Working on virtus taught me a lot about handling data in Ruby, which involves coercions, type safety and validation (amongst other things). Even though the project has been successful, and serving well for many people, I decided to build something better. As a result, dry-types, dry-struct and dry-schema were born. These projects should be considered as virtus' successors, with better separation of concerns and better features. If you're interested in a modern take on same problems that virtus tried to solve, please check out these projects!
@solnic
Virtus allows you to define attributes on classes, modules or class instances with optional information about types, reader/writer method visibility and coercion behavior. It supports a lot of coercions and advanced mapping of embedded objects and collections.
You can use it in many different contexts like:
- Input parameter sanitization and coercion in web applications
- Mapping JSON to domain objects
- Encapsulating data-access in Value Objects
- Domain model prototyping
And probably more.
$ gem install virtus
or in your Gemfile
gem 'virtus'
You can create classes extended with Virtus and define attributes:
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :name, String
attribute :age, Integer
attribute :birthday, DateTime
end
user = User.new(:name => 'Piotr', :age => 31)
user.attributes # => { :name => "Piotr", :age => 31, :birthday => nil }
user.name # => "Piotr"
user.age = '31' # => 31
user.age.class # => Fixnum
user.birthday = 'November 18th, 1983' # => #<DateTime: 1983-11-18T00:00:00+00:00 (4891313/2,0/1,2299161)>
# mass-assignment
user.attributes = { :name => 'Jane', :age => 21 }
user.name # => "Jane"
user.age # => 21
# include attribute DSL + constructor + mass-assignment
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :name, String
end
user = User.new(:name => 'Piotr')
user.attributes = { :name => 'John' }
user.attributes
# => {:name => 'John'}
# include attribute DSL + constructor
class User
include Virtus.model(:mass_assignment => false)
attribute :name, String
end
User.new(:name => 'Piotr')
# include just the attribute DSL
class User
include Virtus.model(:constructor => false, :mass_assignment => false)
attribute :name, String
end
user = User.new
user.name = 'Piotr'
You can create modules extended with Virtus and define attributes for later inclusion in your classes:
module Name
include Virtus.module
attribute :name, String
end
module Age
include Virtus.module(:coerce => false)
attribute :age, Integer
end
class User
include Name, Age
end
user = User.new(:name => 'John', :age => 30)
It's also possible to dynamically extend an object with Virtus:
class User
# nothing here
end
user = User.new
user.extend(Virtus.model)
user.attribute :name, String
user.name = 'John'
user.name # => 'John'
class Page
include Virtus.model
attribute :title, String
# default from a singleton value (integer in this case)
attribute :views, Integer, :default => 0
# default from a singleton value (boolean in this case)
attribute :published, Boolean, :default => false
# default from a callable object (proc in this case)
attribute :slug, String, :default => lambda { |page, attribute| page.title.downcase.gsub(' ', '-') }
# default from a method name as symbol
attribute :editor_title, String, :default => :default_editor_title
def default_editor_title
published? ? title : "UNPUBLISHED: #{title}"
end
end
page = Page.new(:title => 'Virtus README')
page.slug # => 'virtus-readme'
page.views # => 0
page.published # => false
page.editor_title # => "UNPUBLISHED: Virtus README"
page.views = 10
page.views # => 10
page.reset_attribute(:views) # => 0
page.views # => 0
This requires you to set :lazy
option because default values are set in the
constructor if it's set to false (which is the default setting):
User = Class.new
user = User.new
user.extend(Virtus.model)
user.attribute :name, String, default: 'jane', lazy: true
user.name # => "jane"
class City
include Virtus.model
attribute :name, String
end
class Address
include Virtus.model
attribute :street, String
attribute :zipcode, String
attribute :city, City
end
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :name, String
attribute :address, Address
end
user = User.new(:address => {
:street => 'Street 1/2', :zipcode => '12345', :city => { :name => 'NYC' } })
user.address.street # => "Street 1/2"
user.address.city.name # => "NYC"
# Support "primitive" classes
class Book
include Virtus.model
attribute :page_numbers, Array[Integer]
end
book = Book.new(:page_numbers => %w[1 2 3])
book.page_numbers # => [1, 2, 3]
# Support EmbeddedValues, too!
class Address
include Virtus.model
attribute :address, String
attribute :locality, String
attribute :region, String
attribute :postal_code, String
end
class PhoneNumber
include Virtus.model
attribute :number, String
end
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :phone_numbers, Array[PhoneNumber]
attribute :addresses, Set[Address]
end
user = User.new(
:phone_numbers => [
{ :number => '212-555-1212' },
{ :number => '919-444-3265' } ],
:addresses => [
{ :address => '1234 Any St.', :locality => 'Anytown', :region => "DC", :postal_code => "21234" } ])
user.phone_numbers # => [#<PhoneNumber:0x007fdb2d3bef88 @number="212-555-1212">, #<PhoneNumber:0x007fdb2d3beb00 @number="919-444-3265">]
user.addresses # => #<Set: {#<Address:0x007fdb2d3be448 @address="1234 Any St.", @locality="Anytown", @region="DC", @postal_code="21234">}>
class Package
include Virtus.model
attribute :dimensions, Hash[Symbol => Float]
end
package = Package.new(:dimensions => { 'width' => "2.2", :height => 2, "length" => 4.5 })
package.dimensions # => { :width => 2.2, :height => 2.0, :length => 4.5 }
Be aware that some libraries may do a terrible thing and define a global Boolean constant which breaks virtus' constant type lookup, if you see issues with the boolean type you can workaround it like that:
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :admin, Axiom::Types::Boolean
end
This will be improved in Virtus 2.0.
Virtus performs coercions only when a value is being assigned. If you mutate the value later on using its own interfaces then coercion won't be triggered.
Here's an example:
class Book
include Virtus.model
attribute :title, String
end
class Library
include Virtus.model
attribute :books, Array[Book]
end
library = Library.new
# This will coerce Hash to a Book instance
library.books = [ { :title => 'Introduction to Virtus' } ]
# This WILL NOT COERCE the value because you mutate the books array with Array#<<
library.books << { :title => 'Another Introduction to Virtus' }
A suggested solution to this problem would be to introduce your own class instead of using Array and implement mutation methods that perform coercions. For example:
class Book
include Virtus.model
attribute :title, String
end
class BookCollection < Array
def <<(book)
if book.kind_of?(Hash)
super(Book.new(book))
else
super
end
end
end
class Library
include Virtus.model
attribute :books, BookCollection[Book]
end
library = Library.new
library.books << { :title => 'Another Introduction to Virtus' }
class GeoLocation
include Virtus.value_object
values do
attribute :latitude, Float
attribute :longitude, Float
end
end
class Venue
include Virtus.value_object
values do
attribute :name, String
attribute :location, GeoLocation
end
end
venue = Venue.new(
:name => 'Pub',
:location => { :latitude => 37.160317, :longitude => -98.437500 })
venue.location.latitude # => 37.160317
venue.location.longitude # => -98.4375
# Supports object's equality
venue_other = Venue.new(
:name => 'Other Pub',
:location => { :latitude => 37.160317, :longitude => -98.437500 })
venue.location === venue_other.location # => true
require 'json'
class Json < Virtus::Attribute
def coerce(value)
value.is_a?(::Hash) ? value : JSON.parse(value)
end
end
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :info, Json, default: {}
end
user = User.new
user.info = '{"email":"john@domain.com"}' # => {"email"=>"john@domain.com"}
user.info.class # => Hash
# With a custom attribute encapsulating coercion-specific configuration
class NoisyString < Virtus::Attribute
def coerce(value)
value.to_s.upcase
end
end
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :scream, NoisyString
end
user = User.new(:scream => 'hello world!')
user.scream # => "HELLO WORLD!"
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :unique_id, String, :writer => :private
def set_unique_id(id)
self.unique_id = id
end
end
user = User.new(:unique_id => '1234-1234')
user.unique_id # => nil
user.unique_id = '1234-1234' # => NoMethodError: private method `unique_id='
user.set_unique_id('1234-1234')
user.unique_id # => '1234-1234'
class User
include Virtus.model
attribute :name, String
def name=(new_name)
custom_name = nil
if new_name == "Godzilla"
custom_name = "Can't tell"
end
super custom_name || new_name
end
end
user = User.new(name: "Frank")
user.name # => 'Frank'
user = User.new(name: "Godzilla")
user.name # => 'Can't tell'
By default Virtus returns the input value even when it couldn't coerce it to the expected type. If you want to catch such cases in a noisy way you can use the strict mode in which Virtus raises an exception when it failed to coerce an input value.
class User
include Virtus.model(:strict => true)
attribute :admin, Boolean
end
# this will raise an error
User.new :admin => "can't really say if true or false"
If you want to replace empty Strings with nil
values (since they can't be
coerced into the expected type), you can use the :nullify_blank
option.
class User
include Virtus.model(:nullify_blank => true)
attribute :birthday, Date
end
User.new(:birthday => "").birthday # => nil
You can also build Virtus modules that contain their own configuration.
YupNopeBooleans = Virtus.model { |mod|
mod.coerce = true
mod.coercer.config.string.boolean_map = { 'nope' => false, 'yup' => true }
}
class User
include YupNopeBooleans
attribute :name, String
attribute :admin, Boolean
end
# Or just include the module straight away ...
class User
include Virtus.model(:coerce => false)
attribute :name, String
attribute :admin, Boolean
end
If a type references another type which happens to not be available yet you need to use lazy-finalization of attributes and finalize virtus manually after all types have been already loaded:
# in blog.rb
class Blog
include Virtus.model(:finalize => false)
attribute :posts, Array['Post']
end
# in post.rb
class Post
include Virtus.model(:finalize => false)
attribute :blog, 'Blog'
end
# after loading both files just do:
Virtus.finalize
# constants will be resolved:
Blog.attribute_set[:posts].member_type.primitive # => Post
Post.attribute_set[:blog].type.primitive # => Blog
List of plugins/extensions that add features to Virtus:
- virtus-localized: Localize the attributes
- virtus-relations: Add relations to Virtus objects
Virtus is known to work correctly with the following rubies:
- 1.9.3
- 2.0.0
- 2.1.2
- jruby
- (probably) rbx
- Dan Kubb (dkubb)
- Chris Corbyn (d11wtq)
- Emmanuel Gomez (emmanuel)
- Fabio Rehm (fgrehm)
- Ryan Closner (rclosner)
- Markus Schirp (mbj)
- Yves Senn (senny)
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with Rakefile or version (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.