TurboStreamer gives you a simple DSL like jBuilder for generating JSON that streams directly to a String or IO object.
Jbuilder builds a Hash as it renders the template and once complete converts the Hash to JSON. TurboStreamer on the other hand writes directly to the output as it is rendering the template. Because of this some of the magic cannot be done and requires a little more verboseness.
Because no time is spent creating a hash caching is also fast. No time is spent marshaling and unmarshaling from the cache, instead the string is cached and directly inserted into the stream skipping any unmarshaling.
# app/views/message/show.json.streamer
json.object! do
json.content format_content(@message.content)
json.extract! @message, :created_at, :updated_at
json.author do
json.object! do
json.name @message.creator.name.familiar
json.email_address @message.creator.email_address_with_name
json.url url_for(@message.creator, format: :json)
end
end
if current_user.admin?
json.visitors calculate_visitors(@message)
end
json.tags do
json.array! do
@message.tags.each { |tag| json.child! tag }
end
end
json.comments @message.comments, :content, :created_at
json.attachments @message.attachments do |attachment|
json.object! do
json.filename attachment.filename
json.url url_for(attachment)
end
end
end
This will build the following structure:
{
"content": "<p>This is <i>serious</i> monkey business</p>",
"created_at": "2011-10-29T20:45:28-05:00",
"updated_at": "2011-10-29T20:45:28-05:00",
"author": {
"name": "David H.",
"email_address": "'David Heinemeier Hansson' <[email protected]>",
"url": "http://example.com/users/1-david.json"
},
"visitors": 15,
"tags": ['public'],
"comments": [
{ "content": "Hello everyone!", "created_at": "2011-10-29T20:45:28-05:00" },
{ "content": "To you my good sir!", "created_at": "2011-10-29T20:47:28-05:00" }
],
"attachments": [
{ "filename": "forecast.xls", "url": "http://example.com/downloads/forecast.xls" },
{ "filename": "presentation.pdf", "url": "http://example.com/downloads/presentation.pdf" }
]
}
To define attribute and structure names dynamically, use the set!
method:
json.object! do
json.set! :author do
json.object! do
json.set! :name, 'David'
end
end
end
# => { "author": { "name": "David" } }
To merge existing hash or array to current context:
hash = { author: { name: "David" } }
json.post do
json.title "Merge HOWTO"
json.merge! hash
end
# => "post": { "title": "Merge HOWTO", "author": { "name": "David" } }
Top level arrays can be handled directly. Useful for index and other collection actions.
json.array! @comments do |comment|
next if comment.marked_as_spam_by?(current_user)
json.object! do
json.body comment.body
json.author do
json.first_name comment.author.first_name
json.last_name comment.author.last_name
end
end
end
# => [ { "body": "great post...", "author": { "first_name": "Joe", "last_name": "Bloe" }} ]
You can also extract attributes from array directly.
# @people = People.all
json.array! @people, :id, :name
# => [ { "id": 1, "name": "David" }, { "id": 2, "name": "Jamie" } ]
You can either use TurboStreamer stand-alone or directly as an ActionView template language. When required in Rails, you can create views ala show.json.streamer (the json is already yielded):
# Any helpers available to views are available to the builder
json.object! do
json.content format_content(@message.content)
json.extract! @message, :created_at, :updated_at
json.author do
json.object! do
json.name @message.creator.name.familiar
json.email_address @message.creator.email_address_with_name
json.url url_for(@message.creator, format: :json)
end
end
if current_user.admin?
json.visitors calculate_visitors(@message)
end
end
You can use partials as well. The following will render the file
views/comments/_comments.json.streamer
, and set a local variable
comments
with all this message's comments, which you can use inside
the partial.
json.partial! 'comments/comments', comments: @message.comments
It's also possible to render collections of partials:
json.array! @posts, partial: 'posts/post', as: :post
# or
json.partial! 'posts/post', collection: @posts, as: :post
# or
json.partial! partial: 'posts/post', collection: @posts, as: :post
# or
json.comments @post.comments, partial: 'comment/comment', as: :comment
You can explicitly make TurboStreamer object return null if you want:
json.extract! @post, :id, :title, :content, :published_at
json.author do
if @post.anonymous?
json.null! # or json.nil!
else
json.object! do
json.first_name @post.author_first_name
json.last_name @post.author_last_name
end
end
end
Fragment caching is supported, it uses Rails.cache
and works like caching in
HTML templates:
json.object! do
json.cache! ['v1', @person], expires_in: 10.minutes do
json.extract! @person, :name, :age
end
end
You can also conditionally cache a block by using cache_if!
like this:
json.object! do
json.cache_if! !admin?, ['v1', @person], expires_in: 10.minutes do
json.extract! @person, :name, :age
end
end
The only caveat with caching is inside and object you must cache both the key and the value. You cannot just cache the value. For example:
json.boject! do
json.key do
json.cache! :key do
json.value! 'Cache this.'
end
end
end
Will error out, but can easily be rewritten as:
json.boject! do
json.cache! :key do
json.key do
json.value! 'Cache this.'
end
end
end
Keys can be auto formatted using key_format!
, this can be used to convert
keynames from the standard ruby_format to camelCase:
json.key_format! camelize: :lower
json.object! do
json.first_name 'David'
end
# => { "firstName": "David" }
You can set this globally with the class method key_format
(from inside your
environment.rb for example):
TurboStreamer.key_format camelize: :lower
- You must open JSON object or array if you want an object or array.
- You can directly output a value with
json.value! value
, this will allow you to put a number, string, or other JSON value if you wish to not have an object or array. - The call syntax has been removed (eg.
json.(@person, :name, :age)
) - Caching inside of a object must cache both the key and the value.
Currently TurboStreamer supports Wankel and Oj for JSON encoding.
By default TurboStreamer will look for Oj
and Wankel
and use the first
available option.
You can also set the encoder when initializing:
TurboStreamer.encode(encoder: :oj)
# Or
TurboStreamer.encode(encoder: :wankel)
# You can also pass the class
TurboStreamer.encode(encoder: TurboStreamer::WankelEncoder)
# Or your own encoder
TurboStreamer.encode(encoder: MyEncoder)
If you need explicitly set the default:
TurboStreamer.set_default_encoder(:json, :oj)
You can also set default options to pass to the encoder if needed:
TurboStreamer.set_default_encoder(:json, :oj, buffer_size: 1_024)
You may also just set the default options for an encoder:
TurboStreamer.set_default_encoder_options(:oj, buffer_size: 2_048)
The idea was to also support MessagePack, hence requring the mime type when setting a default encoder.
Implementing MessagePack would require a bit of work as you would need a change in the protocol. We do not know how big an array or map/object will be when we start emitting it and MessagePack require we know it. It seems like a relatively small change, instead of a marker followed by number of lements there would be a start marker followed by the elements and then an end marker.
All backends must have the following functions:
key(string)
Output a map keyvalue(value)
Output a valuemap_open
Open a object/mapmap_close
Close a object/maparray_open
Open an Arrayarray_close
Close an Arrayflush
Flush any buffersinject(string)
Inject a (usually cached) string into the output; instering any delimiters as needed.capture(&block)
Capture the output of the block (w/o any delimiters)
gnuplot
is required to run benchmark, to install:
brew install gnuplot
(MacOS)
yajl
is required to install a development dependency wankel
, to install:
brew install yajl
(MacOS)
To run benchmark: bundle exec rake performance
This will produce 2 graph images on in folders
performance/dirk
performance/rolftimmermans
TurboStreamer is a fork of Jbuilder, built of what they have accopmlished and with out Jbuilder TurboStreamer would not be here today. Thanks to everyone who's been a part of Jbuilder!
- David Heinemeier Hansson - http://david.heinemeierhansson.com/ - for writing Jbuidler!!
- Pavel Pravosud - http://pavel.pravosud.com/ - for maintaing and pushing Jbuilder forward