A ruby gem to interact with SalesForce as if it were Active Record. It uses Restforce to interact with the API, so it is fast and stable.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'active_force'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install active_force
Restforce is used to interact with the API, so you will need to setup environment variables to set up credentials.
SALESFORCE_USERNAME = [email protected]
SALESFORCE_PASSWORD = your-sfdc-password
SALESFORCE_SECURITY_TOKEN = security-token
SALESFORCE_CLIENT_ID = your-client-id
SALESFORCE_CLIENT_SECRET = your-client-secret
You might be interested in dotenv-rails to set up those in development.
Also, you may specify which client to use as a configuration option, which is useful when having to reauthenticate utilizing oauth.
ActiveForce.sfdc_client = Restforce.new(
oauth_token: current_user.oauth_token,
refresh_token: current_user.refresh_token,
instance_url: current_user.instance_url,
client_id: SALESFORCE_CLIENT_ID,
client_secret: SALESFORCE_CLIENT_SECRET
)
class Medication < ActiveForce::SObject
field :name, from: 'Name'
field :max_dossage # defaults to "Max_Dossage__c"
field :updated_from
##
# You can cast field value using `as`
# field :address_primary_active, from: 's360a__AddressPrimaryActive__c', as: :boolean
#
# Available options are :boolean, :int, :double, :percent, :date, :datetime, :string, :base64,
# :byte, :ID, :reference, :currency, :textarea, :phone, :url, :email, :combobox, :picklist,
# :multipicklist, :anyType, :location, :compound
##
# Table name is inferred from class name.
#
# self.table_name = 'Medication__c' # default one.
##
# Validations
#
validates :name, :login, :email, presence: true
# Use any validation from active record.
# validates :text, length: { minimum: 2 }
# validates :text, format: { with: /\A[a-zA-Z]+\z/, message: "only allows letters" }
# validates :size, inclusion: { in: %w(small medium large),
# message: "%{value} is not a valid size" }
##
# Callbacks
#
before_save :set_as_updated_from_rails
private
def set_as_updated_from_rails
self.updated_from = 'Rails'
end
end
Altenative you can try the generator. (requires setting up the connection)
rails generate active_force_model Medication__c
class Account < ActiveForce::SObject
has_many :pages
# Use optional parameters in the declaration.
has_many :medications,
scoped_as: ->{ where("Discontinued__c > ? OR Discontinued__c = ?", Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d"), nil) }
has_many :today_log_entries,
model: DailyLogEntry,
scoped_as: ->{ where(date: Time.now.in_time_zone.strftime("%Y-%m-%d")) }
has_many :labs,
scoped_as: ->{ where("Category__c = 'EMR' AND Date__c <> NULL").order('Date__c DESC') }
end
class Page < ActiveForce::SObject
field :account_id, from: 'Account__c'
belongs_to :account
end
You can retrieve SObject from the database using chained conditions to build the query.
Account.where(web_enable: 1, contact_by: ['web', 'email']).limit(2)
#=> this will query "SELECT Id, Name, WebEnable__c
# FROM Account
# WHERE WebEnable__C = 1 AND ContactBy__c IN ('web','email')
# LIMIT 2
It is also possible to eager load associations:
Comment.includes(:post)
When using rails, you can generate a model with all the fields you have on your SFDC table by running:
rails g active_force:model <table name>
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new pull request so we can talk about it.
- Once accepted, please add an entry in the CHANGELOG and rebase your changes to squash typos or corrections.