry cache, as described below
Internally, Arboreal uses the ancestry_string
column to cache the path down the tree to each node (or more correctly, it’s parent. This technique - a variant of “path enumeration” or “materialized paths” - allows efficient retrieval of both ancestors and descendants.
It’s conceivable that the computed ancestry-string values may get out of whack, particularly if changes are made directly to the database. If you suspect corruption, you can restore sanity using rebuild_ancestry
, e.g
Thing.rebuild_ancestry
The ancestry rebuild is implemented in SQL to leverage the underlying DBMS, and so is pretty efficient, even on large trees.