Temporal database system on PostgreSQL using updatable views, table inheritance and INSTEAD OF triggers.
ChronoModel implements what Oracle sells as "Flashback Queries", with standard SQL on free PostgreSQL. Academically speaking, ChronoModel implements a Type-2 Slowly-Changing Dimension with history tables.
All history keeping happens inside the database system, freeing application code from having to deal with it. ChronoModel implements all the required features in Ruby on Rails' ORM to leverage the database temporal structure beneath.
The application model is backed by an updatable view in the default public
schema that behaves like a plain table to any database client. When data in
manipulated on it, INSTEAD OF triggers redirect the manipulations
to concrete tables.
Current data is held in a table in the temporal
schema, while
History is held in a table in the history
schema that inherits
from the Current one, to get automated schema updates for free and other
benefits.
The current time is taken using current_timestamp
, so
that multiple data manipulations in the same transaction on the same records
always create a single history entry (they are squashed together).
Partitioning of history is also possible: this design fits the requirements but it's not implemented yet.
See README.sql for a SQL example defining the machinery for a simple table.
All Active Record schema migration statements are decorated with code that handles the temporal structure by e.g. keeping the triggers in sync or dropping/recreating it when required by your migrations.
Data extraction at a single point in time and even JOIN
s between temporal and
non-temporal data is implemented using sub-selects and a WHERE
generated by
the provided TimeMachine
module to be included in your models.
The WHERE
is optimized using GiST indexes on the
tsrange
defining record validity. Overlapping history is prevented
through exclusion constraints and the
btree_gist extension.
All timestamps are forcibly stored in as UTC, bypassing the
default_timezone
setting.
- Ruby >= 3.0
- Active Record >= 7.0. See the detailed supported versions matrix on Ruby GitHub Actions workflows
- PostgreSQL >= 9.4
- The
btree_gist
PostgreSQL extension
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'chrono_model'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Configure your config/database.yml
to use the chronomodel
adapter:
development:
adapter: chronomodel
username: ...
Configure Active Record in your config/application.rb
to use the :sql
schema
format:
config.active_record.schema_format = :sql
ChronoModel hooks all ActiveRecord::Migration
methods to make them temporal
aware.
create_table :countries, temporal: true do |t|
t.string :common_name
t.references :currency
# ...
end
This creates the temporal table, its inherited history one the public view and all the trigger machinery. Every other housekeeping of the temporal structure is handled behind the scenes by the other schema statements. E.g.:
rename_table
- renames tables, views, sequences, indexes and triggersdrop_table
- drops the temporal table and all dependent objectsadd_column
- adds the column to the current table and updates triggersrename_column
- renames the current table column and updates the triggersremove_column
- removes the current table column and updates the triggersadd_index
- creates the index in both temporal and history tablesremove_index
- removes the index from both tables
Use change_table
:
change_table :your_table, temporal: true
If you want to also set up the history from your current data:
change_table :your_table, temporal: true, copy_data: true
This will create an history record for each record in your table, setting its
validity from midnight, January 1st, 1 CE. You can set a specific validity with
the :validity
option:
change_table :your_table, temporal: true, copy_data: true, validity: '1977-01-01'
Please note that change_table
requires you to use old_style up
and
down
migrations. It cannot work with Rails 3-style change
migrations.
By default UPDATEs only to the updated_at
field are not recorded in the
history.
You can also choose which fields are to be journaled, passing the following
options to create_table
:
journal: %w( fld1 fld2 .. .. )
- record changes in the history only when changing specified fieldsno_journal: %w( fld1 fld2 .. )
- do not record changes to the specified fieldsfull_journal: true
- record changes to all fields, includingupdated_at
.
These options are stored as JSON in the COMMENT area of the public view, alongside with the ChronoModel version that created them.
This is visible in psql
if you issue a \d+
. Example after a test run:
chronomodel=# \d+
List of relations
Schema | Name | Type | Owner | Size | Description
--------+---------------+----------+-------------+------------+-----------------------------------------------------------------
public | bars | view | chronomodel | 0 bytes | {"temporal":true,"chronomodel":"0.7.0.alpha"}
public | foos | view | chronomodel | 0 bytes | {"temporal":true,"chronomodel":"0.7.0.alpha"}
public | plains | table | chronomodel | 0 bytes |
public | test_table | view | chronomodel | 0 bytes | {"temporal":true,"journal":["foo"],"chronomodel":"0.7.0.alpha"}
IMPORTANT: Rails counter cache issues an UPDATE on the parent record table, thus triggering new history entries creation. You are strongly advised to NOT journal the counter cache columns, or race conditions will occur (see #71).
In such cases, ensure to add no_journal: %w( your_counter_cache_column_name )
to your create_table
. Example:
create_table 'sections', temporal: true, no_journal: %w[articles_count] do |t|
t.string :name
t.integer :articles_count, default: 0
end
Include the ChronoModel::TimeMachine
module in your model.
class Country < ActiveRecord::Base
include ChronoModel::TimeMachine
has_many :compositions
end
This will create a Country::History
model inherited from Country
, and add
an as_of
class method.
Country.as_of(1.year.ago)
Will execute:
SELECT "countries".* FROM (
SELECT "history"."countries".* FROM "history"."countries"
WHERE '#{1.year.ago}' <@ "history"."countries"."validity"
) AS "countries"
The returned ActiveRecord::Relation
will then hold and pass along the
timestamp given to the first .as_of()
call to queries on associated entities.
E.g.:
Country.as_of(1.year.ago).first.compositions
Will execute:
SELECT "countries".*, '#{1.year.ago}' AS as_of_time FROM (
SELECT "history"."countries".* FROM "history"."countries"
WHERE '#{1.year.ago}' <@ "history"."countries"."validity"
) AS "countries" LIMIT 1
and then, using the above fetched as_of_time
timestamp, expand to:
SELECT * FROM (
SELECT "history"."compositions".* FROM "history"."compositions"
WHERE '#{as_of_time}' <@ "history"."compositions"."validity"
) AS "compositions" WHERE country_id = X
.joins
works as well:
Country.as_of(1.month.ago).joins(:compositions)
Expands to:
SELECT "countries".* FROM (
SELECT "history"."countries".* FROM "history"."countries"
WHERE '#{1.month.ago}' <@ "history"."countries"."validity"
) AS "countries" INNER JOIN (
SELECT "history"."compositions".* FROM "history"."compositions"
WHERE '#{1.month.ago}' <@ "history"."compositions"."validity"
) AS "compositions" ON compositions.country_id = countries.id
More methods are provided, see the TimeMachine source for more information.
History objects can be changed and .save
d just like any other record. They
cannot be deleted.
ChronoModel currently performs upgrades by dropping and re-creating the views that give access to current data. If you have built other database objects on these views, the upgrade cannot be performed automatically as the dependent objects must be dropped first.
When booting, ChronoModel will issue a warning in your logs about the need of a structure upgrade. Structure usually changes across versions. In this case, you need to set up a rake task that drops your dependent objects, runs ChronoModel.upgrade! and then re-creates them.
A migration system should be introduced, but it is seen as overkill for now, given that usually database objects have creation and dropping scripts.
You need a running PostgreSQL >= 9.4 instance. Create spec/config.yml
with the
connection authentication details (use spec/config.yml.example
as template).
You need to connect as a database superuser, because specs need to create the
btree_gist
extension.
To run the full test suite, use
$ rake
SQL queries are logged to spec/debug.log
. If you want to see them in your
output, set the VERBOSE=true
environment variable.
Some tests check the nominal execution of rake tasks within a test Rails app, and those are quite time consuming. You can run the full ChronoModel tests only against ActiveRecord by using
$ rspec spec/chrono_model
Ensure to run the full test suite before pushing.
-
Considering the nature of modern applications, it's crucial to understand that the database time does not necessarily align with the application time due to the delay introduced by communication between the application and the database server. Consequently, there is no assurance that the application time will always be less than the database time. Therefore, relying solely on
created_at
andupdated_at
fields as timestamps to determine the state of an object at a specific point in time within the application could lead to inaccuracies. -
The triggers and temporal indexes cannot be saved in schema.rb. The AR schema dumper is quite basic, and it isn't (currently) extensible. As we're using many database-specific features, Chronomodel forces the usage of the
:sql
schema dumper, and included rake tasks overridedb:schema:dump
anddb:schema:load
to dodb:structure:dump
anddb:structure:load
. Two helper tasks are also added,db:data:dump
anddb:data:load
. -
The choice of using subqueries instead of Common Table Expressions was dictated by the fact that CTEs currently act as an optimization fence. If it will be possible to opt-out of the fence in the future, they will be probably be used again as they were in the past, because the resulting queries were more readable, and do not inhibit using
.from()
on theAR::Relation
. -
Foreign keys are not supported. See issue #174
-
There may be unexpected results when combining eager loading and joins. See issue #186
-
Global ID ignores historical objects. See issue #192
-
Different historical objects are considered the identical. See issue #206
-
Use with caution when implementing inline editing features, as Chronomodel creates a new record for each modification. This will lead to increased storage requirements and bloated history
-
*_by_sql
query methods are not supported. See issue #313
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some great feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
An special mention has to be made to Paolo Zaccagnini for all his effort in highlighting the improvements and best decisions taken over the life cycle of the design and implementation of Chronomodel while using it in many important projects.
This software is Made in Italy ๐ฎ๐น ๐.