Model preferences
Why are they needed?
We've already covered application-wide preferences. Model preferences have a different scope, as they apply to a single ActiveRecord model and can take different values for each instance or record.
You might think that's what regular ActiveRecord attributes are for. However, preferences are handy
when
using Single Table Inheritance (
STI), i.e., when different models share the same database table. In those cases, you might need to
add a piece of information only for one of them and avoid creating a new column with a NULL
value
for inapplicable models.
Internally, preferences are handled as a serializable ActiveRecord attribute . Notice that serialized data is persisted as a raw string in the database engine. That means they're okay to read information from a loaded record, but they're not suited to perform SQL queries on a large dataset.
Preferable models
Solidus preferences are the right option when you’re writing code that is tightly coupled to Solidus (e.g., it's a descendant of a preferable Solidus class, or it will be configurable via the Solidus admin panel).
If you're writing code that doesn't belong to the Solidus domain (e.g., your own application's business logic), it's almost always better to forgo preferences and use regular ActiveRecord attributes instead.
To make a model accept preferences (i.e., to make it "preferable"), you will first need to add
a preferences
column of type text
to your model. Assuming you already have a model
named Greeter
, here's how to do it:
$ rails g migration AddPreferencesToGreeter preferences:text
$ rails db:migrate
Then, you'll need to include the Spree::Preferences::Persistable
module in your model:
# frozen_string_literal: true
require 'spree/preferences/persistable'
module AmazingStore
class Greeter
include Spree::Preferences::Persistable
end
end
And there you go! Your model is now preferable. Let's see how to use it.
Adding new preferences
Adding a new preference is as simple as calling the preference
method in your class:
# frozen_string_literal: true
require 'spree/preferences/persistable'
module AmazingStore
class Greeter
include Spree::Preferences::Persistable
+ preference :name, :string, default: "John"
end
end
That's it! As you can see, you can also specify a default value with the :default
option.
Besides :string
, other types can be used for a preference.
See Spree::Preferences::Preferable
for details.
Accessing preferences
A few magic methods are generated for each preference in a model instance. For example, given
a :category
preference, the following methods will be generated:
#preferred_category
: reader for the preference value.#preferred_category=(value)
: writer for the preference value (no persistence).#preferred_category_default
: default for the preference.#preferred_category_type
: type for the default preference.
calculator = MyStore::NewTaxCalculator
calculator.preferred_category = "B"
calculator.preferred_category # => "B"
calculator.preferred_category_default # => "A"
calculator.preferred_category_type # => :string
Solidus also provides some generic methods:
#get_preference(name)
: Returns the value for the given preference.#set_preference(name, value)
: Sets the value for the given preference (no persistence).#preference_default(name)
: Gets the default for the given preference.#preference_type(name)
: Gets the type for the given preference.#has_preference?(name)
: Predicate to check whether a preference is defined.
calculator.set_preference(:category, "B")
calculator.get_preference(:category) # => "B"
calculator.preference_default(:category) # => "A"
calculator.preference_type(:category) # => :string
calculator.has_preference?(:category) # => true
calculator.has_preference?(:other) # => false
Finally, some methods allow inspecting the entire collection of preferences:
#preferences
: Hash of preferences.#default_preferences
: Hash of default preferences.
calculator.preferences # => { :category=>"B" }
calculator.default_preferences # => { :category=>"A" }
To bring it all together, let's use our name
preference in the Greeter
model to do something:
# frozen_string_literal: true
require 'spree/preferences/persistable'
module AmazingStore
class Greeter
include Spree::Preferences::Persistable
preference :name, :string, default: "John"
def call
"Hello, #{name}!"
end
end
end
Let's test it:
AmazingStore::Greeter.new.call # => "Hello, John!"
AmazingStore::Greeter.new(preferred_name: "Jane").call # => "Hello, Jane!"
Neat!
Static preferences
Sometimes, you might not want to store preferences in your database. This is the case, for example, with API credentials or other sensitive information. The Twelve-Factor App recommends storing this data in an environment variable.
Solidus supports this mechanism, which is called "static preferences", out of the box.Let's
repurpose our Greeter
model to use them!
First of all, we need to add a preference_source
column (we'll see why in a second):
$ rails g migration AddPreferenceSourceToGreeter preference_source
$ rails db:migrate
Then, we need to include the Spree::Preferences::StaticallyConfigurable
module:
# frozen_string_literal: true
require 'spree/preferences/persistable'
+ require 'spree/preferences/statically_configurable'
module AmazingStore
class Greeter
include Spree::Preferences::Persistable
+ include Spree::Preferences::StaticallyConfigurable
preference :name, :string
end
end
Finally, we'll need to configure one or more preference sources, i.e. the actual collection of
preference values that can be used for instances of our AmazingStore::Greeter
model.
This can be done in any initializer, including config/initializers/spree.rb
:
Rails.application.config.to_prepare do
Spree::Config.static_model_preferences.add(
AmazingStore::Greeter,
'greeter_preferences',
name: ENV["GREETER_NAME"],
)
end
Let's test it again!
ENV["GREETER_NAME"] = "Jane" # To simulate an environment variable
AmazingStore::Greeter.new(
preference_source: "greeter_preferences",
).call # => "Hello, Jane!"
In our example, we are using environment variables to provide the preference values, but you can use a secret store such as Vault or anything else!
Built-in preferable models
Solidus comes with a few preferable models out of the box,
like Spree::PaymentMethod
and Spree::Calculator
. In most cases, you will just inherit from these classes, which means you won't need any of the
boilerplate setup code. Instead, you will just add new preferences to your custom descendant.
Let's see a couple of examples!
Calculators
Say that you want to create a calculator for a new
tax whose amount depends on a categorization of some type. Calculators
are already configurable
, so you can create a new class that inherits from Spree::Calculator
and add a category
preference to it:
# frozen_string_literal: true
module AmazingStore
class NewTaxCalculator < Spree::Calculator
preference :category, :string, default: "A"
AMOUNT_PER_CATEGORY = {
"A" => 10,
"B" => 20,
"C" => 30
}
def initialize(order)
@order = order
end
def calculate
Spree::Tax::OrderTax.new(
order_id: order.id,
line_item_taxes: order.amount + AMOUNT_PER_CATEGORY[preferred_category],
shipment_taxes: 0
)
end
end
end
You'll notice we don't have to include any files or module in our payment method. That's
because Spree::PaymentMethod
already does it for us!
That's it! You can now use your AmazingStore::NewTaxCalculator
.
Payment methods
Payment methods are another example of a configurable class in Solidus. Furthermore, they're statically configurable, so that you can store your payment provider credentials outside of the DB.
Say, for example, that you've followed the guide to create a new payment method, and all that's left to do is to add a configurable API key to your custom payment method. You can do it like this:
# frozen_string_literal: true
module AmazingStore
class AmazingPaymentMethod < Spree::PaymentMethod
preference :api_key, :string
end
end
As you see, we've added an api_key
preference for it, but we don't want its value to be rendered
in plain sight in the backend, and we don't want it to be stored in the database. Let's, therefore,
add a source from where the new payment method can read its preferences:
# ...
Rails.application.config.to_prepare do
Spree::Config.static_model_preferences.add(
AmazingStore::AmazingPaymentMethod,
'amazing_payment_method_credentials',
api_key: ENV['AMAZING_PAYMENT_METHOD_API_KEY'],
server: Rails.env.production? ? 'production' : 'test',
test_mode: !Rails.env.production?
)
end
If you're wondering where those server
and test_mode
settings come from, they're common
preferences inherited from Spree::PaymentMethod
.
You can now to Settings -> Payments -> New Payment Method, create a new instance of
your AmazingPaymentMethod
, and pick amazing_payment_method_credentials
as the preference source
to read the API key from the environment!