Ruby gem to manage read/unread status of ActiveRecord objects - and it's fast.
- Manages unread records for anything you want readers (e.g. users) to read (like messages, documents, comments etc.)
- Supports mark as read to mark a single record as read
- Supports mark all as read to mark all records as read in a single step
- Gives you a scope to get the unread records for a given reader
- Needs only one additional database table
- Most important: Great performance
- Ruby 1.9.3 or newer
- Rails 3.0 or newer (including Rails 4.x and Rails 5.0)
- MySQL, PostgreSQL or SQLite
- Needs a timestamp field in your models (like created_at or updated_at) with a database index on it
https://github.com/ledermann/unread/releases
Step 1: Add this to your Gemfile:
gem 'unread'
and run
bundle
Step 2: Generate and run the migration:
rails g unread:migration
rake db:migrate
If you upgrade from an older release of this gem, you should read the upgrade notes.
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_reader
# Optional: Allow a subset of users as readers only
def self.reader_scope
where(:is_admin => true)
end
end
class Message < ActiveRecord::Base
acts_as_readable :on => :created_at
end
message1 = Message.create!
message2 = Message.create!
## Get unread messages for a given user
Message.unread_by(current_user)
# => [ message1, message2 ]
message1.mark_as_read! :for => current_user
Message.unread_by(current_user)
# => [ message2 ]
## Get read messages for a given user
Message.read_by(current_user)
# => [ ]
message1.mark_as_read! :for => current_user
Message.read_by(current_user)
# => [ message1 ]
## Get all messages including the read status for a given user
messages = Message.with_read_marks_for(current_user)
# => [ message1, message2 ]
messages[0].unread?(current_user)
# => false
messages[1].unread?(current_user)
# => true
Message.mark_as_read! :all, :for => current_user
Message.unread_by(current_user)
# => [ ]
Message.read_by(current_user)
# => [ message1, message2 ]
## Get users that have not read a given message
user1 = User.create!
user2 = User.create!
User.have_not_read(message1)
# => [ user1, user2 ]
message1.mark_as_read! :for => user1
User.have_not_read(message1)
# => [ user2 ]
## Get users that have read a given message
User.have_read(message1)
# => [ user1 ]
message1.mark_as_read! :for => user2
User.have_read(message1)
# => [ user1, user2 ]
Message.mark_as_read! :all, :for => user1
User.have_not_read(message1)
# => [ ]
User.have_not_read(message2)
# => [ user2 ]
User.have_read(message1)
# => [ user1, user2 ]
User.have_read(message2)
# => [ user1 ]
## Get all users including their read status for a given message
users = User.with_read_marks_for(message1)
# => [ user1, user2 ]
users[0].have_read?(message1)
# => true
users[1].have_read?(message2)
# => false
# Optional: Cleaning up unneeded markers
# Do this in a cron job once a day
Message.cleanup_read_marks!
The main idea of this gem is to manage a list of read items for every reader after a certain timestamp.
The gem defines a scope doing a LEFT JOIN to this list, so your app can get the unread items in a performant manner. Of course, other scopes can be combined.
It will be ensured that the list of read items will not grow up too much:
- If a user uses "mark all as read", his list gets deleted and the timestamp is set to the current time.
- If a user never uses "mark all as read", the list will grow and grow with each item he reads. But there is help: Your app can use a cleanup method which removes unnecessary list items.
Overall, this gem can be used for large data. Please have a look at the generated SQL queries, here is an example:
# Assuming we have a user who has marked all messages as read on 2010-10-20 08:50
current_user = User.find(42)
# Get the unread messages for this user
Message.unread_by(current_user)
Generated query:
SELECT messages.*
FROM messages
LEFT JOIN read_marks ON read_marks.readable_type = "Message"
AND read_marks.readable_id = messages.id
AND read_marks.reader_id = 42
AND read_marks.reader_type = 'User'
AND read_marks.timestamp >= messages.created_at
WHERE read_marks.id IS NULL
AND messages.created_at > '2010-10-20 08:50:00'
Hint: You should add a database index on messages.created_at
.
Copyright (c) 2010-2016 Georg Ledermann and contributors, released under the MIT license