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Rails SQL Server 2000, 2005 and 2008 Adapter

The SQL Server adapter for rails is back for ActiveRecord 2.2 and up! We are currently passing all tests and hope to continue to do so moving forward.

What’s New

  • Now supports SQL Server 2008 too!

  • Fully tested under 1.9!!! Correctly encodes/decodes UTF-8 types in ruby 1.9 too.

  • Now supports both rails 2.2 & 2.3!!!

  • An ActiveRecord::Base.execute_procedure method that can be used by classes.

  • Enabled support for DDL transactions.

  • Micro second support. Time#usec is automatically converted to SQL Server’s 3.33 millisecond limitation.

  • Datetime data types before type casting are represented correctly. For example: 1998-01-01 23:59:59.997

  • Implementation for #disable_referential_integrity used by ActiveRecord’s Fixtures class.

  • Pessimistic locking suppot. See the #add_lock! method for details.

  • Enabled #case_sensitive_equality_operator used by unique validations.

  • Unicode character support for nchar, nvarchar and ntext data types. Configuration option for defaulting all string data types to the unicode safe types.

  • View support for table names, identity inserts, and column defaults.

  • A block method to run queries within a specific isolation level.

  • Automatically reconnects to lost database connections.

SQL Server 2008 Support

Because this adapter is primarily coded to SQL Server 2000/2005, it does not take advantage of many of the things in 2008 that would speed up the code. At some point in the future there will be a branch of this code that is specifically targeted for 2008. That adapter version will remove much of the dirty innards of this version that are meant to code around many previous SQL Server 2000/2005 short comings, the biggest being no limit/offset.

Date/Time Data Type Hinting

Both SQL Server 2000 and 2005 do not include native data types for just ‘date’ or ‘time’, it only has ‘datetime’. To pass the ActiveRecord tests we implemented two simple class methods that can teach your models to coerce column information to be cast correctly. Simply past a list of symbols to either the coerce_sqlserver_date or coerce_sqlserver_time methods that correspond to ‘datetime’ columns that need to be cast correctly.

class Topic < ActiveRecord::Base
  coerce_sqlserver_date :last_read
  coerce_sqlserver_time :bonus_time
end

This implementation has some limitations. To date we can only coerce date/time types for models that conform to the expected ActiveRecord class to table naming convention. So a table of ‘foo_bar_widgets’ will look for coerced types in the FooBarWidget class if it exists.

Executing Stored Procedures

Every class that sub classes ActiveRecord::Base will now have an execute_procedure class method to use. This method takes the name of the stored procedure which can be a string or symbol and any number of variables to pass to the procedure. Arguments will automatically be quoted per the connection’s standards as normal. For example.

Account.execute_procedure :update_totals, 'admin', nil, true

Native Data Type Support

Currently the following custom data types have been tested for schema definitions.

  • char

  • nchar

  • nvarchar

  • ntext

  • varchar(max) for SQL Server 2005 only.

  • nvarchar(max) for SQL Server 2005 only.

For example:

create_table :sql_server_custom_types, :force => true do |t|
  t.column :ten_code,       :char,      :limit => 10
  t.column :ten_code_utf8,  :nchar,     :limit => 10
  t.column :title_utf8,     :nvarchar
  t.column :body,           :varchar_max    # Creates varchar(max)
  t.column :body_utf8,      :ntext
  t.column :body2_utf8,     :nvarchar_max   # Creates nvarchar(max)
end

Manually creating a varchar(max) on SQL Server 2005 is not necessary since this is the default type created when specifying a :text field. As time goes on we will be testing other SQL Server specific data types are handled correctly when created in a migration.

Native Text/String/Binary Data Type Accessor

To pass the ActiveRecord tests we had to implement an class accessor for the native type created for :text columns. By default any :text column created by migrations will create these native types.

  • SQL Server 2000 is ‘text’

  • SQL Server 2005 is ‘varchar(max)’

During testing this type is set to ‘varchar(8000)’ for SQL Server 2000. The reason is that rails expects to be able to use SQL = operators on text data types and this is not possible with a native ‘text’ data type in SQL Server. The default ‘varchar(max)’ for SQL Server 2005 can be queried using the SQL = operator and has plenty of storage space which is why we made it the default for 2005. If for some reason you want to change the data type created during migrations for any SQL Server version, you can configure this line to your liking in a config/initializers file.

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_text_database_type = 'varchar(8000)'

Also, there is a class attribute setter for the native string database type. This is the same for both SQL Server 2000 and 2005, ‘varchar’. However in can be used instead of the #enable_default_unicode_types below for finer grain control over which types you want unicode safe when adding or changing the schema.

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_string_database_type = 'nvarchar'

By default any :binary column created by migrations will create these native types

  • SQL Server 2000 is ‘image’

  • SQL Server 2005 is ‘varbinary(max)’

Setting Unicode Types As Default

By default the adapter will use non-unicode safe data types for :string and :text types when DEFINING or CHANGING the schema. If you choose, you can set the following class attribute in a config/initializers file that will change this behavior. When set to true it has the equivalent meaning as the two lower items. These examples show detail level alternatives to achieve similar effects.

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.enable_default_unicode_types = true

# SQL Server 2000
ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_text_database_type = 'ntext'
ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_string_database_type = 'nvarchar'

# SQL Server 2005
ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_text_database_type = 'nvarchar(max)'
ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.native_string_database_type = 'nvarchar'

It is important to remember that unicode types in SQL Server have approximately half the storage capacity as their counter parts. So where a normal string would max out at (8000) a unicode string will top off at (4000).

Schema Information Logging

By default all queries to the INFORMATION_SCHEMA table is silenced. If you think logging these queries are useful, you can enable it by adding this like to a config/initializers file.

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.log_info_schema_queries = true

Auto Connecting

By default the adapter will auto connect to lost DB connections. For every query it will retry at intervals of 2, 4, 8, 16 and 32 seconds. During each retry it will callback out to ActiveRecord::Base.did_retry_sqlserver_connection(connection,count). When all retries fail, it will callback to ActiveRecord::Base.did_lose_sqlserver_connection(connection). Both implementations of these methods are to write to the rails logger, however, they make great override points for notifications like Hoptoad. If you want to disable automatic reconnections use the following in an initializer.

ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::SQLServerAdapter.auto_connect = false

Versions

It is our goal to match the adapter version with each version of rails. However we will track our own tiny version independent of ActiveRecord. For example, an adapter version of 2.2.x will work on any 2.2.x version of ActiveRecord. This convention will be used in both the Git tags as well as the Rubygems versioning.

Installation

First, you will need Ruby DBI and Ruby ODBC. If you are using the adapter under 1.9, then you need at least ruby-odbc version 0.9996. To my knowledge the ADO DBD for DBI is no longer supported. The installation below is not a comprehensive walk thru on how to get all the required moving parts like FreeTDS installed and/or configured. It will also assume gem installations of both the dependent libraries and the adapter itself.

It should be noted that this version of the adapter was developed using both the ancient 0.0.23 version of DBI up to the current stable release of 0.4.1. Note that DBI 0.4.1 is the minimal for ruby 1.9 compatibility. Because later versions of DBI will be changing many things, IT IS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED that you max your install to version 0.4.1 which the examples below show. For the time being we are not supporting DBI versions higher than 0.4.1. The good news is that if you were using a very old DBI with ADO, technically this adapter will still work for you, but be warned your path is getting old and may not be supported for long.

$ gem install dbi --version 0.4.1
$ gem install dbd-odbc --version 0.2.4
$ gem install activerecord-sqlserver-adapter

Optionally configure your gem dependencies in your rails environment.rb file.

config.gem 'dbi', :version => '0.4.1'
config.gem 'dbd-odbc', :version => '0.2.4', :lib => 'dbd/ODBC'
config.gem 'activerecord-sqlserver-adapter',    :version => 'x.x.xx'

Here are some external links for libraries and/or tutorials on how to install any other additional components to use this adapter. If you know of a good one that we can include here, just let us know.

Contributing

If you’d like to contribute a feature or bugfix, thanks! To make sure your fix/feature has a high chance of being added, please read the following guidelines. First, ask on the Google list, IRC, or post a ticket on github issues. Second, make sure there are tests! We will not accept any patch that is not tested. Please read the RUNNING_UNIT_TESTS file for the details of how to run the unit tests.

Credits

Many many people have contributed. If you do not see your name here and it should be let us know.

  • Ken Collins

  • Murray Steele

  • Shawn Balestracci

  • Joe Rafaniello

  • Tom Ward

License

Copyright © 2008. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the MIT-LICENSE file.