This post is an excerpt from our e-book Growing Rails Applications in Practice,
now available through The Pragmatic Programmers and Leanpub.
As a Rails application grows, so does its app/models
folder. We've seen applications
grow to hundreds of models. With an app/models
directory that big, it becomes increasingly
hard to navigate. Also it becomes near-impossible to understand what the application is about
by looking at the models
folder, where the most important models of your core domain
sit next to some support class of low significance.
A good way to not drown in a sea of .rb
files is to aggressively
namespace models into sub-folders. This doesn't actually reduce the number
of files of course, but makes it much easier to browse through your model
and highlights the important parts.
Namespacing a model is easy. Let's say we have an Invoice
class and each invoice can have multiple invoice items:
class Invoice < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :items
end
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :invoice
end
Clearly Invoice
is a composition of Item
s and an Item
cannot live without a containing Invoice
.
Other classes will probably interact with Invoice
and not with Item
. So let's get Item
out of the way by nesting it into the Invoice
namespace. This involves renaming the class to
Invoice::Item
and moving the source file to app/models/invoice/item.rb
:
class Invoice::Item < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :invoice
end
What might seem like a trivial refactoring has great effects a few weeks down the road.
It is a nasty habit of Rails teams to avoid creating many classes, as if adding another file
was an expensive thing to do. And in fact making a huge models
folder even larger
is something that does not feel right.
But since the models/invoice
folder already existed,
your team felt encouraged to create other invoice-related models and place them
into this new namespace:
File |
Class |
app/models/invoice.rb |
Invoice |
app/models/invoice/item.rb |
Invoice::Item |
app/models/invoice/reminder.rb |
Invoice::Reminder |
app/models/invoice/export.rb |
Invoice::Export |
Note how the namespacing strategy encourages the use of service objects
in lieu of fat models that contain more functionality than they should.
Real-world example
In order to visualize the effect that heavy namespacing has on a real-world-project,
we refactored one of our oldest applications, which was created in a time when we
didn't use namespacing.
Here is the models
folder before refactoring:
activity.rb
amortization_cost.rb
api_exchange.rb
api_schema.rb
budget_calculator.rb
budget_rate_budget.rb
budget.rb
budget_template_group.rb
budget_template.rb
business_plan_item.rb
business_plan.rb
company.rb
contact.rb
event.rb
fixed_cost.rb
friction_report.rb
internal_working_cost.rb
invoice_approval_mailer.rb
invoice_approval.rb
invoice_item.rb
invoice.rb
invoice_settings.rb
invoice_template.rb
invoice_template_period.rb
listed_activity_coworkers_summary.rb
note.rb
person.rb
planner_view.rb
profit_report_settings.rb
project_filter.rb
project_link.rb
project_profit_report.rb
project_rate.rb
project.rb
project_summary.rb
project_team_member.rb
project_type.rb
rate_group.rb
rate.rb
revenue_report.rb
review_project.rb
review.rb
staff_cost.rb
stopwatch.rb
task.rb
team_member.rb
third_party_cost.rb
third_party_cost_report.rb
topix.rb
user.rb
variable_cost.rb
various_earning.rb
workload_report.rb
Looking at the huge list of files, could you tell what the application is about?
Probably not (it's a project management and invoicing tool).
Let's look at the refactored version:
/activity
/api
/contact
/invoice
/planner
/report
/project
activity.rb
contact.rb
planner.rb
invoice.rb
project.rb
user.rb
Note how the app/models
folder now gives you an overview of the core domain
at one glance. Every single file is still there, but neatly organized into a
clear directory structure. If we asked a new developer to change the way
invoices work, she would probably find her way through the code more easily.
Use the same structure everywhere
In a typical Rails application there are many places that are (most of the time)
structured like the models
folder. For instance, you often see helper modules
or unit tests named after your models.
When you start using namespaces, make sure that namespacing is also adopted
in all the other places that are organized by model. This way you get the
benefit of better organization and discoverability in all parts of your application.
Let's say we have a namespaced model Project::Report
. We should now
namespace helpers, controllers and views in the same fashion:
File |
Class |
app/models/project/report.rb |
Project::Report |
app/helpers/project/report_helper.rb |
Project::ReportHelper |
app/controllers/projects/reports_controller.rb |
Projects::ReportsController |
app/views/projects/reports/show.html.erb |
View template |
Note how we put the controller into a Projects
(plural) namespace.
While this might feel strange at first, it allows for natural nesting of folders
in in app/views
:
app/
views/
projects/
index.html.erb
show.html.erb
reports/
show.html.erb
If we put the controller into a Project
(singular) namespace, Rails would expect
view templates in a structure like this:
app/
views/
project/
reports/
show.html.erb
projects/
index.html.erb
show.html.erb
Note how two folders project
(singular) and projects
(plural) sit right next
to each other. This doesn't feel right. We feel that the file organization
of our views is more important than keeping controller namespace names in singular form.
Organizing test files
When we have tests we nest the test cases and support code like we nest
our models. For instance, when you use RSpec and Cucumber, your test files
should be organized like this:
File |
Description |
spec/models/project/report_spec.rb |
Model test |
spec/controllers/projects/reports_controller_spec.rb |
Controller test |
features/project/reports.feature |
Cucumber untegration test |
features/step_definitions/project/report_steps.rb |
Step definitions |
Other ways of organizing files
Of course models/controllers/tests don't always map 1:1:1, but often they do.
We think it is at the very least a good default with little ambiguity.
When you look for a file in a project structured like this, you always know where to look first.
If another way to split up your files feels better, just go ahead and do it.
Do not feel forced to be overly consistent, but always have a good default.