This adapter is a fork of the ActiveRecord JDBC Adapter with basic support for SQL Server/Azure SQL. This adapter may work with other databases supported by the original adapter such as PostgreSQL but it is advised to use the original adapter
This adapter only works with JRuby and it is advised to install the latest stable versions of Rails
- For Rails
5.0.7
install the50.7.0
version of this adapter - For Rails
5.1.7
install the51.7.0
version of this adapter - For Rails
5.2.4
install the52.6.0
version of this adapter
Support for Rails 6.0 is planned in the future.
This adapter passes most of the Rails tests (ActiveRecord tests) with the exception of some test that are not compatible with the SQL Server
Add the following to your Gemfile
:
platforms :jruby do
# Use jdbc as the database for Active Record
gem 'activerecord-jdbc-alt-adapter', '~> 52.6.0'
gem 'jdbc-mssql', '~> 0.9.0'
end
Or look at the sample rails 5.0 app wombat and see how is set up.
- This adapter let SQL Server be SQL Server, it does not make SQL Server to be more like MySQL or PostgreSQL, The query will just fails if SQL Server does not support that SQL dialect.
- This adapter uses the
datetime2
sql data type as the Rails logicaldatetime
data type. - This adapter needs the mssql jdbc driver version 7.0.0 onwards to work properly,
therefore you can use the gem
jdbc-mssql
version0.6.0
onwards or the actual driver jar file version7.0.0
.
If you have the old sql server datetime
data type for created_at
and
updated_at
, you don't need to upgrade straightaway to datetime2
, the old data type
(datetime_basic
) will still work for simple updates, just make you add to the time zone
aware list. If you have complex datetime
queries it is advised to upgrade to
datetime2
# time zone aware configuration.
config.active_record.time_zone_aware_types = [:datetime, :datetime_basic]
In order to avoid deadlocks it is advised to use SET READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT ON
Make sure to run ALTER DATABASE your_db SET READ_COMMITTED_SNAPSHOT ON
against
your database.
If you prefer to use the READ_UNCOMMITED
transaction isolation level as your
default isolation level, add the transaction_isolation: 'read_uncommitted'
in
your database config.
If you have slow queries on your background jobs and locking queries you can change the default
lock_timeout
config, add the lock_timeout: 10000
in your database config.
database config example (database.yml
):
# SQL Server (2012 or higher)
default: &default
adapter: sqlserver
encoding: utf8
development:
<<: *default
host: localhost
database: sam_development
username: SA
password: password
transaction_isolation: read_uncommitted
lock_timeout: 10000
test:
<<: *default
host: localhost
database: sam_test
username: SA
password: password
production:
<<: *default
host: localhost
database: sam_production
username:
password:
Keep one eye in the Rails connection pool, we have not thoroughly tested that part since we don't use the default Rails connection pool, other than that this adapter should just work.
ActiveRecord-JDBC-Adapter (AR-JDBC) is the main database adapter for Rails' ActiveRecord component that can be used with JRuby. ActiveRecord-JDBC-Adapter provides full or nearly full support for: MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite3 and MSSQL* (SQLServer).
Unless we get more contributions we will not be supporting more adapters. Note that the amount of work needed to get another adapter is not huge but the amount of testing required to make sure that adapter continues to work is not something we can do with the resources we currently have.
- for Oracle database users you are encouraged to use https://github.com/rsim/oracle-enhanced
- MSSQL adapter's gem parts reside in a separate repository
Versions are targeted at certain versions of Rails and live on their own branches.
Gem Version | Rails Version | Branch |
---|---|---|
50.x | 5.0.x | 50-stable |
51.x | 5.1.x | 51-stable |
52.x | 5.2.x | 52-stable |
future | latest | master |
The minimum version of JRuby for 50+ is JRuby 9.1.x and JRuby 9.1+ requires Java 7 or newer (we recommend Java 8 at minimum).
To use AR-JDBC with JRuby on Rails:
- Choose the adapter you wish to gem install. The following pre-packaged adapters are available:
- MySQL (
activerecord-jdbcmysql-adapter
) - PostgreSQL (
activerecord-jdbcpostgresql-adapter
) - SQLite3 (
activerecord-jdbcsqlite3-adapter
) - MSSQL (
activerecord-jdbcsqlserver-adapter
)
-
If you're generating a new Rails application, use the following command:
jruby -S rails new sweetapp
-
Configure your database.yml in the normal Rails style:
development:
adapter: mysql2 # or mysql
database: blog_development
username: blog
password: 1234
For JNDI data sources, you may simply specify the JNDI location as follows, it's recommended to use the same adapter: setting as one would configure when using "bare" (JDBC) connections e.g. :
production:
adapter: postgresql
jndi: jdbc/PostgreDS
NOTE: any other settings such as database:, username:, properties: make no difference since everything is already configured on the JNDI DataSource end.
JDBC driver specific properties might be set if you use an URL to specify the DB or preferably using the properties: syntax:
production:
adapter: mysql
username: blog
password: blog
url: "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/blog?profileSQL=true"
properties: # specific to com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
socketTimeout: 60000
connectTimeout: 60000
Once the setup is made (see below) you can establish a JDBC connection like this
(e.g. for activerecord-jdbcderby-adapter
):
ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection(
adapter: 'sqlite3',
database: 'db/my-database'
)
Proceed as with Rails; specify ActiveRecord
in your Bundle along with the
chosen JDBC adapter(s), this time sample Gemfile for MySQL:
gem 'activerecord', '~> 5.0.6'
gem 'activerecord-jdbcmysql-adapter', :platform => :jruby
When you require 'bundler/setup'
everything will be set up for you as expected.
Install the needed gems with JRuby, for example:
gem install activerecord -v "~> 5.0.6"
gem install activerecord-jdbc-adapter --ignore-dependencies
If you wish to use the adapter for a specific database, you can install it directly and the (jdbc-) driver gem (dependency) will be installed as well:
jruby -S gem install activerecord-jdbcmysql-adapter
Your program should include:
require 'active_record'
require 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter' if defined? JRUBY_VERSION
The source for activerecord-jdbc-adapter is available using git:
git clone git://github.com/jruby/activerecord-jdbc-adapter.git
Please note that the project manages multiple gems from a single repository, if you're using Bundler >= 1.2 it should be able to locate all gemspecs from the git repository. Sample Gemfile for running with (MySQL) master:
gem 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter', :github => 'jruby/activerecord-jdbc-adapter'
gem 'activerecord-jdbcmysql-adapter', :github => 'jruby/activerecord-jdbc-adapter'
Please read our CONTRIBUTING & RUNNING_TESTS guides for starters. You can always help us by maintaining AR-JDBC's wiki.
Please report bugs at our issue tracker. If you're not sure if something's a bug, feel free to pre-report it on the mailing lists or ask on the #JRuby IRC channel on http://freenode.net/ (try web-chat).
This project was originally written by Nick Sieger and Ola Bini with lots of help from the JRuby community. Polished 3.x compatibility and 4.x support (for AR-JDBC >= 1.3.0) was managed by Karol Bucek among others.
ActiveRecord-JDBC-Adapter is open-source released under the BSD/MIT license. See LICENSE.txt included with the distribution for details.
Open-source driver gems within AR-JDBC's sources are licensed under the same license the database's drivers are licensed. See each driver gem's LICENSE.txt.