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Author: Matt Wang (Engineer at PingCAP, moderator of Ruby-China community)

Editors: Fendy Feng, Tom Dewan

If you are a Ruby on Rails developer, I think you’ll really enjoy this article. It aims to help you get started with TiDB, an open-source NewSQL database, and use it to power up your Rails applications.

Use TiDB to build up your Ruby on Rails applications

TiDB is an open-source NewSQL database that supports Hybrid Transactional and Analytical Processing (HTAP) workloads. It is MySQL compatible and features horizontal scalability, strong consistency, and high availability.

To build apps with Rails, TiDB offers you MySQL interfaces which can be used as the backend database layers. TiDB allows you to use Active Record Object Relational Mapping (ORM) directly, and also provides you with an alternative: the activerecord-tidb-adapter, a lightweight extension of Active Record that offers compatible patches and TiDB-exclusive functions such as Sequence.

Getting started with TiDB

The instructions below teach you how to build a Rails application with TiDB as the backend storage.

If you already know how to build a Rails app from scratch, you can skip steps 2-4 and start playing with our demo application.

Step 1: Set up your local TiDB server

Deploy a TiDB cluster on your local machine.

  1. Install TiUP.

    TiDB provides a smooth deployment experience using TiUP, a package manager for you to manage different cluster components easily in the TiDB ecosystem.

    $ curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://tiup-mirrors.pingcap.com/install.sh | sh
    
  2. Start TiDB playground.

    Start a TiDB nightly instance by running the tiup playground command:

    $ tiup playground nightly
    
  3. Connect to the TiDB instance in a similar way as you connect to MySQL.
    mysql --host 127.0.0.1 --port 4000 -u root -p
    

Step 2: Initialize the Rails application

  1. Make sure that you have Ruby and Rails installed, and initiate a Rails app named tidb-rails; also be sure to set the database as mysql because TiDB speaks the MySQL protocol.
    $ ruby -v
    ruby 2.7.0
    
    $ rails -v
    Rails 6.1.4
    
    $ rails new tidb-rails --database=mysql --api
    
  2. Add activerecord-tidb-adapter to Gemfile. Activerecord-tidb-adapter allows you to use TiDB as a backend for ActiveRecord and Rails apps.
    $ bundle add activerecord-tidb-adapter --version "~> 6.1.0"
    
  3. After you create a new app, edit config/database.yml to configure the connection setting to TiDB.
    default: &default
     adapter: tidb
     encoding: utf8mb4
     collation: utf8mb4_general_ci
     pool: <%= ENV.fetch("RAILS_MAX_THREADS") { 5 } %>
     host: 127.0.0.1
     port: 4000
     variables:
       tidb_enable_noop_functions: ON
     username: root
     password:
    development:
     <<: *default
     database: tidb_rails_development
    

    Now, TiDB is already set up and ready to use with your Rails app. You don’t have to configure anything else.

Step 3: Create a database

Create the local database for your rails application.

$ bundle exec rails db:create
Created database 'tidb_rails_development'
Created database 'tidb_rails_test'

Step 4: Manipulate TiDB data through your Rails app

Before you play with your app with TiDB, you need to define the model and migrate the database.

  1. Define the model by executing rails g command.
    $ bundle exec rails g model user email:string name:string gender:integer
    ...
    $ vim ./db/migrate/20210826174523_create_users.rb # edit
    
  2. Edit the db/migrate/20210826174523_create_users.rb file:
    class CreateUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[6.1]
     def change
       create_table :users do |t|
         t.string :email, index: {unique: true}
          t.string :name
         t.integer :gender
         t.timestamps
       end
     end
    end
    
  3. Migrate your database.
    $ bundle exec rails db:migrate
    == 20210826174523 CreateUsers: migrating ======================================
    -- create_table(:users)
      -> 0.1717s
    == 20210826174523 CreateUsers: migrated (0.1717s) =============================
    
  4. Launch the Rails console to play with the app.
    $ bundle exec rails c
    Running via Spring preloader in process 13378
    Loading development environment (Rails 6.1.4.1)
    irb(main):001:0> 30.times.each { |i| User.create!(email: "user-#{i}@example.com", name: "user-#{i}", gender: i % 3) }
      (1.2ms)  select version()
     TRANSACTION (0.8ms)  BEGIN
     User Create (93.5ms)  INSERT INTO `users` (`email`, `name`, `gender`, `created_at`, `updated_at`) VALUES ('user-0@example.com', 'user-0', 0, '2021-08-26 17:50:40.661945', '2021-08-26 17:50:40.661945')
     TRANSACTION (14.9ms)  COMMIT
    ...
    
    => 30
    irb(main):002:0> User.count
      (8.9ms)  SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `users`
    => 30
    irb(main):003:0> User.first
     User Load (5.8ms)  SELECT `users`.* FROM `users` ORDER BY `users`.`id` ASC LIMIT 1
    => #<User id: 1, email: "user-0@example.com", name: "user-0", gender: 0, created_at: "2021-08-26 17:50:40.661945000 +0000", updated_at: "2021-08-26 17:50:40.661945000 +0000">
    

Try us out!

Pretty simple, huh? Try TiDB now to develop your Rails applications!

If you have any question or feedback about TiDB during your app building, feel free to contact us. You’re also welcome to join our Slack channel to have direct conversations with us, or join us on GitHub to help improve TiDB further.


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