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A ray tracing renderer written in Rails' ActiveRecord

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Note

I gave a talk about this at RailsConf 2024. Below is a small excerpt.

Raytraced rendering in ActiveRecord

Render output

The output of render.rb, rendered in about half a second.

Explanation

In order to generate so many pixel values, we're going to use a quite uncommon SQL construct called a recursive common table expression. A common table expression (CTE) is created with the WITH keyword, and is used for creating temporary named result sets. This lets you break down big queries into smaller chunks, giving you intermediary tables in a virtual table, so you don't have to CREATE TABLE, calculate stuff, then DROP TABLE. WITH RECURSIVE does this too, but uses its own table data again and again until there are no more rows (ie some condition is met).

Say we want to construct an SQL query that simply counts up to 10.

First, let's define a recursive CTE with WITH RECURSIVE. Then, name it (just "foo" in this example). I'm also going to explicitly define a column named n, which will be the only one in the CTE and will contain our number.

WITH RECURSIVE foo(n)

then, we need to create the create the actual recursive query.

SELECT 1     -- this will be the inital value of n.
UNION ALL    -- combining the result of SELECT 1 with the following SELECT resultset
SELECT n + 1 -- the recursive bit - takes the value of n from the previous step and increments it
FROM foo     -- referring to our CTE
WHERE n < 10 -- we don't want to go on forever! This is our end condition

put it together and we get

WITH RECURSIVE foo(n) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT n + 1 FROM foo LIMIT 10) SELECT n FROM foo;
sqlite> WITH RECURSIVE foo(n) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT n + 1 FROM foo LIMIT 10) SELECT n FROM foo;
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

This looks like what we want, but there's a problem; each number is its own row. If we were querying real data, this would be exactly what we want, but we're trying to construct a string here. When we run

ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute("WITH RECURSIVE foo(n) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT n + 1 FROM foo WHERE n < 10) SELECT n FROM foo")

we get the following back:

{"n"=>1}
{"n"=>2}
{"n"=>3}
{"n"=>4}
{"n"=>5}
{"n"=>6}
{"n"=>7}
{"n"=>8}
{"n"=>9}
{"n"=>10}

Now, we could just concat them in Ruby, like so

res = ActiveRecord::Base.connection.execute("WITH RECURSIVE foo(n) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT n + 1 FROM foo WHERE n < 10) SELECT n FROM foo")
puts res.map { |curr| curr["n"] }.join(", ") # 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10

But the goal here is to do as much computation in SQL as possible. Luckily, SQLite has both a print function (a pseudo-reimplementation of C's stdio.h printf) and a row concatenation function - PRINTF and GROUP_CONCAT respectively. We can use them to format our rows however we like.

sqlite> WITH RECURSIVE foo(n) AS (SELECT 1 UNION ALL SELECT n + 1 FROM foo LIMIT 10) SELECT GROUP_CONCAT(PRINTF("number: %i", n), ', ') FROM foo;
number: 1, number: 2, number: 3, number: 4, number: 5, number: 6, number: 7, number: 8, number: 9, number: 10

Here, PRINTF("number: %i", n) is formatting each row (we would write "number #{n}" in Ruby) and GROUP_CONCAT is essentially acting as Ruby's Array#join.

Where Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction breaks down

AFAIK, Arel does not support defining common table expressions with explicit columns. I thought I could define it as a NamedFunction node, like so;

Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new("numbers", [Arel.sql("n")])

but as I understand this is for calling named functions, not defining them, because while the direct .to_sql output is what's needed for defining a CTE, when used in more complex queries it breaks down, as demonsrated below.

The following works as expected;

cte_def = Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new("numbers", [Arel.sql("n")])
as_stmt = Arel::Nodes::As.new cte_def, Arel.sql("foo")
puts as_stmt.to_sql

Outputs numbers(n) AS foo.

But when used within another method, not so much

cte_def = Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new("numbers", [Arel.sql("n")])
as_stmt = Arel::Nodes::As.new cte_def, Arel.sql("foo")
select_manager = Arel::SelectManager.new
puts select_manager.with(as_stmt).to_sql

Outputs WITH "numbers" AS foo SELECT It turns out that the Node::NamedFunction's name method is being called, which we defined as numbers. Secondly, because the return type of name is a string, Arel is wrapping it in quotes in the sql output.

For now, I'm going to make a very hacky fix, but I hope it can be fixed in idiomatic Arel. If you know how, let me know.

cte_def = Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new("numbers", [Arel.sql("n")])
cte_def.define_singleton_method(:name) do
    # Making this an SqlLiteral node ensures it's not wrapped in quotes, as a string would be.
    Arel.sql("numbers(n)")
end

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