ParseResource makes it easy to interact with Parse.com's REST API. It adheres to the ActiveRecord pattern. ParseResource is fully ActiveModel compliant, meaning you can use validations and Rails forms.
Ruby/Rails developers should feel right at home.
If you're used to Post.create(:title => "Hello, world", :author => "Octocat")
, then this is for you.
- ActiveRecord-like API, almost no learning curve
- Validations
- Rails forms and scaffolds just work
- Build a custom admin dashboard for your Parse.com data
- Use the same database for your web and native apps
- Pre-collect data for use in iOS and Android apps
Include in your Gemfile
:
gem "parse_resource", "~> 1.7.1"
Or just gem install:
gem install parse_resource
Create an account at Parse.com. Then create an application and copy the app_id
and master_key
into a file called parse_resource.yml
. If you're using a Rails app, place this file in the config
folder.
development:
app_id: 1234567890
master_key: abcdefgh
test:
app_id: 1234567890
master_key: abcdefgh
production:
app_id: 1234567890
master_key: abcdefgh
You can create separate Parse databases if you want. If not, include the same info for each environment.
In a non-Rails app, include this somewhere (preferable in an initializer):
ParseResource::Base.load!("your_app_id", "your_master_key")
Create a model:
class Post < ParseResource::Base
fields :title, :author, :body
validates_presence_of :title
end
If you are using version 1.5.11
or earlier, subclass to just ParseResource
--or just update to the most recent version.
Creating, updating, and deleting:
p = Post.new
# validations
p.valid? #=> false
p.errors #=> #<ActiveModel::Errors:0xab71998 ... @messages={:title=>["can't be blank"]}>
p.title = "Introducing ParseResource" #=> "Introducing ParseResource"
p.valid? #=> true
# setting more attributes, then saving
p.author = "Alan deLevie"
p.body = "Ipso Lorem"
p.save #=> #<Post:0xab74864 ... >
# checking the id generated by Parse's servers
p.id #=> "QARfXUILgY"
p.updated_at #=> nil
p.created_at #=> "2011-09-19T01:32:04.973Z" # does anybody want this to be a DateTime object? Let me know.
# updating
p.title = "[Update] Introducing ParseResource"
p.save
p.updated_at #=> "2011-09-19T01:32:37.930Z" # more magic from Parse's servers
# destroying an object
p.destroy #=> nil
p.title #=> nil
Finding:
posts = Post.where(:author => "Arrington")
# the query is lazy loaded
# nothing gets sent to the Parse server until you run #all, #count, or any Array method on the query
# (e.g. #first, #each, or #map)
posts.each do |post|
"#{post.title}, by #{post.author}"
end
posts.map {|p| p.title} #=> ["Unpaid blogger", "Uncrunched"]
id = "DjiH4Qffke"
p = Post.find(id) #simple find by id
# ActiveRecord style find commands
Post.find_by_title("Uncrunched") #=> A Post object
Post.find_all_by_author("Arrington") #=> An Array of Posts
# you can chain method calls, just like in ActiveRecord
Post.where(:param1 => "foo").where(:param2 => "bar").all
# destroy all objects
Post.destroy_all
# limit the query
posts = Post.limit(5).where(:foo => "bar")
posts.length #=> 5
# get a count
Post.where(:bar => "foo").count #=> 1337
Users
# app/models/user.rb
class User < ParseUser
end
# create a user
user = User.new(:username => "adelevie")
user.password = "asecretpassword"
user.save
# after saving, the password is automatically hashed by Parse's server
# user.password will return the unhashed password when the original object is in memory
# from a new session, User.where(:username => "adelevie").first.password will return nil
# check if a user is logged in
User.authenticate("adelevie", "foooo") #=> false
User.authenticate("adelevie", "asecretpassword") #=> #<User...>
# A simple controller to authenticate users
class SessionsController < ApplicationController
def new
end
def create
user = User.authenticate(params[:username], params[:password])
if user
session[:user_id] = user.id
redirect_to root_url, :notice => "logged in !"
else
flash.now.alert = "Invalid username or password"
render "new"
end
end
def destroy
session[:user_id] = nil
redirect_to root_url, :notice => "Logged out!"
end
end
If you want to use parse_resource to back a simple authentication system for a Rails app, follow this tutorial, and make some simple modifications.
Associations
class Post < ParseResource::Base
belongs_to :author
fields :title, :body
end
class Author < ParseResource::Base
has_many :posts
field :name
end
author = Author.create(:name => "RL Stine")
post1 = Post.create(:title => "Goosebumps 1")
post2 = Post.create(:title => "Goosebumps 2")
# assign from parent class
author.posts << post1
author.posts << post2
# or assign from child class
post3 = Post.create(:title => "Goosebumps 3")
post3.author = author
post3.save
# relational queries
posts = Post.include_object(:author).all
posts.each do |post|
puts post.author.name
# because you used Post#include_object, calling post.title won't execute a new query
# this is similar to ActiveRecord's eager loading
end
- User authentication
- Better documentation
Associations- Callbacks
- Push notifications
- Better type-casting
- HTTP request error handling
User authentication is my top priority feature. Several people have specifically requested it, and Parse just began exposing User objects in the REST API.
Let me know of any other features you want.
- Check out the latest master to make sure the feature hasn't been implemented or the bug hasn't been fixed yet
- Check out the issue tracker to make sure someone already hasn't requested it and/or contributed it
- Fork the project
- Start a feature/bugfix branch
- Commit and push until you are happy with your contribution
- Make sure to add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Create
parse_resource.yml
in the root of the gem folder. Using the same format asparse_resource.yml
in the instructions (except only creating atest
environment, add your own API keys. - Please try not to mess with the Rakefile, version, or history. If you want to have your own version, or is otherwise necessary, that is fine, but please isolate to its own commit so I can cherry-pick around it.
Copyright (c) 2011 Alan deLevie. See LICENSE.txt for further details.