I have an array of users I want to save in my database. An example when shown in the console after a POST is made:
"users"=>[{"name"=>"Job", "email"=>"*****"}, {"name"=>"Ed", "email"=>"****"}]
No nested attributes going on here. How to format strong params for this?
def user_params
params.fetch(:user, {}).permit(:name, :email, ...)
end
This may work for saving a single user but I'm passing an array of users. I'm currently storing the user in a "dirty" manner:
users = params[:users]
users.each do |user|
User.create(name: user[:name], email: user[:email])
end
I'd like to refactor and do something like:
User.create(user_params)
To permit a param key containing an array of hashes you pass the name as the key and an array of permitted attributes:
def user_params
params.permit(users: [:name, :email, ...])
.fetch(:users, [])
end
The output will be an array of ActionController::Parameters instances or an empty array if the key is not present:
[#<ActionController::Parameters {"name"=>"Job", "email"=>"*****"} permitted: true>,
#<ActionController::Parameters {"name"=>"Ed", "email"=>"****"} permitted: true>]
I get params like this: Parameters: {"utf8"=>"✓", "events"=>{"363"=>{"name"=>"3"}}, "new_events"=>[{"name"=>"1"}, {"name"=>"2"}], "date"=>"2016-11-01"}
What I would like to do is create Events from new_events array of hashes, but it doesn's let me because it neets to be sanitized for mass assignment.
This is how event_params looks like:
def event_params
params.require(:events).permit(:id, :name, :start_time, :user_id)
end
This setup is because I want to update and/or create new records when I press submit.
The current way I do this is
params[:new_events].each_with_object({}) do |e|
Event.create(name: e[:name], user_id: current_user.id, start_time: params[:date])
end
But Im not sure it's the correct way to do it
You should be able to sanitize the array of parameters:
params.require(:events).permit(new_events: [:name])
Event.create(params[:new_events] do |new_event|
new_event.user = current_user
end
But note that you'll have to loop over the objects anyway, so it doesn't make much of a difference. You may want to just do the loop with Event.new and validate them as a group:
events = Event.new(params[:new_events]) do |new_event|
new_event.user = current_user
...
end
if events.any?(&:invalid?)
[error handling]
else
events.save!
I have the following dynamic params depending on the line items i am trying to add to an order
{"line_item" => {"items"=>{"0"=>{"price"=>"5.75", "name"=>"Item name", "quantity"=>"5"}, "1"=>{"price"=>"3.35", "name"=>"Item name", "quantity"=>"1"}}}
In my controller:
def lineitems_params
params.require(:line_item).permit(:key1, :key2, :key3, :key4, :payment_type, :payment_provider).tap do |whitelisted|
whitelisted[:items] = params[:line_item][:items]
end
end
I still get the
Unpermitted parameters: items
in my logs, and it does not update the items.
How can i solve this?
NOTE: the items hash can have many elements inside.
EDIT:
In my model:
serialize :items, Hash
This should work
def lineitems_params
params.require(:line_item).permit(:key1, :key2, :key3, :key4, :payment_type, :payment_provider, {:items => {:price, :name, :quantity}})
end
Update
may be you should just give like this
def lineitems_params
params.require(:line_item).tap do |whitelisted|
whitelisted[:items] = params[:line_item][:items]
end
end
Source
Note: Don't give params.require(:line_items).permit! it permits all attributes.
I make a http put request with following parameters:
{"post"=>{"files"=>{"file1"=>"file_content_1",
"file2"=>"file_content_2"}}, "id"=>"4"}
and i need to permit hash array in my code.
based on manuals I've tried like these:
> params.require(:post).permit(:files) # does not work
> params.require(:post).permit(:files => {}) # does not work, empty hash as result
> params.require(:post).permit! # works, but all params are enabled
How to make it correctly?
UPD1: file1, file2 - are dynamic keys
Rails 5.1+
params.require(:post).permit(:files => {})
Rails 5
params.require(:post).tap do |whitelisted|
whitelisted[:files] = params[:post][:files].permit!
end
Rails 4 and below
params.require(:post).tap do |whitelisted|
whitelisted[:files] = params[:post][:files]
end
In rails 5.1.2, this works now:
params.require(:post).permit(:files => {})
See https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/e86524c0c5a26ceec92895c830d1355ae47a7034
I understand that this is an old post. However, a Google search brought me to this result, and I wanted to share my findings:
Here is an alternative solution that I have found that works (Rails 4):
params = ActionController::Parameters.new({"post"=>{"files"=>{"file1"=>"file_content_1", "file2"=>"file_content_2"}}, "id"=>"4"})
params.require(:post).permit(files: params[:post][:files].keys)
# Returns: {"files"=>{"file1"=>"file_content_1", "file2"=>"file_content_2"}}
The difference between this answer and the accepted answer, is that this solution restricts the parameter to only 1 level of dynamic keys. The accepted answer permits multiple depths.
[Edit] Useful tip from comment
"Oh, and you need to verify that params[:post][.files] exists otherwise keys will fail"
Orlando's answer works, but the resulting parameter set returns false from the permitted? method. Also it's not clear how you would proceed if you were to later have other parameters in the post hash that you want included in the result.
Here's another way
permitted_params = params.require(:post).permit(:other, :parameters)
permitted_params.merge(params[:post][:files])
Here's what we had to do in Rails 5.0.0, hope this helps someone.
files = params[:post].delete(:files) if params[:post][:files]
params.require(:post).permit(:id).tap do |whitelisted|
whitelisted[:files] = files.permit!
end
In my case, there was just one attribute which had dynamic keys,
def post_params
marking_keys = Set.new
params[:post][:marking].keys.collect {|ii| marking_keys.add(ii)}
params.require(:post).permit(:name, marking: marking_keys.to_a)
end
Here is another way to get around this:
def post_params
permit_key_params(params[:post]) do
params.require(:post)
end
end
def permit_key_params(hash)
permitted_params = yield
dynamic_keys = hash.keys
dynamic_keys.each do |key|
values = hash.delete(key)
permitted_params[key] = values if values
end
permitted_params
end
This should work for post: { something: {...}, something_else: {...} }
You can use a temporary variable to build your permitted list like so:
permitted = params.require(:post).permit(:id)
permitted[:post][:files] = params[:post][:files].permit!
Here's a simple way to do it (works for rails 5):
def my_params
data_params = preset_data_params
params.require(:my_stuff).permit(
:some,
:stuff,
data: data_params
)
end
def preset_data_params
return {} unless params[:my_stuff]
return {} unless params[:my_stuff][:data]
params[:my_stuff][:data].keys
end
Send params as array type like name=date[]**strong text**
def user_post
dates = params[:date]
#render json: { 'response' => params }
i = 0
dates.each do |date|
locations = params['location_'+"#{i}"]
user_names = params['user_'+"#{i}"]
currency_rates = params['currency_'+"#{i}"]
flags = params['flag_'+"#{i}"]
j = 0
locations.each do |location|
User.new(user_name: user_names[j], currency_name: flags[j],
currency_rate: currency_rates[j], currency_flag: flags[j], location: location).save
j =+ 1
end
i =+ 1
end
def
I could not get any of the many proposed answers to work (Rails 5) without either:
knowing all the hash keys in advance, or
virtually negating the value of strong parameters by allowing arbitrary params.
I'm using this solution.
It uses the standard strong parameters rig to clean up most of the params,
and the Hash attribute is added back in explicitly.
# Assuming:
class MyObject < ApplicationRecord
serialize :hash_attr as: Hash
#...
end
# MyObjectsController method to filter params:
def my_object_params
# capture the hashed attribute value, as a Hash
hash_attr = params[:my_object] && params[:my_object][:hash_attr] ?
params[my_object][:hash_attr].to_unsafe_h : {}
# clean up the params
safe_params = params.require(:my_object).permit(:attr1, :attr2) # ... etc
# and add the hashed value back in
safe_params.to_unsafe_h.merge hash_attr: hash_attr
end
Let's use a more complicated subset of data:
task: {
code: "Some Task",
enabled: '1',
subtask_attributes: {
'1' => { field: 'something', rules: {length_10: true, phone: false, presence: false }} ,
'2' => { field: 'another', rules: {length_10: true, phone: false, presence: false }}
}
}
So we send it to Strong Parameters for processing:
params = ActionController::Parameters.new({
task: {
code: "Some Task",
enabled: '1',
subtask_attributes: {
'1' => { field: 'something', rules: {length_10: true, phone: false, presence: false }} ,
'2' => { field: 'another', rules: {length_10: true, phone: false, presence: false }}
}
}
})
We will not be able to specify :rules in Strong Params in Rails 4 because it is a hash of data:
permitted = params.require(:task).permit(:code, :enabled, subtask_attributes: [:field, :rules])
Unpermitted parameter: rules
Unpermitted parameter: rules
So what if you want to whitelist specific attributes AND a COLLECTION of hashes of data. The accepted answer does not whitelist specified attributes. You have to do this:
params.require(:task).permit(
:code, :enabled,
subtask_attributes: [:field, :rules],
)
# whitelist the validation rules hash
params.require(:task).tap do |whitelisted|
params[:task][:subtask_attributes].each do |k,v|
whitelisted[:subtask_attributes][k] = params[:task][:subtask_attributes][k]
whitelisted.permit!
end
end
After trying several of the solutions here, none worked. Only aboved worked for nested attributes in a has_many association which contains arbitrary hash data.
I know this is an old post, one of many with different ways to update a serialize hash field. I thought I give my version that I accidently found by piecing together some methods. I'll just use my application. This is Rails 7.0.4 and Ruby 3.0. I also use slim templates.
I have a Taxable model that contains semi-persistent tax rates for different Departments. All items are Sales Tax taxable, but in my case, Liquor adds an additional tax. The Taxable table only has two fields with tax being a serialized JSON field.
create_table "taxables", force: :cascade do |t|
t.date "date"
t.string "tax"
...
end
If a Tax is changed or added, the I would add a new record to reflect the change that took place on some date. Any ticket that had a tax in the past would use the record that is the earliest record before the ticket date. Anything new will the new changed record
The Taxable model has a constant that names all taxes that may be used:
TaxesUsed = %w(sales county federal city liquor)
The records would be something like:
[#<Taxable:0x0000000111c7bfc0
id: 2,
date: Sun, 01 Jan 2023,
tax: {"sales"=>"8.0", "county"=>"2.0", "federal"=>"0.0", "city"=>"0.0", "liquor"=>"3.0"} ...
#<Taxable:0x0000000111c7b980
id: 3,
date: Fri, 01 Jan 2021,
tax: {"sales"=>"8.0", "county"=>"2.0", "federal"=>"0.0", "city"=>"0.0", "liquor"=>"4.0"}...
]
I initially had a kludge that worked, which was creating the hash from some un-permitted parameter and updating the record. I then found mention of using form_with to describe the Tax field and to my surprise it worked! The form:
= form_with(model: #taxable) do |form|
div
= form.label :date, style: "display: block"
= form.date_field :date
div
= form.label :tax, style: "display: block", class:"font-bold"
= form.fields_for :tax do |tax|
# #taxable.tax is the existing serialize tax hash or a new default hash
- #taxable.tax.each do |k,v|
div.flex.gap-2
div.w-36.font-bold.text-right = k
div
= tax.text_field k, value:v
div[class="#{btn_submit}"]
= form.submit
I had to define a new taxable_parmam that states that :tax is a Hash
def taxable_params
params.require(:taxable).permit(:date, :tax => {})
end
Submitting the form give me params:
Parameters: {"authenticity_token"=>"[FILTERED]",
"taxable"=>{"date"=>"2021-01-01", "tax"=>{"sales"=>"8.0",
"county"=>"2.0", "federal"=>"0.0", "city"=>"0.0",
"liquor"=>"4.0"}}, "commit"=>"Update Taxable", "id"=>"3"}
and it works! I forgot about form_with but this is about a simple as you can get just using plain ol Rails.
Update: I forgot that stuff coming from form fields is text. I had to get the params to a new hash, change the float values (percents) and update using the new hash
I have an array field in my model and I'm attempting to update it.
My strong parameter method is below
def post_params
params["post"]["categories"] = params["post"]["categories"].split(",")
params.require(:post).permit(:name, :email, :categories)
end
My action in my controller is as follows
def update
post = Post.find(params[:id]
if post and post.update_attributes(post_params)
redirect_to root_url
else
redirect_to posts_url
end
end
However, whenever I submit the update the post, in my development log I see
Unpermitted parameters: categories
The parameters passed through is
Parameters: {"utf8"=>"✓", "authenticity_token"=>"auth token", "id"=>"10",
"post"=>{"name"=>"Toni Mitchell", "email"=>"eileen_hansen#hayetokes.info", "categories"=>",2"}}
I want to think it has something to do with the fact that the attribute categories is an array since everything else looks fine. Then again, I could be wrong. So, what's wrong with my code and why is not letting me save the categories field when clearly it is permitted to do so? Thanks.
Try this
params.require(:post).permit(:name, :email, :categories => [])
(Disregard my comment, I don't think that matters)
in rails 4, that would be,
params.require(:post).permit(:name, :email, {:categories => []})
The permitted scalar types are String, Symbol, NilClass, Numeric, TrueClass, FalseClass, Date, Time, DateTime, StringIO, IO, ActionDispatch::Http::UploadedFile and Rack::Test::UploadedFile.
To declare that the value in params must be an array of permitted scalar values map the key to an empty array:
params.permit(:id => [])
This is what the strong parameters documentation on Github says:
params.require(:post).permit(:name, :email, :categories => [])
I hope this works out for you.
I had the same problem, but simply adding array to permit was not enough. I had to add type, too. This way:
params.require(:transaction).permit(:name, :tag_ids => [:id])
I am not sure if this is perfect solution, but after that, the 'Unpermitted parameters' log disappeared.
I found hint for that solution from this excellent post: http://patshaughnessy.net/2014/6/16/a-rule-of-thumb-for-strong-parameters
If there are multiple items and item_array inside parameters like this-
Parameters {"item_1"=>"value 1", "item_2"=> {"key_1"=> "value A1",
"key_2"=>["val B2", "val C3"]} }
There we have array inside item_2.
That can be permit as below-
params.permit(item_2: [:key_1, :key_2 => [] ])
Above saved my day, may be helpful for you too.
I had the same problem but in my case I had also to change from:
<input type="checkbox" name="photographer[attending]" value="Baku">
to:
<input type="checkbox" name="photographer[attending][]" value="Baku">
Hope this is helping someone.