• Introduction
  • Dev Environment Setup
  • Developing Apps
  • Data Handling
  • Device Capabilities
  • Testing & Debugging
  • Extending
Warning Older Docs! - You are viewing documentation for a previous released version of RhoMobile Suite.

Using Rhom in Ruby

Creating a Ruby Data Model

There are two ways to generate a Ruby model: one is using RhoStudio and the other is with the command-line generator. Under the hood, RhoStudio invokes the command-line tool, so both approaches are equivalent. Together with the model class itself, the generator will output a default set of views that you can customize as needed.

Adding a Model from RhoStudio

To generate a model, right-click on the application project in the Project Explorer and select New -> RhoMobile model.

In the Model Information window, enter the name for your model: in this case, Product.

Do not use the following for model names: Config, Settings, helpers, test, Client, Sync or any built-in Ruby class name. It is also a good programming practice to avoid using generic names, such as time or print. Using descriptive names in your models will help you grow your application more easily in the future

The other required piece of information is the list of attributes, which must be entered as a string with no spaces, each attribute separated by a comma: in this Product example, name,brand,price,quantity,sku.

After pressing the Finish button, you’ll see the results of the RhoMobile model generator in the output console.

Adding a Model from the command line

If you prefer to use the command line or another development environment instead of RhoStudio, the rhodes tool can be invoked manually. To create the Product model with name, brand, price, quantity and sku as the attributes, switch to the root directory of your application (the one that contains app as a child) and run:

$ rhodes model Product name,brand,price,quantity,sku

What a generated model consists of

Output from the model generator will contain the following files:

  • app/Product/index.erb - the html view template to display the list of objects
  • app/Product/edit.erb - the html view template to edit an object
  • app/Product/new.erb - the html view template to supply values to create a new object
  • app/Product/show.erb - the html view template to displays the selected object
  • app/Product/product_controller.rb - contains the the business logic for the model, the basic CRUD actions: index, new, create, edit, update and delete.
  • app/Product/product.rb - contains the Product model definition
  • app/test/product_spec.rb - placeholder for Product test specs

You are free to update all these files to suit your application

Why does the product.rb file not mention the attributes at all? Rhodes provides two model storage schemes, called PropertyBag and FixedSchema. FixedSchema stores data for each model in its own database table, with one column per attribute, and requires the model to explicitly list the attributes it supports. PropertyBag stores everything in a single table and is more flexible: it determines the list of attributes dynamically at run time, the model does not need to declare them. The generator outputs PropertyBag models by default; that is why there is no mention of the attributes in the generated model file, PropertyBag does not require them. For a discussion of the benefits and drawbacks of each approach, see Using the local database.

Using Models

Property Bag

With a property bag model, all data is stored in a single table using the object-attribute-value pattern also referred to as the Entity-attribute-value model.

Property Bag Advantages

  • Simple to use, it doesn’t require specifying attributes.
  • Data migrations are not necessary.
  • Attributes can be added or removed without modifying the database schema.

Property Bag Disadvantages

  • For some applications, the database size may be significantly larger than fixed schema. This is because each attribute is indexed for fast lookup.
  • Sync process may be slightly slower because inserts are performed at attribute level.

In a property bag model, Rhom groups objects by their source id and object id. The following example illustrates this idea:

Source ID: 1, Model Name: Account
+-----------+----------+--------------+----------------------+
| source_id | attrib   | object       | value                |
+-----------+----------+--------------+------- --------------+
|         1 | name     | 48f39f63741b | A.G. Parr PLC 37862  | 
|         1 | industry | 48f39f63741b | Entertainment        |
|         1 | name     | 48f39f230529 | Jones Group          |
|         1 | industry | 48f39f230529 | Sales                |
+-----------+----------+--------------+----------------------+

Here, Rhom will expose a class Account with two attributes: name and industry

account = Account.find('48f39f63741b')
account.name
  #=> "A.G. Parr PLC 37862"

account.industry
  #=> "Entertainment"

Using Property Bag Models

To use a property bag model, simply generate a new model with some attributes:

$ rhodes model product name,brand,price,quantity,sku

This will generate a file called product.rb which looks like:

class Product
  include Rhom::PropertyBag

  # Uncomment the following line to enable sync with Product.
  # enable :sync

  #add model specific code here
end

There are several features you can enable or disable in the model, below is a complete list:

class SomeModel
  include Rhom::PropertyBag

  # rhoconnect settings
  # Enable sync for this model.
  # Default is disabled.
  enable :sync 

  # Set the type of sync this model
  # will use (default :incremental).
  # Set to :bulk_only to disable incremental
  # sync and only use bulk sync.
  set :sync_type, :bulk_only 

  # Set the sync priority for this model.
  # 1000 is default, set to lower number
  # for a higher priority.
  set :sync_priority, 1     

  # Instruct Rhom to send all attributes
  # to RhoConnect when an object is updated.
  # Default is disabled, only changed attributes
  # are sent.
  enable :full_update 

  # RhoConnect provides a simple way to keep data out of redis. 
  # If you have sensitive data that you do not want saved in redis, 
  # add the pass_through option in settings/settings.yml for each source.
  # Add pass_through to client model definition
  enable :pass_through 

  # model settings

  # Define how data is partitioned for this model.
  # For synced models default is :user. 
  # For non-synced models default is :local
  # If you have an :app partition
  # for your RhoConnect source adapter and use bulk sync,
  # set this to :app also.
  set :partition, :app

  # Define blob attributes for the model.
  # :blob           Declare property as a blob type
  #
  # :overwrite      (optional) Overwrite client copy 
  #                 of blob with new copy from server.
  #                 This is useful when RhoConnect modifies
  #                 images sent from Rhodes, for example 
  #                 zooming or cropping.
  property :image_url, :blob, :overwrite 

  # You can define your own properties also
  property :mycustomproperty, 'hello'
end

Fixed Schema

With a fixed schema model, each model has a separate database table and each attribute exists as a column in the table. In this sense, fixed schema models are similar to traditional relational tables.

Fixed Schema Advantages

  • Smaller database size, indexes can be specified only on specific attributes.
  • Sync process may perform faster because whole objects are inserted at a time.

Fixed Schema Disadvantages

  • Schema changes must be handled with data migrations.
  • Database performance may be slow unless you specify proper indexes.

Using Fixed Schema Models

Using a fixed schema model involves an additional step to using a property bag model.

First, generate the model using the rhodes command:

$ rhodes model product name,brand,price,quantity,sku

Next, change the include statement in product.rb to include Rhom::FixedSchema and add the attributes:

class Product
  include Rhom::FixedSchema

  # Uncomment the following line to enable sync with Product.
  # enable :sync

  property :name, :string
  property :brand, :string
  property :price, :string
  property :quantity, :string
  property :sku, :string

  property :int_prop, :integer
  property :float_prop, :float
  property :date_prop, :date #translate to integer type
  property :time_prop, :time #translate to integer type

end

That’s it! Now your model is a fixed schema model, the table will be generated automatically for you when the application launches.

Below is a full list of options available to fixed schema models:

class SomeModel
  include Rhom::FixedSchema

  # rhoconnect settings
  # Enable sync for this model.
  # Default is disabled.
  enable :sync 

  # Set the type of sync this model
  # will use (default :incremental).
  # Set to :bulk_only to disable incremental
  # sync and only use bulk sync.
  set :sync_type, :bulk_only 

  # Set the sync priority for this model.
  # 1000 is default, set to lower number
  # for a higher priority.
  set :sync_priority, 1     

  # Instruct Rhom to send all attributes
  # to RhoConnect when an object is updated.
  # Default is disabled, only changed attributes
  # are sent.
  enable :full_update 

  # RhoConnect provides a simple way to keep data out of redis. 
  # If you have sensitive data that you do not want saved in redis, 
  # add the pass_through option in settings/settings.yml for each source.
  # Add pass_through to client model definition
  enable :pass_through 

  # model settings

  # Define how data is partitioned for this model.
  # Default is :user.  If you have an :app partition
  # for your RhoConnect source adapter and use bulk sync,
  # set this to :app also.
  set :partition, :app

  # Set the current version of the fixed schema.
  # Your application may use it for data migrations.
  set :schema_version, '1.0'

  # Define fixed schema attributes.
  # :string and :blob types are supported.
  property :name, :string
  property :tag, :string
  property :phone, :string
  property :image_url, :blob

  # Define a named index on a set of attributes.
  # For example, this will create index for name and tag columns.
  index :by_name_tag, [:name, :tag] 

  # Define a unique named index on a set of attributes.
  # For example, this will create unique index for the phone column.
  unique_index :by_phone, [:phone] 

  # Define blob attributes for the model.
  # :blob           Declare property as a blob type
  #
  # :overwrite      (optional) Overwrite client copy 
  #                 of blob with new copy from server.
  #                 This is useful when RhoConnect modifies
  #                 images sent from Rhodes, for example 
  #                 zooming or cropping.
  property :image_url, :blob, :overwrite

  # You can define your own properties also
  property :mycustomproperty, 'hello'
end

Data Migrations

Fixed Schema Data Migrations

Rhom provides an application hook to migrate the data manually. You can also use this hook to run business logic related to updating the database. For example, your application may want to display a customized alert notifying the user that a migration is in progress and it may take a few moments.

To use this hook, first we need to track the :schema_version in our model:

class Product
  include Rhom::FixedSchema

  set :schema_version, '1.1'
end

Next, we will implement the following hook in our application.rb class:

on_migrate_source(old_version, new_src)

This is called on application start when :schema_version has changed.

class AppApplication < Rho::RhoApplication

  # old_version     String containing old version value (i.e. '1.0')
  # new_src         Hash with source information:
  #                 'schema_version', 'name', 'schema'
  #                 new_src['schema']['sql'] contains new schema sql
  def on_migrate_source(old_version, new_src)
    # ... do something like alert user ...

    db = Rho::RHO.get_src_db(new_src['name'])
    db.execute_sql("ALTER TABLE #{new_src['name']} ADD COLUMN mytest VARCHAR DEFAULT null")

    true # does not create table
  end
end

To modify schema without recreate table, you can use only ADD COLUMN command, you cannot remove column or change type(This is sqlite limitation)

Return false to run the custom sql specified by the new_src[‘schema’][‘sql’] string:

def on_migrate_source(old_version, new_src)
  # ... do something like alert user ...
  false # create table by source schema - useful only for non-synced models
end

For sync sources, you cannot just recreate table without data copy. Because server will not send this data at sync time.

Property Bag Data Migrations

No data migration required, since all attributes are dynamic. If you want to remove all local data when upgrading to new application version: change app_db_version in rhoconfig.txt.

This scenario will work for Property Bag and Fixed Schema models.

Adding new objects

Use the create method to create a new model object and save it to the database.

This is the fastest way to insert a single item into the database.
user = User.create(
        :name => 'Alice', 
        :email => 'alice@example.com')

You can also create the new model object without saving it automatically and then explicitly use the save method. This is useful when you want to update some of the object attributes before saving.

user = User.new(:name => 'Alice')
# update the object
user.email = 'alice@example.com'
user.save

Retrieving objects

You can retrieve all objects for a model or only those matching given conditions using the find method.

Getting all objects for a model

You can retrieve all objects for a model using the all parameter.

users = User.find(:all)

Finding objects matching conditions

You can retrieve all objects matching given conditions using the conditions parameter.

users = User.find(
            :all, 
            :conditions => {:name => 'Alice'}
        )

Numeric field comparisons in property bag models

Because, internally, property bag models store all their values in the same column, this column is defined as varchar, which means that number comparisons do not work as you would expected. If you need to perform order comparisons on a numeric field in a property bag model, use CAST to convert the value to a number of the desired type:

@accts = Account.find(:all, 
    :conditions => { {:func=> 'CAST', :name=>'rating as INTEGER', :op=>'<'} => 3 } )
#or using sql query:
size = 3
@accts = Account.find(:all, 
    :conditions => ["CAST(rating as INTEGER)< ?", "#{size}"], :select => ['rating'] )

Ordering the objects

You can retrieve objects sorted by one or more attributes using the order and orderdir parameters.

# order by one attribute
users = User.find(
            :all, 
            :order => 'name', 
            :orderdir => 'DESC'
        )

# order by multiple attributes
users = User.find(
            :all, 
            :order => ['name', 'email'], 
            :orderdir => ['ASC', 'DESC']
        )

Retrieving specific attributes

If, for a particular action, you do not need every attribute in an object, you can make your application faster by selecting only the specific attributes you need using the select parameter.

users = User.find(
            :all, 
            :select => ['name']
        )

Paginating results

this section applies to Ruby only

You can pass offset and per_page parameters to find method to retrieve objects in chunks.

# get first 10 records
users = User.find(:all, :per_page => 10)

# get records 21-40
users = User.find(:all, :offset => 20, :per_page => 20)

For convenience, there is a paginate method which emulates Rails' classic pagination syntax. The default page size is 10.

You can use :conditions, :order and select parameters, similarly to the find method.

# get first 10 records
users = User.paginate(:page => 0)

# get records 21-40
users = User.paginate(:page => 1, :per_page => 20)

Retrieving only the first object matching conditions

You can get only the first object matching given conditions using first instead of all when calling find.

user = User.find(
            :first, 
            :conditions => {:name => 'Alice'}
        )

Using SQL queries directly

You can directly retrieve model object(s) using SQL queries with the findBySql method. This method works only for fixed schema models.

users = User.findBySql('SELECT * FROM User')

Counting objects

You can get the number of objects matching given conditions using the count parameter with find method.

count = User.find(
            :count, 
            :conditions => {:name => 'Alice'}
        )

Updating

You can update an object’s attributes and save it to the database using the updateAttributes method

This is the fastest way to add or update item attributes.
user = User.find(:first, :conditions => {:name => 'Alice'})
user.update_attributes(
            :name => 'Bob', 
            :email => 'bob@example.com')

Deleting

Deleting one object

To delete one model object use the destroy method on the object to be deleted.

user = User.find(:first)
user.destroy

Delete multiple objects

To delete all objects for a model, or only those matching given conditions, use the delete_all method.

# delete all objects
User.delete_all()

# delete only objects matching :conditions
User.delete_all(:conditions => {:name => 'Alice'})

Transactions

Use transactions to group together database operations that must either succeed or fail as a group, without leaving any partially completed operations. You can combine any set of object/model operations like insert/update/delete under a transaction.

db = Rho::Database.new
db.startTransaction
begin
    # do multiple operations
    User.create(:name => 'Alice', :email => 'alice@example.com')
    User.create(:name => 'Bob', :email => 'bob@example.com')

    # no errors, so commit all the changes
    db.commitTransaction
rescue
    # on error rollback all changes
    db.rollbackTransaction
end

Executing SQL

You can execute SQL statements directly on the database by using Database.executeSql method.

begin
    db = Rho::Database.new(Rho::Application.databaseFilePath('app'),'app');
    result = db.executeSql('SELECT * FROM User') # result is an array of hashes, where each hash is a record
ensure
    db.close
end

:::ruby
db.executeBatchSql("UPDATE User set valid=0; Update Account set active=0")

Resetting database

You can use the following method for recovering the database from a bad or corrupt state or if the RhoConnect server returns errors.

Delete all objects for given models.

Rho::ORM.databaseFullResetEx(:models => ['User'], :reset_client_info => true, :reset_local_models => true)

Adding more fields to an existing model

The list of attributes in a model can be updated as development progresses. If you are using the PropertyBag storage scheme (the default), the only thing you need to do is add the relevant code to the views (index.erb, edit.erb, new.erb and show.erb) and Rhodes will take care of the rest. If you have switched to FixedSchema, however, you also need to add the appropriate lines in your model .rb file:

property :<property_name> :<data_type>

In our example Product model, for example, we could add

property :color, :string

The guide Using the local database contains all the details on which data types are supported, as well as other ways to fine-tune data synchronization.

Linking a model to a RhoConnect synchronization server

What is RhoConnect

RhoConnect is the server-side part of RhoMobile Suite that connects your mobile application to external data sources. Whether your data comes from a relational database, NoSQL data store, RESTful web services or any other data source, RhoConnect bridges the gap between mobile clients and server resources. Using RhoConnect frees you from writing error-prone, hard to maintain synchronization code and takes care of all aspects of data sync.

Integrating a mobile Rhodes application with RhoConnect

Once your application can store data about a particular model, enabling two-way synchronization with a RhoConnect server is a one-step process: there is only one line to change, in your model file (product.rb in our example), uncomment the line

enable :sync

As long as your RhoConnect server is properly configured, this is all that is required to benefit from automatic, two-way synchronization. See the RhoConnect Tutorial for in-depth information about the benefits RhoConnect provides, as well as Using the local database to find out how to tune data synchronization according to the needs of your application.

Associations

Rhom has a sync association called belongs_to which you can use to trigger updates on sync-enabled models. This is useful where you have relationships between backend service objects.

For example, you can have a list of customers who are assigned to a sales person:

class Customer
  include Rhom::PropertyBag

  # Declare container model and attribute.
  belongs_to :salesrep_id, 'SalesRep'
end

The value you must use as the identifier to link objects is the object property

def create
  @customer = Customer.new(@params['customer'])
  @customer.save

  sales_rep = SalesRep.find(...) # find the appropriate sales representative for new customers
  customer.salesrep_id = @sales_rep.object
  customer.save
  redirect :action => :index
end

You can also define polymorphic sync associations, or sync associations across multiple classes.

Using array notation:

belongs_to :parent_id, ['Product', 'Case']

Or multiple declarations:

belongs_to :parent_id, 'Product'
belongs_to :parent_id, 'Case'

If you are planning to use the bulk sync feature for your associated models, then you should take into consideration the corresponding support on the RhoConnect Server side. See RhoConnect Bulk Sync associations.

Freezed models

If you want to limit model attributes by specific list - you can ‘freeze’ model:

class Customer
    include Rhom::PropertyBag

    enable :sync

    set :freezed, true

    property :address, :string
    property :city, :string
    property :email, :string
end

For such models if you try to set a property that has not been explicitly defined, you will get ArgumentError exception:

obj = Customer.new( :wrong_address => 'test') #will raise ArgumentError exception
obj = Customer.create( :wrong_address => 'test') #will raise ArgumentError exception

obj = Customer.new
obj.wrong_address = 'test' #will raise ArgumentError exception

obj = Customer.new
obj.update_attributes(:wrong_address => 'test') #will raise ArgumentError exception

FixedSchema models are ‘freezed’ by default. This is only supported in Ruby models.

Resetting the Database

Rhodes provides the following functions for recovering the database from a bad or corrupt state, or if the RhoConnect server returns errors.

Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset(reset_client_info=false, reset_local_models=true)

Deletes all records from the property bag and model tables.

# reset_client_info   If set to true, client_info 
#           table will be cleaned.
#
# reset_local_models  If set to true, local(non-synced models) 
#           will be cleaned.
Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset(false,true)

Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset_and_logout

Perform a full reset and then logout the RhoConnect client.

Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset_and_logout

Rhom::Rhom.database_fullclient_reset_and_logout

Equivalent to Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset(true) followed by SyncEngine.logout.

Rhom::Rhom.database_fullclient_reset_and_logout

If you receive a sync error “Unknown client” message in your sync callback, this means that the RhoConnect server no longer knows about the client and a Rhom::Rhom.database_fullclient_reset_and_logout is recommended. This error requires proper intervention in your app so you can handle the state before resetting the client. For example, your sync notification could contain the following:

if @params['error_message'].downcase == 'unknown client'
  puts "Received unknown client, resetting!"
  Rhom::Rhom.database_fullclient_reset_and_logout
end

Rhom::Rhom.database_local_reset

Reset only local(non-sync-enabled) models.

Rhom::Rhom.database_local_reset

Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset_ex( :models => [model_name1, model_name2], :reset_client_info=>false, :reset_local_models => true)

Deletes all records from the property bag and model tables, if models are set then reset only selected models

# models                Array of models names to reset
# reset_client_info   If set to true, client_info 
#           table will be cleaned.
#
# reset_local_models  If set to true, local(non-synced models) 
#           will be cleaned.
Rhom::Rhom.database_full_reset_ex(:models => ['Product', 'Customer'])

Advanced Queries

find(*args) (advanced conditions)

Rhom also supports advanced find :conditions. Using advanced :conditions, rhom can optimize the query for the property bag table.

Let’s say we have the following SQL fragment condition:

Product.find(
 :all, 
 :conditions => [ 
   "LOWER(description) like ? or LOWER(title) like ?", 
   query, 
   query
 ], 
 :select => ['title','description'] 
)

Using advanced :conditions, this becomes:

Product.find( 
  :all, 
  :conditions => { 
  { 
    :func => 'LOWER', 
    :name => 'description', 
    :op => 'LIKE'
  } => query, 
    {
    :func => 'LOWER', 
    :name => 'title', 
    :op => 'LIKE'
  } => query
  }, 
  :op => 'OR', 
  :select => ['title','description']
)

You can also use the ‘IN’ operator:

Product.find(
  :all, 
  :conditions => { 
    {
    :name => "image_uri", 
    :op => "IN" 
  } => "'15704','15386'" 
  } 
)

# or use array notation
Product.find(
  :all, 
  :conditions => { 
    {
    :name => "image_uri", 
    :op => "IN" 
  } => ["15704","15386"]
  } 
)

You can also group :conditions:

cond1 = {
  :conditions => { 
    {
    :func => 'UPPER', 
    :name => 'name', 
    :op => 'LIKE' 
  } => query, 
    { 
    :func => 'UPPER', 
    :name => 'industry', 
    :op => 'LIKE'
  } => query
  }, 
  :op => 'OR'
}

cond2 = {
  :conditions => { 
    {
    :name => 'description', 
    :op => 'LIKE'
    } => 'Hello%'
  }   
}

@accts = Account.find( 
  :all, 
  :conditions => [cond1, cond2], 
  :op => 'AND', 
  :select => ['name','industry','description']
)

Find by numeric field

To use number comparison conditions in find use CAST : :::ruby @accts = Account.find(:all, :conditions => { {:func=> ‘CAST’, :name=>‘rating as INTEGER’, :op=>‘<’} => 3 } ) #or using sql query: size = 3 @accts = Account.find(:all, :conditions => [“CAST(rating as INTEGER)< ?”, “#{size}”], :select => [‘rating’] )

Database Encryption

As of Rhodes version 3.3.3, Rhom data encryption is removed from Rhodes. This feature is only supported in Zebra RhoMobile Suite. If you wish to use this feature, you will need to upgrade to RhoMobile Suite. Your application’s build.yml will also need to be modified to indicate the application type is ‘Rhoelements’. Additionally, a RhoElements license is required.

If your application requires that the local database is encrypted on the filesystem, you can enable it by setting a flag in build.yml:

encrypt_database: 1

Database encryption is not supported for applications that use bulk sync at this time.

Platform Notes

  • iOS: Uses AES 128 encryption algorithm from iOS SDK.
  • Android: Uses AES 128 ecryption algorithm from Android SDK.
  • Windows Mobile: Uses RC4 algorithm from Windows Mobile SDK.

Related reading

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