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ActiveModel::Serializers

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ActiveModel::Serializers brings convention over configuration to your JSON generation.

AMS does this through two components: serializers and adapters. Serializers describe which attributes and relationships should be serialized. Adapters describe how attributes and relationships should be serialized.

MAINTENANCE, PLEASE READ

This is the master branch of AMS. It will become the 0.10.0 release when it's ready, but it's not. You probably don't want to use it yet.

There are two released versions of AMS that you may want to use: 0.9.x and 0.8.x. 9 was recently master, so if you were using master, you probably want to use it. 8 was the version that was on RubyGems, so if you were using that, that's probably what you want.

0.10.x will be based on the 0.8.0 code, but with a more flexible architecture. We'd love your help.

For more, please see the rails-api-core mailing list.

Thanks!

Example

Given two models, a Post(title: string, body: text) and a Comment(name:string, body:text, post_id:integer), you will have two serializers:

class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
  attribute :title, :body
  
  has_many :comments

  url :post
end

and

class CommentSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
  attribute :name, :body
  
  belongs_to :post
  
  url [:post, :comment]
end

Generally speaking, you as a user of AMS will write (or generate) these serializer classes. By default, they will use the JsonApiAdapter, implemented by AMS. If you want to use a different adapter, such as a HalAdapter, you can change this in an initializer:

ActiveModel::Serializer.default_adapter = ActiveModel::Serializer::Adapter::HalAdapter

You won't need to implement an adapter unless you wish to use a new format or media type with AMS.

In your controllers, when you use render :json, Rails will now first search for a serializer for the object and use it if available.

class PostsController < ApplicationController
  def show
    @post = Post.find(params[:id])

    render json: @post
  end
end

In this case, Rails will look for a serializer named PostSerializer, and if it exists, use it to serialize the Post.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'active_model_serializers' 

And then execute:

$ bundle 

Creating a Serializer

The easiest way to create a new serializer is to generate a new resource, which will generate a serializer at the same time:

$ rails g resource post title:string body:string

This will generate a serializer in app/serializers/post_serializer.rb for your new model. You can also generate a serializer for an existing model with the serializer generator:

$ rails g serializer post

The generated seralizer will contain basic attributes and has_many/belongs_to declarations, based on the model. For example:

class PostSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
  attribute :title, :body
  
  has_many :comments

  url :post
end

and

class CommentSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
  attribute :name, :body
  
  belongs_to :post_id
  
  url [:post, :comment]
end

The attribute names are a whitelist of attributes to be serialized.

The has_many and belongs_to declarations describe relationships between resources. By default, when you serialize a Post, you will get its Comments as well.

The url declaration describes which named routes to use while generating URLs for your JSON. Not every adapter will require URLs.

Getting Help

If you find a bug, please report an Issue.

If you have a question, please post to Stack Overflow.

Thanks!

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

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ActiveModel::Serializer implementation and Rails hooks

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