View Source Manual Actions
Manual actions allow you to control how an action is performed instead of dispatching to a data layer. To do this, specify the manual
option with a module that adopts the appropriate behavior.
Manual actions are a way to implement an action in a fully custom way. This can be a very useful escape hatch when you have something that you are finding difficult to model with Ash's builtin tools.
Manual Creates/Updates/Destroy
For manual create, update and destroy actions, a module is passed that uses one of the following (Ash.Resource.ManualCreate
, Ash.Resource.ManualUpdate
and Ash.Resource.ManualDestroy
).
For example:
create :special_create do
manual MyApp.DoCreate
end
# The implementation
defmodule MyApp.DoCreate do
use Ash.Resource.ManualCreate
def create(changeset, _, _) do
record = create_the_record(changeset)
{:ok, record}
# An `{:error, error}` tuple should be returned if something failed
end
end
The underlying record can be retrieved from changeset.data
for update and destroy manual actions. The changeset given to the manual action will be after any before_action
hooks, and before any after_action
hooks.
Manual Read Actions
Manual read actions work the same, except the will also get the "data layer query". For AshPostgres, this means you get the ecto query that would have been run. You can use Ash.Query.apply_to/3
to apply a query to records in memory. This allows you to fetch the data in a way that is not possible with the data layer, but still honor the query that was provided to.
# in the resource
actions do
read :action_name do
manual MyApp.ManualRead
# or `{MyApp.ManualRead, ...opts}`
end
end
# the implementation
defmodule MyApp.ManualRead do
use Ash.Resource.ManualRead
def read(ash_query, ecto_query, _opts, _context) do
...
{:ok, query_results} | {:error, error}
end
end
Modifying the query
As an alternative to manual read actions, you can also provide the modify_query
option, which takes an MFA
and allows low level manipulation of the query just before it is dispatched to the data layer.
For example:
read :read do
modify_query {MyApp.ModifyQuery, :modify, []}
end
defmodule MyApp.ModifyQuery do
def modify(ash_query, data_layer_query) do
{:ok, modify_data_layer_query(data_layer_query)}
end
end
This can be used as a last-resort escape hatch when you want to still use resource actions but need to do something that you can't do easily with Ash tools. As with any low level escape hatch, here be dragons.