require 'active_record' class SampleDatatable < AjaxDatatablesRails::Base include SamplesHelper ASSIGNED_SORT_COL = "assigned" def initialize(view, organization, project = nil, my_module = nil) super(view) @organization = organization @project = project @my_module = my_module end # Define sortable columns, so 1st column will be sorted by attribute in sortable_columns[0] def sortable_columns sort_array = [ ASSIGNED_SORT_COL, "Sample.name", "SampleType.name", "SampleGroup.name", "Sample.created_at", "User.full_name", ] sort_array.push(*custom_fields_sort_by) @sortable_columns ||= sort_array end # Define attributes on which we perform search def searchable_columns search_array = [ "Sample.name", "SampleType.name", "SampleGroup.name", "Sample.created_at", "User.full_name" ] search_array.push(*custom_fields_sort_by) @searchable_columns ||= filter_search_array search_array end private # filters the search array by checking if the the column is visible def filter_search_array input_array param_index = 2 filtered_array =[] input_array.each do |col| unless params[:columns].to_a[param_index] == nil filtered_array.push(col) unless params[:columns].to_a[param_index][1]["searchable"] == "false" param_index += 1 end end filtered_array end # Get array of columns to sort by (for custom fields) def custom_fields_sort_by num_cf = CustomField.where(organization_id: @organization).count array = [] for _ in 0..num_cf array << "SampleCustomField.value" end array end # Returns json of current samples (already paginated) def data records.map do |record| sample = { "DT_RowId": record.id, "1": assigned_cell(record), "2": record.name, "3": record.sample_type.nil? ? I18n.t("samples.table.no_type") : record.sample_type.name, "4": record.sample_group.nil? ? " " + I18n.t("samples.table.no_group") : " " + record.sample_group.name, "5": I18n.l(record.created_at, format: :full), "6": record.user.full_name, "sampleInfoUrl": Rails.application.routes.url_helpers.edit_sample_path(record.id), "sampleUpdateUrl": Rails.application.routes.url_helpers.sample_path(record.id) } # Add custom attributes record.sample_custom_fields.each do |scf| sample[@cf_mappings[scf.custom_field_id]] = scf.value end sample end end def assigned_cell(record) @assigned_samples.include?(record) ? " " : " " end # Query database for records (this will be later paginated and filtered) # after that "data" function will return json def get_raw_records samples = Sample .includes( :sample_type, :sample_group, :user, :sample_custom_fields ) .references( :sample_type, :sample_group, :user, :sample_custom_fields ) .where( organization: @organization ) if @my_module @assigned_samples = @my_module.samples samples = samples .joins( "LEFT OUTER JOIN sample_my_modules ON (samples.id = sample_my_modules.sample_id AND (sample_my_modules.my_module_id = #{@my_module.id.to_s} OR sample_my_modules.id IS NULL))" ) .references(:sample_my_modules) elsif @project @assigned_samples = @project.assigned_samples ids = @project.my_modules.select(:id) samples = samples .joins( "LEFT OUTER JOIN sample_my_modules ON (samples.id = sample_my_modules.sample_id AND (sample_my_modules.my_module_id IN (#{ids.to_sql}) OR sample_my_modules.id IS NULL))" ) .references(:sample_my_modules) end # Make mappings of custom fields, so we have same id for every column i = 7 @cf_mappings = {} all_custom_fields.each do |cf| @cf_mappings[cf.id] = i.to_s i += 1 end samples end # Override default behaviour # Don't filter and paginate records when sorting by custom column - everything # is done in sort_records method - you might ask why, well if you want the # number of samples/all samples it's dependant upon sort_record query def fetch_records records = get_raw_records records = sort_records(records) if params[:order].present? records = filter_records(records) if params[:search].present? && (not (sorting_by_custom_column)) records = paginate_records(records) if (not (params[:length].present? && params[:length] == '-1')) && (not (sorting_by_custom_column)) records end # Override default sort method if needed def sort_records(records) if params[:order].present? and params[:order].length == 1 if sort_column(params[:order].values[0]) == ASSIGNED_SORT_COL # If "assigned" column is sorted if @my_module then # Depending on the sort, order nulls first or # nulls last on sample_my_modules association records.order("sample_my_modules.id NULLS #{sort_null_direction(params[:order].values[0])}") elsif @project # A very elegant solution to sort assigned samples at a project level # grabs the ids of samples which has a modules that belongs to this project assigned = Sample .joins('LEFT OUTER JOIN "sample_my_modules" ON "sample_my_modules"."sample_id" = "samples"."id"') .joins('LEFT OUTER JOIN "my_modules" ON "my_modules"."id" = "sample_my_modules"."my_module_id"') .where('"my_modules"."project_id" = ?', @project.id) .where('"my_modules"."nr_of_assigned_samples" > 0') .select('"samples"."id"') .distinct # grabs the ids that are not the previous one but are still of the same organization unassigned = Sample .where('"samples"."organization_id" = ?', @organization.id) .where('"samples"."id" NOT IN (?)', assigned) .select('"samples"."id"') .distinct # check the input param and merge the two arrays of ids if params[:order].values[0]["dir"] == "asc" ids = assigned + unassigned elsif params[:order].values[0]["dir"] == "desc" ids = unassigned + assigned end ids = ids.collect { |s| s.id } # order the records by input ids order_by_index = ActiveRecord::Base.send(:sanitize_sql_array, ["position((',' || samples.id || ',') in ?)", ids.join(',') + ','] ) records.where(id: ids).order(order_by_index) end elsif sorting_by_custom_column # Check if have to filter samples first if params[:search].present? and params[:search][:value].present? # Couldn't force ActiveRecord to yield the same query as below because # Rails apparently forgets to join stuff in subqueries - # #justrailsthings conditions = build_conditions_for(params[:search][:value]) filter_query = 'SELECT "samples"."id" FROM "samples" LEFT OUTER JOIN "sample_custom_fields" ON "sample_custom_fields"."sample_id" = "samples"."id" LEFT OUTER JOIN "sample_types" ON "sample_types"."id" = "samples"."sample_type_id" LEFT OUTER JOIN "sample_groups" ON "sample_groups"."id" = "samples"."sample_group_id" LEFT OUTER JOIN "users" ON "users"."id" = "samples"."user_id" WHERE "samples"."organization_id" = ' + @organization.id.to_s + ' AND ' + conditions.to_sql records = records.where("samples.id IN (#{filter_query})") end cf_id = all_custom_fields[params[:order].values[0]["column"].to_i - 7].id dir = sort_direction(params[:order].values[0]) # Because samples can have multiple sample custom fields, we first group # them by samples.id and inside that group we sort them by cf_id. Because # we sort them ASC, sorted columns will be on top. Distinct then only # takes the first row and cuts the rest of every group and voila we have # 1 row for every sample, which are not sorted yet ... records = records.select("DISTINCT ON (samples.id) *") .order("samples.id, CASE WHEN sample_custom_fields.custom_field_id = #{cf_id} THEN 1 ELSE 2 END ASC") # ... this little gem (pun intended) then takes the records query, sorts it again # and paginates it. sq.t0_* are determined empirically and are crucial - # imagine A -> B -> C transitive relation but where A and C are the # same. Useless right? But not when you acknowledge that find_by_sql # method does some funky stuff when your query spans multiple queries - # Sample object might have id from SampleType, name from # User ... chaos ensues basically. If something changes in db this might # change. formated_date = (I18n.t 'time.formats.datatables_date').gsub!(/^\"|\"?$/, '') Sample.find_by_sql("SELECT sq.t0_r0 as id, sq.t0_r1 as name, to_char( sq.t0_r4, '#{ formated_date }' ) as created_at, sq.t0_r5, sq.t0_r6 as sample_group_id ,sq.t0_r7 as sample_type_id, sq.t0_r2 as user_id, sq.custom_field_id FROM (#{records.to_sql}) as sq ORDER BY CASE WHEN sq.custom_field_id = #{cf_id} THEN 1 ELSE 2 END #{dir}, sq.value #{dir} LIMIT #{per_page} OFFSET #{offset}") else super(records) end else super(records) end end #(I18n.t('time.formats.datatables_date')).gsub("\"", '\'') # A hack that overrides the new_search_contition method default behavior of the ajax-datatables-rails gem # now the method checks if the column is the created_at and generate a custom SQL to parse # it back to the caller method def new_search_condition(column, value) model, column = column.split('.') model = model.constantize formated_date = (I18n.t 'time.formats.datatables_date').gsub!(/^\"|\"?$/, '') if column == 'created_at' casted_column = ::Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new('CAST', [ Arel.sql("to_char( samples.created_at, '#{ formated_date }' ) AS VARCHAR") ] ) else casted_column = ::Arel::Nodes::NamedFunction.new('CAST', [model.arel_table[column.to_sym].as(typecast)]) end casted_column.matches("%#{value}%") end def sort_null_direction(item) val = sort_direction(item) val == "ASC" ? "LAST" : "FIRST" end def inverse_sort_direction(item) val = sort_direction(item) val == "ASC" ? "DESC" : "ASC" end def sorting_by_custom_column params[:order].values[0]["column"].to_i > 6 end end