Blazing fast Ruby alternative to acts-as-taggable-on
and other similar gems. Instead of million of records in the database it uses powerful ElasticSearch, which gives a very fast and scalable solution with a search capabilities of ElasticSearch.
All you need is to add in your Gemfile
the follwing line.
gem 'tagliani'
And run bundle install
command.
- ActiveRecord
- redis-client
- elasticsearch
To run this gem it is required to have ActiveRecord.
In your rails app config/initializers
create tagliani.rb
with the following content
Tagliani.configure do |config|
config.elasticsearch.url = "http://localhost:9200" # URL of your ElasticSearch service, by default set to this endpoint
config.elasticsearch.index = "tagliani_#{Rails.env}" # Index name
config.elasticsearch.refresh = true # false by default
config.elasticsearch.log = true # false by default
config.redis.url = "redis://localhost:6379/tagliani" # By default set to this endpoint
config.redis.queue = "tagliani" # By default set to this queue name
config.redis.length = 200 # By default set to 200. It is a queue length per bulk that is going to be sent to ElasticSearch
end
Let's say inside the Rails application you have a model with a name "Hashtag", that represents all the tags attached to the model "Tweet".
class Hashtag < ActiveRecord::Base
include Tagliani::Concerns::Search
end
class Tweet < ActiveRecord::Base
taggable tag_kls: "Hashtag"
end
tag_kls is optional. By default it set to Tag
model
To attach the tag simply execute:
tweet = Tweet.create(body: "Follow @rrubyist on Twitter")
tweet.tags.add(name: '#followme')
To list the attached tags you can run:
tweet.tags
It will return you an array of Hashtag
objects attached to the Tweet
model.
[#<Hashtag id: 2, name: "#followme", sticker: "default">]
If you want to search for all tweets attached to the Hashtag
model with a name #followme
you can use public search
method defined in class.
You don't have to specify tag_kls
, unless you have multiple models that act as Tag model
Hashtag.search(where: { tag_name: ['#followme'], tag_kls: ['Hashtag'] }
Tag name represents the name
field of the Hashtag
model.
[#<Tweet id: 3, body: "Tweet #0">, #<Tweet id: 4, body: "Tweet #1">,
#<Tweet id: 5, body: "Tweet #2">, #<Tweet id: 6, body: "Follow @rrubyist on Twitter">]
In fact, you can do so much more with it. You are in power of using all the abilities of ElasticSearch. For example, you can search using a *
. You can write pro*
and match all tags that contain this part of the word at the beginning of the name tag.
producer.tags.search(where: { tag_name: ["pro*"] })
=> [#<Tag id: 3, name: "professor", sticker: "default">, #<Tag id: 4, name: "professional", sticker: "default">]
For a non-blocking processes you can enable option to index jobs in background queue.
class Artist < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :albums
tagliani async: true
end
To index in bulks, simply execute:
Tagliani::Search::Index.bulk!
You can specify the models you want to inherit tags from by adding an option :inherit
with a list of models in the taggable
method.
class Album < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :songs
belongs_to :artist
belongs_to :producer
taggable inherit: %i[artist producer]
end
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/rudkovskyi/tagliani. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the Contributor Covenant code of conduct.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Everyone interacting in the Tagliani project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.