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Rails 3: Multiple has_one associations & seeding

I'm working with a data concept that Rails doesn't seem to do great with - a Route has two (and only two) Airports. I finally figured out how to hard-code my foreign keys so that they would be sensible.

My models/route.rb is pretty simple:

class Route < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :airport, :foreign_key => 'from_airport_id', :class_name => 'Airport'
  has_one :airport, :foreign_key => 'to_airport_id', :class_name => 'Airport'
end

This all seems to be working fine but I can't seem to get it to seed correctly.

My seeds.rb looks like so:

Airport.delete_all
@kpdx = Airport.create(:icao => 'KPDX', :name => 'Portland International Airport', :lat => '45.58869934', :lon => '-122.5979996')
@ksea = Airport.create(:icao => 'KSEA', :name => 'Seattle Tacoma International Airport', :lat => '47.4490013122559', :lon => '-122.30899810791')
Route.delete_all
Route.create(:from_airport_id => @kpdx, :to_airport_id => @ksea, :route => "RIVR6 BTG OLM6")
Route.create(:from_airport_id => @kpdx, :to_airport_id => @ksea, :route => "BTG OLM OLM6")

Route.create(:from_airport_id => Airport.find_by_icao("KSEA"), :to_airport_id => Airport.find_by_icao("KPDX"), :route => "SEATL4 SEA HELNS4")
Route.create(:from_airport_id => Airport.find_by_icao("KSEA"), :to_airport_id => Airport.find_by_icao("KPDX"), :route => "SEA HELNS4")

Note that I have two different ways of trying to tell the seed data to go from one of the airports I created to the other. Neither one works. When I run rake db:seed, all of the from_airport_id and to_airport_id fields are just set to 1, when the IDs in the airport table are incrementing (23 & 24 in my current run).

So I have two questions:

  1. Is there a better way to handle the model code than what I'm doing?
  2. What am I doing wrong in seeding :-)

Thanks!

like image 882
tkrajcar Avatar asked Jan 21 '23 08:01

tkrajcar


1 Answers

I would change your model to specify a different symbol for each relationship:

class Route < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_one :from_airport, :foreign_key => 'from_airport_id', :class_name => 'Airport'
  has_one :to_airport, :foreign_key => 'to_airport_id', :class_name => 'Airport'
end

Since enabling a has_one lets you access that relationship through the name (e.g. route.airport), these need to be different.

To get your seeding to work, call .id on the airport:

Route.create(:from_airport_id => @kpdx.id, :to_airport_id => @ksea.id, :route => "RIVR6 BTG OLM6")

Example:

ruby-1.9.2-p136 :001 > a = Airport.create(:icao => 'KPDX', :name => 'Portland International Airport')
 => #<Airport id: 1, icao: "KPDX", name: "Portland International Airport", created_at: "2011-03-01 02:44:42", updated_at: "2011-03-01 02:44:42">
ruby-1.9.2-p136 :002 > b = Airport.create(:icao => 'ABCD', :name => 'Another Airport')
 => #<Airport id: 2, icao: "ABCD", name: "Another Airport", created_at: "2011-03-01 02:46:22", updated_at: "2011-03-01 02:46:22">
ruby-1.9.2-p136 :003 > r = Route.create(:to_airport_id => a.id, :from_airport_id => b.id)
 => #<Route id: 3, from_airport_id: 2, to_airport_id: 1, route: nil, created_at: "2011-03-01 02:46:36", updated_at: "2011-03-01 02:46:36">
like image 108
Michelle Tilley Avatar answered Jan 29 '23 10:01

Michelle Tilley