Skip to content

Lazy loading associations for the ActiveRecord models

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

doha99-eh/ar_lazy_preload

 
 

Repository files navigation

ArLazyPreload Cult Of Martians Gem Version Build Status Maintainability Coverage Status

ArLazyPreload is a gem that brings association lazy load functionality to your Rails applications. There is a number of built-in methods to solve N+1 problem, but sometimes a list of associations to preload is not obvious–this is when you can get most of this gem.

  • Simple. The only thing you need to change is to use #lazy_preload instead of #includes, #eager_load or #preload
  • Fast. Take a look at performance benchmark and memory benchmark
  • Perfect fit for GraphQL. Define a list of associations to load at the top-level resolver and let the gem do its job
  • Auto-preload support. If you don't want to specify the association list–set ArLazyPreload.config.auto_preload to true

Used in production by:

Why should I use it?

Lazy loading is super helpful when the list of associations to load is determined dynamically. For instance, in GraphQL this list comes from the API client, and you'll have to inspect the selection set to find out what associations are going to be used.

This gem uses a different approach: it won't load anything until the association is called for a first time. When it happens–it loads all the associated records for all records from the initial relation in a single query.

Usage

Let's try #lazy_preload in action! The following code will perform a single SQL request (because we've never accessed posts):

users = User.lazy_preload(:posts).limit(10)  # => SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 10
users.map(&:first_name)

However, when we try to load posts, there will be one more request for posts:

users.map(&:posts) # => SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id in (...)

Auto preloading

If you want the gem to be even lazier–you can configure it to load all the associations lazily without specifying them explicitly. To do that you'll need to change the configuration in the following way:

ArLazyPreload.config.auto_preload = true

After that there is no need to call #lazy_preload on the association, everything would be loaded lazily.

If you want to turn automatic preload off for a specific record, you can call .skip_preload before any associations method:

users.first.skip_preload.posts # => SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id = ?

Warning : Using the ArLazyPreload.config.auto_preload feature makes ArLazyPreload try to preload every association target throughout your app, and in any other gem that makes association target calls. When enabling the setting in an existing app, you may find some edge cases where previous working queries now fail, and you should test most of your app paths to ensure that there are no such issues.

Relation auto preloading

Another alternative for auto preloading is using relation #preload_associations_lazily method

posts = User.preload_associations_lazily.flat_map(&:posts)
# => SELECT * FROM users LIMIT 10
# => SELECT * FROM posts WHERE user_id in (...)

Gotchas

  1. Lazy preloading does not work for ActiveRecord < 6 when .includes is called earlier:
Post.includes(:user).preload_associations_lazily.each do |p|
  p.user.comments.load
end
  1. When #size is called on association (e.g., User.lazy_preload(:posts).map { |u| u.posts.size }), lazy preloading won't happen, because #size method performs SELECT COUNT() database request instead of loading the association when association haven't been loaded yet (here is the issue, and here is the explanation article about size, length and count).

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile, and you're all set:

gem "ar_lazy_preload"

Credits

Initially sponsored by Evil Martians.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

About

Lazy loading associations for the ActiveRecord models

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 100.0%