Martin Gamsjaeger
2006-Apr-18 02:49 UTC
[Rails] Connecting to multiple databases with multiple database users
Hi everyone, I was wondering what the common practice for handling multiple db users with fine grained privileges on multiple databases is. Against the often read guideline for rails users to keep with a single db as "more dbs don''t really make sense anyway", my opinion is that it DOES make sense to use more than one db schema for a number of reasons that I won''t explain here. Anyway, I think a lot of users have to face the need for multiple dbs, so it should be easy to do it in rails :-) shouldn''t it? I''m working on a project with the goal to put an evaluation system online. Customers must be able to fill out the answers to the evaluation questions, and Admins must be able to (1) keep track of all current evaluations and (2) trigger statistic calculations once customers complete their evaluation. Customers must not be able to view/change other Customer''s data, Admins must not be able to change Customer data but are allowed to view it. These rules MUST be enforced on the database level. Which leaves me with the facts that I have an admin and a customer user on my mysql db, and i have three database schemas called authentication, customer_sandbox and persistent_base in there as well. The db of most interest is customer_sandbox. On most of the tables in customer_sandbox only Admin is allowed to perform CRUD operations. However there is a set of tables where both Admin and Customer users are allowed CRUD operations. These tables are the ones where the Customer''s answers to the evaluation questions are stored. They are a bit tricky because column privileges restrict access in a way that + only Admins are granted INSERT into these tables (make place for new evaluation answers) + Admins are granted UPDATE only on some of the columns (foreign keys and stuff) + Customers are granted UPDATE on the rest of the colums (answers to the questions - Admins are not allowed to UPDATE those columns) I currently do the connection configuration in database.yml and I have different sections for all combinations of database/user pairs, for all three rails environments. My database.yml looks roughly like this (the following entries occur for "test" and "production" as well, also I have the obviously necessary sections labelled development, test and production with a rather randomly chosen copy of one of my real db configurations - rails apparently needs these sections, however, connection details are handled in the model classes, there simply IS NO default db in my (?any?) multiple db setting) webadmin_authentication_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_authentication username: webadmin password: host: localhost webadmin_sandbox_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_sandbox username: webadmin password: host: localhost webadmin_persistent_base_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_sandbox username: webadmin password: host: localhost customer_sandbox_development: adapter: mysql database: sandbox username: customer password: host: localhost customer_authentication_development: adapter: mysql database: authentication username: customer password: host: localhost Following Chad Fowler''s Rails Recipe on multiple database connections and Dave Thomas'' blogentry at http://blogs.pragprog.com/cgi-bin/pragdave.cgi/Tech/Ruby/Connections.rdoc I created a subclass of ActiveRecord::Base to establish a connection for all models that only webadmin is allowed to CRUD. Although this is currently not working at the moment (see my previous post to this list) I''m pretty sure this is the way to go. The question arises on the set of tables that can be accessed as both webadmin and customer. I see the following possibilities: (When i say "default the connection to ..." I mean following the above mentioned rails recipe) 1) Default the connection of those tables to a customer connection. In the WebadminController action performing the "webadmin-only" operations, remember the old connection and manually change it to the webadmin connection by calling establish_connection. Perform the "webadmin-only" operations. Change the connection back to the old one 2) Same scenario as 1 but vice versa (i.e. defaulting to webadmin and changing to customer in the CustomerController) 3) Create the model classes two times, one time with a superclass using a webadmin connection, and one time with a superclass using a customer connection. I think it would at least be necessary to give rails information about the underlying table name since we need names different from the rails convention in order for the classnames not to clash (although I think this should be possible to solve using modules, then again I don''t know about how models behave in different modules). The Controllers referencing those models would need to declare precisely which model class they refer to. WebadminController would refer to WebadminEvaluationFigureInput and CustomerController would refer to CustomerEvaluationFigureInput thus using the same table with a different db connection. I am aware that this is not really DRY, but I also don''t know which implications on the number of open db connections the other 2 possibilities would have, if any. I even don''t know if this is working anyway. I will try it out after I got some sleep and let you all know! Here is the proposed code class WebadminSandboxBase < ActiveRecord::Base establish_connection "webadmin_sandbox_#{RAILS_ENV}" end class CustomerSandboxBase < ActiveRecord::Base establish_connection "customer_sandbox_#{RAILS_ENV}" end class WebadminEvaluationFigureInput < WebadminSandboxBase set_table_name "evaluation_figure_inputs" end class CustomerEvaluationFigureInput < CustomerSandboxBase set_table_name "evaluation_figure_inputs" end class WebadminController < ApplicationController model :webadmin_evaluation_figure_input # webadmin operations using webadmin db connection # ... end class CustomerController < ApplicationController model :customer_evaluation_figure_input # customer operations using customer db connection # ... end I would appreciate very much ANY THOUGHTS on how to handle multiple users on multiple databases with rails! How to properly use the database.yml to configure connections for multiple users on multiple database(schemata)? What to do with the default connections needed by rails (development, test, production sections in the yml) that just don''t really make sense in such a setting? PLEASE also read my last posting on Connecting to multiple databases. I still haven''t solved this problem ... Many many thx for taking the time! gamsl
Martin Gamsjaeger
2006-Apr-27 11:16 UTC
[Rails] Connecting to Multiple Databases with Multiple Database Users
Hi everyone, I am posting this again, as I didn''t get any replies ... I was wondering what the common practice for handling multiple db users with fine grained privileges on multiple databases is. Against the often read guideline for rails users to keep with a single db as "more dbs don''t really make sense anyway", my opinion is that it DOES make sense to use more than one db schema for a number of reasons that I won''t explain here. Anyway, I think a lot of users have to face the need for multiple dbs, so it should be easy to do it in rails :-) shouldn''t it? I''m working on a project with the goal to put an evaluation system online. Customers must be able to fill out the answers to the evaluation questions, and Admins must be able to (1) keep track of all current evaluations and (2) trigger statistic calculations once customers complete their evaluation. Customers must not be able to view/change other Customer''s data, Admins must not be able to change Customer data but are allowed to view it. These rules MUST be enforced on the database level. Which leaves me with the facts that I have an admin and a customer user on my mysql db, and i have three database schemas called authentication, customer_sandbox and persistent_base in there as well. The db of most interest is customer_sandbox. On most of the tables in customer_sandbox only Admin is allowed to perform CRUD operations. However there is a set of tables where both Admin and Customer users are allowed CRUD operations. These tables are the ones where the Customer''s answers to the evaluation questions are stored. They are a bit tricky because column privileges restrict access in a way that + only Admins are granted INSERT into these tables (make place for new evaluation answers) + Admins are granted UPDATE only on some of the columns (foreign keys and stuff) + Customers are granted UPDATE on the rest of the colums (answers to the questions - Admins are not allowed to UPDATE those columns) I currently do the connection configuration in database.yml and I have different sections for all combinations of database/user pairs, for all three rails environments. My database.yml looks roughly like this (the following entries occur for "test" and "production" as well, also I have the obviously necessary sections labelled development, test and production with a rather randomly chosen copy of one of my real db configurations - rails apparently needs these sections, however, connection details are handled in the model classes, there simply IS NO default db in my (?any?) multiple db setting) webadmin_authentication_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_authentication username: webadmin password: host: localhost webadmin_sandbox_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_sandbox username: webadmin password: host: localhost webadmin_persistent_base_development: adapter: mysql database: ca_sandbox username: webadmin password: host: localhost customer_sandbox_development: adapter: mysql database: sandbox username: customer password: host: localhost customer_authentication_development: adapter: mysql database: authentication username: customer password: host: localhost Following Chad Fowler''s Rails Recipe on multiple database connections and Dave Thomas'' blogentry at http://blogs.pragprog.com/cgi-bin/pragdave.cgi/Tech/Ruby/Connections.rdoc I created a subclass of ActiveRecord::Base to establish a connection for all models that only webadmin is allowed to CRUD. Although this is currently not working at the moment (see my previous post to this list) I''m pretty sure this is the way to go. The question arises on the set of tables that can be accessed as both webadmin and customer. I see the following possibilities: (When i say "default the connection to ..." I mean following the above mentioned rails recipe) 1) Default the connection of those tables to a customer connection. In the WebadminController action performing the "webadmin-only" operations, remember the old connection and manually change it to the webadmin connection by calling establish_connection. Perform the "webadmin-only" operations. Change the connection back to the old one 2) Same scenario as 1 but vice versa (i.e. defaulting to webadmin and changing to customer in the CustomerController) 3) Create the model classes two times, one time with a superclass using a webadmin connection, and one time with a superclass using a customer connection. I think it would at least be necessary to give rails information about the underlying table name since we need names different from the rails convention in order for the classnames not to clash (although I think this should be possible to solve using modules, then again I don''t know about how models behave in different modules). The Controllers referencing those models would need to declare precisely which model class they refer to. WebadminController would refer to WebadminEvaluationFigureInput and CustomerController would refer to CustomerEvaluationFigureInput thus using the same table with a different db connection. I am aware that this is not really DRY, but I also don''t know which implications on the number of open db connections the other 2 possibilities would have, if any. I even don''t know if this is working anyway. I will try it out after I got some sleep and let you all know! Here is the proposed code class WebadminSandboxBase < ActiveRecord::Base establish_connection "webadmin_sandbox_#{RAILS_ENV}" end class CustomerSandboxBase < ActiveRecord::Base establish_connection "customer_sandbox_#{RAILS_ENV}" end class WebadminEvaluationFigureInput < WebadminSandboxBase set_table_name "evaluation_figure_inputs" end class CustomerEvaluationFigureInput < CustomerSandboxBase set_table_name "evaluation_figure_inputs" end class WebadminController < ApplicationController model :webadmin_evaluation_figure_input # webadmin operations using webadmin db connection # ... end class CustomerController < ApplicationController model :customer_evaluation_figure_input # customer operations using customer db connection # ... end I would appreciate very much ANY THOUGHTS on how to handle multiple users on multiple databases with rails! How to properly use the database.yml to configure connections for multiple users on multiple database(schemata)? What to do with the default connections needed by rails (development, test, production sections in the yml) that just don''t really make sense in such a setting? cheers Martin
Ezra Zygmuntowicz
2006-Apr-27 15:29 UTC
[Rails] Connecting to Multiple Databases with Multiple Database Users
Hi! On Apr 27, 2006, at 4:16 AM, Martin Gamsjaeger wrote:> Hi everyone, > > I am posting this again, as I didn''t get any replies ... > > I was wondering what the common practice for handling multiple db > users with fine grained privileges on multiple databases is. Against > the often read guideline for rails users to keep with a single db as > "more dbs don''t really make sense anyway", my opinion is that it DOES > make sense to use more than one db schema for a number of reasons that > I won''t explain here. Anyway, I think a lot of users have to face the > need for multiple dbs, so it should be easy to do it in rails :-) > shouldn''t it? >Martin- I know this isn''t the answer to all your problems but this is the way I am connecting to multiple db''s in one project. I have like 5 models that each need a different db connection. I do it like this: class PastDue < ActiveRecord::Base end PastDue.establish_connection( :adapter => "mysql", :host => "mysql.foo.com", :database => "pastdue", :username => "customer_front", :password => "xxxxxxxx" ) -Ezra
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