Dossier is a Rails engine that turns SQL into reports. Reports can be easily rendered in various formats, like HTML, CSV, XLS, and JSON.
- If you hate SQL, you can use whatever tool you like to generate it; for example, ActiveRecord's
to_sql
. - If you love SQL, you can use every feature your database supports.
Install the Dossier gem and create config/dossier.yml
. This has the same format as Rails' database.yml
, and can actually just be a symlink (from your Rails.root
: ln -s database.yml config/dossier.yml
).
Dossier will add a route to your app so that reports/fancy_ketchup
will instantiate and run a FancyKetchupReport
. It will respond with whatever format was requested; for example reports/fancy_ketchup.csv
will render the results as CSV.
Dossier currently supports outputting to the following formats:
- HTML
- CSV
- XLS
- JSON
Any of these formats can be requested by using the appropriate format extension on the end of the report's URL.
In your app, create report classes under app/reports
, with Report
as the end of the class name. Define a sql
method that returns the sql string to be sent to the database.
For example:
# app/reports/fancy_ketchup_report.rb
class FancyKetchupReport < Dossier::Report
def sql
'SELECT * FROM ketchups WHERE fancy = true'
end
# Or, if you're using ActiveRecord and hate writing SQL:
def sql
Ketchup.where(fancy: true).to_sql
end
end
If you need dynamic values that may be influenced by the user, do not interpolate them directly. Dossier provides a safer way to add them: any lowercase symbols in the query will be replaced by calling methods of the same name in the report. Return values will be escaped by the database connection. Arrays will have all of their contents escaped, joined with a "," and wrapped in parentheses.
# app/reports/fancy_ketchup_report.rb
class FancyKetchupReport < Dossier::Report
def sql
"SELECT * FROM ketchups WHERE price <= :max_price and brand IN :brands"
# => "SELECT * FROM ketchups WHERE price <= 7 and brand IN ('Acme', 'Generic', 'SoylentRed')"
end
def max_price
7
end
def brands
%w[Acme Generic SoylentRed]
end
end
By default, headers are generated by calling titleize
on the column name from the result set. To override this, define a format_header
method in your report that returns what you want. For example:
class ProductMarginReport < Dossier::Report
# ...
def format_header(column_name)
custom_headers = {
margin_percentage: 'Margin %',
absolute_margin: 'Margin $'
}
custom_headers.fetch(column_name.to_sym) { super }
end
end
You can format any values in your results by defining a format_
method for that column on your report class. For instance, to reverse the names of your employees:
class EmployeeReport < Dossier::Report
# ...
def format_name(value)
value.reverse
end
end
Dossier also provides a formatter
with access to all the standard Rails formatters. So to format all values in the payment
column as currency, you could do:
class MoneyLaunderingReport < Dossier::Report
#...
def format_payment(value)
formatter.number_to_currency(value)
end
end
In addition, the formatter provides Rails' URL helpers for use in your reports. For example, in a report of your least profitable accounts, you might want to add a link to change the salesperson assigned to that account.
class LeastProfitableAccountsReport < Dossier::Report
#...
def format_account_id(value)
formatter.url_formatter.link_to value, formatter.url_formatter.url_helpers.edit_accounts_path(value)
end
end
The built-in ReportsController
uses this formatting when rendering the HTML and JSON representations, but not when rendering the CSV or XLS.
If your formatting method takes a second argment, it will be given a hash of the values in the row.
class MoneyLaunderingReport < Dossier::Report
#...
def format_payment(value, row)
return "$0.00" if row[:recipient] == 'Jimmy The Squid'
formatter.number_to_currency(value)
end
end
Hidden Columns
You may override display_column?
in your report class in order to hide columns from the formatted results. For instance, you might select an employee's ID and name in order to generate a link from their name to their profile page, without actually displaying the ID value itself:
class EmployeeReport < Dossier::Report
# ...
def display_column?(name)
name != 'id'
end
def format_name(value, row)
url = formatter.url_formatter.url_helpers.employee_path(row['id'])
formatter.url_formatter.link_to(value, url)
end
end
By default, all selected columns are displayed.
You may want to specify parameters for a report: which columns to show, a range of dates, etc. Dossier supports this via URL parameters, anything in params[:options]
will be passed into your report's initialize
method and made available via the options
reader.
You can pass these options by hardcoding them into a link, or you can allow users to customize a report with a form. For example:
# app/views/dossier/reports/employee.html.haml
= form_for report, as: :options, url: url_for, html: {method: :get} do |f|
= f.label "Salary greater than:"
= f.text_field :salary_greater_than
= f.label "In Division:"
= f.select_tag :in_division, divisions_collection
= f.button "Submit"
= render template: 'dossier/reports/show', locals: {report: report}
It's up to you to use these options in generating your SQL query.
However, Dossier does support one URL parameter natively: if you supply a footer
parameter with an integer value, the last N rows will be accesible via report.results.footers
instead of report.results.body
. The built-in show
view renders those rows inside an HTML footer. This is an easy way to display a totals row or something similar.
The default report views use a <table class="dossier report">
for easy CSS styling.
To further customize your results view, run the generator provided. The default will provide 'app/views/dossier/reports/show'.
rails generate dossier:views
You may pass a filename as an argument. This example creates 'app/views/dossier/reports/account_tracker.html.haml'.
rails generate dossier:views account_tracker
To produce report results, Dossier builds your query and executes it in separate steps. It uses ActiveSupport::Callbacks to define callbacks for build_query
and execute
. Therefore, you may provide callbacks similar to these:
set_callback :build_query, :before, :run_my_stored_procedure
set_callback :execute, :after do
mangle_results
end
You can use Dossier reports in your own controllers and views. For example, if you wanted to render two reports on a page with other information, you might do this in a controller:
class ProjectsController < ApplicationController
def show
@project = Project.find(params[:id])
@project_status_report = ProjectStatusReport.new(project: @project)
@project_revenue_report = ProjectRevenueReport.new(project: @project, grouped: 'monthly')
end
end
.span6
= render template: 'dossier/reports/show', locals: {report: @project_status_report.run}
.span6
= render template: 'dossier/reports/show', locals: {report: @project_revenue_report.run}
class Api::ProjectsController < Api::ApplicationController
def snapshot
render json: ProjectStatusReport.new(project: @project).results.hashes
end
end
To see a report with all the bells and whistles, check out spec/dummy/app/reports/employee_report.rb
or other reports in spec/dummy/app/reports
.
Dossier currently supports all databases supported by ActiveRecord; it comes with Dossier::Adapter::ActiveRecord
, which uses ActiveRecord connections for escaping and executing queries. However, as the Dossier::Adapter
namespace implies, it was written to allow for other connection adapters. See CONTRIBUTING.md
if you'd like to add one.
You probably want to provide some protection to your reports: require viewers to be logged in, possibly check whether they're allowed to access this particular report, etc.
Of course, you can protect your own controllers' use of Dossier reports however you wish. To protect report access via Dossier::Controller
, you can make use of two facts:
Dossier::Controller
subclassesApplicationController
- If you use an initializer, you can call methods on
Dossier::Controller
So for a very simple, roll-your-own solution, you could do this:
# config/initializers/dossier.rb
Rails.application.config.to_prepare do
# Define `#my_protection_method` on your ApplicationController
Dossier::ReportsController.before_filter :my_protection_method
end
For a more robust solution, you might make use of some gems. Here's a solution using Devise for authentication and Authority for authorization:
# app/controllers/application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
# Basic "you must be logged in"; will apply to all subclassing controllers,
# including Dossier::Controller.
before_filter :authenticate_user!
end
# config/initializers/dossier.rb
Rails.application.config.to_prepare do
# Use Authority to enforce viewing permissions for this report.
# You might set the report's `authorizer_name` to 'ReportsAuthorizer', and
# define that with a `readable_by?(user)` method that suits your needs
Dossier::ReportsController.authorize_actions_for :report_class
end
See the referenced gems for more documentation on using them.
Note: when you run the tests, Dossier will make and/or truncate some tables in the dossier_test
database.
- Run
bundle
RAILS_ENV=test rake db:create
cp spec/dummy/config/database.yml{.example,}
and edit it so that it can connect to the test database.cp spec/fixtures/db/mysql2.yml{.example,}
cp spec/fixtures/db/sqlite3.yml{.example,}
rspec spec
- How Dossier uses ORM adapters to connect to databases, currently only AR's are used.
- Examples of connecting to different databases, of the same type or a different one
- Document using hooks and what methods are available in them
- Callbacks, eg:
- Stored procedures
- Reformat results
- Linking
- To other reports
- To other formats
- Extending the formatter
- Show how to do "crosstab" reports (preliminary query to determine columns, then build SQL case statements?)
- Moar Dokumentationz pleaze
- Use the
roo
gem to generate a variety of output formats