I have a pair of classes:
class Collection < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :items, autosave: true
end
class Item < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :collection
end
From the docs:
When :autosave is true all children is saved, no matter whether they are new records:
But when I update an Item and save its parent Collection, the Item‘s upated attributes don’t get saved:
> c = Collection.first
=> #<Collection id: 1, name: "collection", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:10", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:10">
> i = c.items.first
=> #<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">
> i.name = 'new name'
=> "new name"
> c.save
=> true
> Collection.first.items
=> [#<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">]
So, what am I missing?
I’m using Rails 3.2.5 and Ruby 1.9.2.
So I’ve done some digging about in the source of ActiveRecord. We can get hold of c‘s autosave assocations:
> c.class.reflect_on_all_autosave_associations
=> [#<ActiveRecord::Reflection::AssociationReflection:0x007fece57b3bd8 @macro=:has_many, @name=:items, @options={:autosave=>true, :extend=>[]}, @active_record=Collection(id: integer, name: string, created_at: datetime, updated_at: datetime), @plural_name="items", @collection=true, @class_name="Item", @klass=Item(id: integer, collection_id: integer, name: string, created_at: datetime, updated_at: datetime), @foreign_key="collection_id", @active_record_primary_key="id", @type=nil>]
I think this illustrates that the association has been set up for autosaving.
We can then get the instance of the association corresponding to c:
> a = c.send :association_instance_get, :items
=> #<ActiveRecord::Associations::HasManyAssociation:0x007fece738e920 @target=[#<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">], @reflection=#<ActiveRecord::Reflection::AssociationReflection:0x007fece57b3bd8 @macro=:has_many, @name=:items, @options={:autosave=>true, :extend=>[]}, @active_record=Collection(id: integer, name: string, created_at: datetime, updated_at: datetime), @plural_name="items", @collection=true, @class_name="Item", @klass=Item(id: integer, collection_id: integer, name: string, created_at: datetime, updated_at: datetime), @foreign_key="collection_id", @active_record_primary_key="id", @type=nil>, @owner=#<Collection id: 1, name: "collection", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:10", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:10">, @updated=false, @loaded=true, @association_scope=[#<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">], @proxy=[#<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">], @stale_state=nil>
We can then find the actual objects that are associated via this association:
> a.target
=> [#<Item id: 1, collection_id: 1, name: "item1", created_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25", updated_at: "2012-07-23 00:00:25">]
The object found here does not have update that I’d made earlier.
The problem here is the line
This line pulls the correct item from the database, but doesn’t attach it to the collection c. It is a distinct ruby object from the object
If you replace the first line with the second your example will work.