ActiveModel::Serializers
Purpose
ActiveModel::Serializers
encapsulates the JSON serialization of objects.
Objects that respond to read_attribute_for_serialization
(including ActiveModel
and ActiveRecord
objects) are supported.
Serializers know about both a model and the current_user
, so you can
customize serialization based upon whether a user is authorized to see the
content.
In short, serializers replace hash-driven development with object-oriented
development.
Installing
The easiest way to install ActiveModel::Serializers
is to add it to your
Gemfile
:
gem "active_model_serializers"
Then, install it on the command line:
$ bundle install
Ruby 1.8 is no longer supported!
If you must use a ruby 1.8 version (MRI 1.8.7, REE, Rubinius 1.8, or JRuby 1.8), you need to use version 0.8.x.
Versions after 0.9.0 do not support ruby 1.8. To specify version 0.8, include this in your Gemfile:
gem "active_model_serializers", "~> 0.8.0"
Creating a Serializer
The easiest way to create a new serializer is to generate a new resource, which
will generate a serializer at the same time:
$ rails g resource post title:string body:string
This will generate a serializer in app/serializers/post_serializer.rb
for
your new model. You can also generate a serializer for an existing model with
the serializer generator:
$ rails g serializer post
Support for POROs
The PORO should include ActiveModel::SerializerSupport. That’s all you need to
do to have your POROs supported.
For Rails versions before Rails 4 ActiveModel::Serializers expects objects to
implement read_attribute_for_serialization
.
render :json
In your controllers, when you use render :json
, Rails will now first search
for a serializer for the object and use it if available.
class PostsController < ApplicationController def show @post = Post.find(params[:id]) render json: @post end end
In this case, Rails will look for a serializer named PostSerializer
, and if
it exists, use it to serialize the Post
.
This also works with respond_with
, which uses to_json
under the hood. Also
note that any options passed to render :json
will be passed to your
serializer and available as @serialization_options
inside.
To specify a custom serializer for an object, you can specify the
serializer when you render the object:
render json: @post, serializer: FancyPostSerializer
Use serialization outside of ActionController::Base
When controller does not inherit from ActionController::Base,
include Serialization module manually:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::API include ActionController::Serialization end
Arrays
In your controllers, when you use render :json
for an array of objects, AMS will
use ActiveModel::ArraySerializer
(included in this project) as the base serializer,
and the individual Serializer
for the objects contained in that array.
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :title, :body end class PostsController < ApplicationController def index @posts = Post.all render json: @posts end end
Given the example above, the index action will return
{ "posts": [ { "title": "Post 1", "body": "Hello!" }, { "title": "Post 2", "body": "Goodbye!" } ] }
By default, the root element is the name of the controller. For example, PostsController
generates a root element “posts”. To change it:
render json: @posts, root: "some_posts"
You may disable the root element for arrays at the top level, which will result in
more concise json. See the next section for ways on how to do this. Disabling the
root element of the array with any of those methods will produce
[ { "title": "Post 1", "body": "Hello!" }, { "title": "Post 2", "body": "Goodbye!" } ]
To specify a custom serializer for the items within an array:
render json: @posts, each_serializer: FancyPostSerializer
Render independently
By default the setting of serializer is in controller as described above which is the
recommended way. However, there may be cases you need to render the json object elsewhere
say in a helper or a view when controller is only for main object.
Then you can render the serialized JSON independently.
def current_user_as_json_helper CurrentUserSerializer.new(current_user).to_json end
You can also render an array of objects using ArraySerializer.
def users_array_as_json_helper(users) ActiveModel::ArraySerializer.new(users, each_serializer: UserSerializer).to_json end
Disabling the root element
You have 4 options to disable the root element, each with a slightly different scope:
1. Disable root globally for all, or per class
In an initializer:
# Disable for all serializers (except ArraySerializer) ActiveModel::Serializer.root = false # Disable for ArraySerializer ActiveModel::ArraySerializer.root = false
2. Disable root per render call in your controller
render json: @posts, root: false
3. Subclass the serializer, and specify using it
class CustomArraySerializer < ActiveModel::ArraySerializer self.root = false end # controller: render json: @posts, serializer: CustomArraySerializer
4. Define default_serializer_options in your controller
If you define default_serializer_options
method in your controller,
all serializers in actions of this controller and it’s children will use them.
One of the options may be root: false
def default_serializer_options { root: false } end
Changing the Key Format
You can specify that serializers use the lower-camel key format at the config, class or instance level.
ActiveModel::Serializer.setup do |config| config.key_format = :lower_camel end class BlogLowerCamelSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer format_keys :lower_camel end BlogSerializer.new(object, key_format: :lower_camel)
Changing the default association key type
You can specify that serializers use unsuffixed names as association keys by default.
ActiveModel::Serializer.setup do |config| config.default_key_type = :name end
This will build association keys like comments
or author
instead of comment_ids
or author_id
.
Getting the old version
If you find that your project is already relying on the old rails to_json
change render :json
to render json: @your_object.to_json
.
Attributes and Associations
Once you have a serializer, you can specify which attributes and associations
you would like to include in the serialized form.
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments end
Attributes
For specified attributes, a serializer will look up the attribute on the
object you passed to render :json
. It uses
read_attribute_for_serialization
, which ActiveRecord
objects implement as a
regular attribute lookup.
Before looking up the attribute on the object, a serializer will check for the
presence of a method with the name of the attribute. This allows serializers to
include properties beyond the simple attributes of the model. For example:
class PersonSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :first_name, :last_name, :full_name def full_name "#{object.first_name} #{object.last_name}" end end
Within a serializer’s methods, you can access the object being
serialized as object
.
Since this shadows any attribute named object
, you can include them through object.object
. For example:
class VersionSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :version_object def version_object object.object end end
You can also access the scope
method, which provides an
authorization context to your serializer. By default, the context
is the current user of your application, but this
can be customized.
Serializers provide a method named filter
, which should return an array
used to determine what attributes and associations should be included in the output.
This is typically used to customize output based on current_user
. For example:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body, :author def filter(keys) if scope.admin? keys else keys - [:author] end end end
And it’s also safe to mutate keys argument by doing keys.delete(:author)
in case you want to avoid creating two extra arrays. Note that if you do an
in-place modification, you still need to return the modified array.
Alias Attribute
If you would like the key in the outputted JSON to be different from its name
in ActiveRecord, you can declare the attribute with the different name
and redefine that method:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer # look up subject on the model, but use title in the JSON def title object.subject end attributes :id, :body, :title has_many :comments end
If you would like to add meta information to the outputted JSON, use the :meta
option:
render json: @posts, serializer: CustomArraySerializer, meta: {total: 10}
The above usage of :meta
will produce the following:
{ "meta": { "total": 10 }, "posts": [ { "title": "Post 1", "body": "Hello!" }, { "title": "Post 2", "body": "Goodbye!" } ] }
If you would like to change the meta key name you can use the :meta_key
option:
render json: @posts, serializer: CustomArraySerializer, meta_object: { total: 10 }, meta_key: :meta_object
The above usage of :meta_key
will produce the following:
{ "meta_object": { "total": 10 }, "posts": [ { "title": "Post 1", "body": "Hello!" }, { "title": "Post 2", "body": "Goodbye!" } ] }
When using meta information, your serializer cannot have the { root: false }
option, as this would lead to
invalid JSON. If you do not have a root key, the meta information will be ignored.
If you would like direct, low-level control of attribute serialization, you can
completely override the attributes
method to return the hash you need:
class PersonSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :first_name, :last_name def attributes hash = super if scope.admin? hash["ssn"] = object.ssn hash["secret"] = object.mothers_maiden_name end hash end end
Associations
For specified associations, the serializer will look up the association and
then serialize each element of the association. For instance, a has_many
association will create a new
:commentsCommentSerializer
for each comment
and use it to serialize the comment.
By default, serializers simply look up the association on the original object.
You can customize this behavior by implementing a method with the name of the
association and returning a different Array. Often, you will do this to
customize the objects returned based on the current user (scope).
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments # only let the user see comments he created. def comments object.comments.where(created_by: scope) end end
As with attributes, you can change the JSON key that the serializer should
use for a particular association.
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body # look up comments, but use +my_comments+ as the key in JSON has_many :comments, root: :my_comments end
Also, as with attributes, serializers will execute a filter method to
determine which associations should be included in the output. For
example:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments def filter(keys) keys.delete :comments if object.comments_disabled? keys end end
Or …
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_one :author has_many :comments def filter(keys) keys.delete :author unless scope.admin? keys.delete :comments if object.comments_disabled? keys end end
You may also use the :serializer
option to specify a custom serializer class and the :polymorphic
option to specify an association that is polymorphic (STI), e.g.:
has_many :comments, serializer: CommentShortSerializer has_one :reviewer, polymorphic: true
Serializers are only concerned with multiplicity, and not ownership. belongs_to
ActiveRecord associations can be included using has_one
in your serializer.
Embedding Associations
By default, associations will be embedded inside the serialized object. So if
you have a post, the outputted JSON will look like:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comments": [ { "id": 1, "body": "what a dumb post" } ] } }
This is convenient for simple use-cases, but for more complex clients, it is
better to supply an Array of IDs for the association. This makes your API more
flexible from a performance standpoint and avoids wasteful duplication.
To embed IDs instead of associations, simply use the embed
class method:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments end
Now, any associations will be supplied as an Array of IDs:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comment_ids": [ 1, 2, 3 ] } }
You may also choose to embed the IDs by the association’s name underneath a
key
for the resource. For example, say we want to change comment_ids
to comments
underneath a links
key:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments, embed: :ids, key: :comments, embed_namespace: :links end
The JSON will look like this:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "links": { "comments": [ 1, 2, 3 ] } } }
Alternatively, you can choose to embed only the ids or the associated objects per association:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments, embed: :objects has_many :tags, embed: :ids end
The JSON will look like this:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comments": [ { "id": 1, "body": "what a dumb post" } ], "tag_ids": [ 1, 2, 3 ] } }
In addition to supplying an Array of IDs, you may want to side-load the data
alongside the main object. This makes it easier to process the entire package
of data without having to recursively scan the tree looking for embedded
information. It also ensures that associations that are shared between several
objects (like tags), are only delivered once for the entire payload.
You can specify that the data be included like this:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids, include: true attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments end
Assuming that the comments also has_many :tags
, you will get a JSON like
this:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comment_ids": [ 1, 2 ] }, "comments": [ { "id": 1, "body": "what a dumb post", "tag_ids": [ 1, 2 ] }, { "id": 2, "body": "i liked it", "tag_ids": [ 1, 3 ] }, ], "tags": [ { "id": 1, "name": "short" }, { "id": 2, "name": "whiny" }, { "id": 3, "name": "happy" } ] }
If you would like to namespace association JSON underneath a certain key in
the root document (say, linked
), you can specify an embed_in_root_key
:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids, include: true, embed_in_root_key: :linked attributes: :id, :title, :body has_many :comments, :tags end
The above would yield the following JSON document:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comment_ids": [ 1, 2 ] }, "linked": { "comments": [ { "id": 1, "body": "what a dumb post", "tag_ids": [ 1, 2 ] }, { "id": 2, "body": "i liked it", "tag_ids": [ 1, 3 ] }, ], "tags": [ { "id": 1, "name": "short" }, { "id": 2, "name": "whiny" }, { "id": 3, "name": "happy" } ] } }
When side-loading data, your serializer cannot have the { root: false }
option,
as this would lead to invalid JSON. If you do not have a root key, the include
instruction will be ignored
You can also specify a different root for the embedded objects than the key
used to reference them:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids, include: true attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments, key: :comment_ids, root: :comment_objects end
This would generate JSON that would look like this:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comment_ids": [ 1 ] }, "comment_objects": [ { "id": 1, "body": "what a dumb post" } ] }
You can also specify a different attribute to use rather than the ID of the
objects:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids, include: true attributes :id, :title, :body has_many :comments, key: :external_id end
This would generate JSON that would look like this:
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "body": "A body!", "comment_ids": [ "COMM001" ] }, "comments": [ { "id": 1, "external_id": "COMM001", "body": "what a dumb post" } ] }
NOTE: The embed :ids
mechanism is primary useful for clients that process
data in bulk and load it into a local store. For these clients, the ability to
easily see all of the data per type, rather than having to recursively scan the
data looking for information, is extremely useful.
If you are mostly working with the data in simple scenarios and manually making
Ajax requests, you probably just want to use the default embedded behavior.
Embedding Polymorphic Associations
Because we need both the id and the type to be able to identify a polymorphic associated model, these are serialized in a slightly different format than common ones.
When embedding entire objects:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer attributes :id, :title has_many :attachments, polymorphic: true end
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "attachments": [ { "type": "image", "image": { "id": 3, "name": "logo", "url": "http://images.com/logo.jpg" } }, { "type": "video", "video": { "id": 12, "uid": "XCSSMDFWW", "source": "youtube" } } ] } }
When embedding ids:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer embed :ids attributes :id, :title has_many :attachments, polymorphic: true end
{ "post": { "id": 1, "title": "New post", "attachment_ids": [ { "type": "image", "id": 12 }, { "type": "video", "id": 3 } ] } }
Customizing Scope
In a serializer, current_user
is the current authorization scope which the controller
provides to the serializer when you call render :json
. By default, this is
current_user
, but can be customized in your controller by calling
serialization_scope
:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base serialization_scope :current_admin end
The above example will also change the scope from current_user
to
current_admin
.
Please note that, until now, serialization_scope
doesn’t accept a second
object with options for specifying which actions should or should not take a
given scope in consideration.
To be clear, it’s not possible, yet, to do something like this:
class SomeController < ApplicationController serialization_scope :current_admin, except: [:index, :show] end
So, in order to have a fine grained control of what each action should take in
consideration for its scope, you may use something like this:
class CitiesController < ApplicationController serialization_scope nil def index @cities = City.all render json: @cities, each_serializer: CitySerializer end def show @city = City.find(params[:id]) render json: @city, scope: current_admin end end
Assuming that the current_admin
method needs to make a query in the database
for the current user, the advantage of this approach is that, by setting
serialization_scope
to nil
, the index
action no longer will need to make
that query, only the show
action will.
Testing
In order to test a Serializer, you can just call .new
on it, passing the object to serialize:
MiniTest
class TestPostSerializer < Minitest::Test def setup @serializer = PostSerializer.new Post.new(id: 123, title: 'some title', body: 'some text') end def test_special_json_for_api assert_equal '{"post":{"id":123,"title":"some title","body":"some text"}}', @serializer.to_json end
RSpec
describe PostSerializer do it "creates special JSON for the API" do serializer = PostSerializer.new Post.new(id: 123, title: 'some title', body: 'some text') expect(serializer.to_json).to eql('{"post":{"id":123,"title":"some title","body":"some text"}}') end end
Caching
NOTE: This functionality was removed from AMS and it’s in the TODO list.
We need to re-think and re-design the caching strategy for the next
version of AMS.
To cache a serializer, call cached
and define a cache_key
method:
class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer cached # enables caching for this serializer attributes :title, :body def cache_key [object, scope] end end
The caching interface uses Rails.cache
under the hood.
ApplicationSerializer
By default, new serializers descend from ActiveModel::Serializer. However, if you wish to share behaviour across your serializers you can create an ApplicationSerializer at app/serializers/application_serializer.rb
:
class ApplicationSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer end
Any newly generated serializers will automatically descend from ApplicationSerializer.
$ rails g serializer post
now generates:
class PostSerializer < ApplicationSerializer attributes :id end
Design and Implementation Guidelines
Keep it Simple
ActiveModel::Serializers
is capable of producing complex JSON views/large object
trees, and it may be tempting to design in this way so that your client can make
fewer requests to get data and so that related querying can be optimized.
However, keeping things simple in your serializers and controllers may
significantly reduce complexity and maintenance over the long-term development
of your application. Please consider reducing the complexity of the JSON views
you provide via the serializers as you build out your application, so that
controllers/services can be more easily reused without a lot of complexity
later.
Performance
As you develop your controllers or other code that utilizes serializers, try to
avoid n+1 queries by ensuring that data loads in an optimal fashion, e.g. if you
are using ActiveRecord, you might want to use query includes or joins as needed
to make the data available that the serializer(s) need.