This repository contains various Ruby and Rails integrations for Elasticsearch:
- ActiveModel integration with adapters for ActiveRecord and Mongoid
- Repository pattern based persistence layer for Ruby objects
- Enumerable-based wrapper for search results
- ActiveRecord::Relation-based wrapper for returning search results as records
- Convenience model methods such as
search
,mapping
,import
, etc - Rake tasks for importing the data
- Support for Kaminari and WillPaginate pagination
- Integration with Rails' instrumentation framework
- Templates for generating example Rails application
Elasticsearch client and Ruby API is provided by the elasticsearch-ruby project.
Install each library from Rubygems:
gem install elasticsearch-model
gem install elasticsearch-rails
The libraries are compatible with Ruby 3.0 and higher.
We follow Ruby’s own maintenance policy and officially support all currently maintained versions per Ruby Maintenance Branches.
The version numbers follow the Elasticsearch major versions. Currently the main
branch is compatible with version 8.x
of the Elasticsearch stack.
Rubygem | Elasticsearch | |
---|---|---|
0.1 | → | 1.x |
2.x | → | 2.x |
5.x | → | 5.x |
6.x | → | 6.x |
7.x | → | 7.x |
8.x | → | 8.x |
main | → | 8.x |
Check out Elastic product end of life dates to learn which releases are still actively supported and tested.
This project is split into three separate gems:
-
elasticsearch-model
, which contains search integration for Ruby/Rails models such as ActiveRecord::Base and Mongoid, -
elasticsearch-persistence
, which provides a standalone persistence layer for Ruby/Rails objects and models -
elasticsearch-rails
, which contains various features for Ruby on Rails applications
Example of a basic integration into an ActiveRecord-based model:
require 'elasticsearch/model'
class Article < ActiveRecord::Base
include Elasticsearch::Model
include Elasticsearch::Model::Callbacks
end
# Index creation right at import time is not encouraged.
# Typically, you would call create_index! asynchronously (e.g. in a cron job)
# However, we are adding it here so that this usage example can run correctly.
Article.__elasticsearch__.create_index!
Article.import
@articles = Article.search('foobar').records
You can generate a simple Ruby on Rails application with a single command (see the other available templates). You'll need to have an Elasticsearch cluster running on your system before generating the app. The easiest way of getting this set up is by running it with Docker with this command:
docker run \
--name elasticsearch-rails-searchapp \
--publish 9200:9200 \
--env "discovery.type=single-node" \
--env "cluster.name=elasticsearch-rails" \
--env "cluster.routing.allocation.disk.threshold_enabled=false" \
--rm \
docker.elastic.co/elasticsearch/elasticsearch:7.6.0
Once Elasticsearch is running, you can generate the simple app with this command:
rails new searchapp --skip --skip-bundle --template https://raw.github.com/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-rails/main/elasticsearch-rails/lib/rails/templates/01-basic.rb
Example of using Elasticsearch as a repository for a Ruby domain object:
class Article
attr_accessor :title
end
require 'elasticsearch/persistence'
repository = Elasticsearch::Persistence::Repository.new
repository.save Article.new(title: 'Test')
# POST http://localhost:9200/repository/article
# => {"_index"=>"repository", "_id"=>"Ak75E0U9Q96T5Y999_39NA", ...}
Please refer to each library documentation for detailed information and examples.
To work on the code, clone the repository and install all dependencies first:
git clone https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch-rails.git
cd elasticsearch-rails/
bundle install
rake bundle:install
You can run unit and integration tests for each sub-project by running the respective Rake tasks in their folders.
You can also unit, integration, or both tests for all sub-projects from the top-level directory:
rake test:all
The test suite expects an Elasticsearch cluster running on port 9250, and will delete all the data.
This software is licensed under the Apache 2 license, quoted below.
Licensed to Elasticsearch B.V. under one or more contributor
license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
this work for additional information regarding copyright
ownership. Elasticsearch B.V. licenses this file to you under
the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
software distributed under the License is distributed on an
"AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
specific language governing permissions and limitations
under the License.