View Source Aggregates
Aggregates in Ash allow for retrieving summary information over groups of related data. A simple example might be to show the "count of published posts for a user". Aggregates allow us quick and performant access to this data, in a way that supports being filtered/sorted on automatically. More aggregate types can be added, but you will be restricted to only the supported types. In cases where aggregates don't suffice, use Calculations, which are intended to be much more flexible.
Declaring aggregates on a resource
Aggregates are defined in an aggregates
section. For all possible types, see below.
For a full reference, see Ash.Resource.Dsl.aggregates
.
aggregates do
count :count_of_posts, :posts do
filter expr(published == true)
end
end
Using an aggregate
Aggregates are loaded and filtered on in the same way that calculations are. Lets look at some examples:
Loading aggregates in a query or on records
User
|> Ash.Query.load(:count_of_posts)
|> Map.get(:count_of_posts)
# => 10
users
|> Ash.load!(:count_of_posts)
|> Enum.map(&(&1.count_of_posts)
# => [3, 5, 2]
Filtering on aggregates
require Ash.Query
User
|> Ash.Query.filter(count_of_posts > 10)
|> Ash.read!()
Sorting aggregates
User
|> Ash.Query.sort(count_of_posts: :asc)
|> Ash.read!()
Aggregate types
count
- counts related items meeting the criteria.exists
- checks if any related items meet the criteria.first
- gets the first related value matching the criteria. Must specify thefield
.sum
- sums the related items meeting the criteria. Must specify thefield
.list
- lists the related values. Must specify thefield
.max
- gets the maximum related value. Must specify thefield
.min
- gets the minimum related value. Must specify thefield
.avg
- gets the average related value. Must specify thefield
.custom
- allows for a custom aggregate. Implementation depends on the data layer. Must provide animplementation
.
The declared set of named aggregates can be used by extensions and referred to throughout your application As an escape hatch, they can also be loaded in the query using Ash.Query.load/2
, or after the fact using Ash.load/3
. Aggregates declared on the resource will be keys in the resource's struct.
See the docs on Ash.Resource.Dsl.aggregates
for more information.
Custom aggregates in the query
Custom aggregates can be added to the query and will be placed in the aggregates
key of the results. This is an escape hatch, and is not the primary way that you should be using aggregates. It does, however, allow for dynamism, i.e if you are accepting user input that determines what the filter and/or field should be, that kind of thing.
Example:
User
|> Ash.Query.aggregate(
:count_of_posts,
:count,
:posts,
query: [
filter: [published: published?]
]
)
See the documentation for Ash.Query.aggregate/4
for more information.
Join Filters
Join filters allows for more complex aggregate queries, including joining with predicates based on multiple related values.
Example
aggregates do
sum :saved_money, [:redeems, :deal], :amount do
# where any redeem of the deal is redeemed
filter expr(redeems.redeemed == true)
# where the `redeems` are `redeemed`
join_filter :redeems, expr(redeemed == true)
# where the `redeems.deal.active` == `redeems.require_active`
join_filter [:redeems, :deal], expr(active == parent(require_active))
end
end
Inline Aggregates
Aggregates can be created in-line in expressions, with their relationship path specified and any options provided that match the options given to Ash.Query.Aggregate.new/4
. For example:
calculate :grade, :decimal, expr(
count(answers, query: [filter: expr(correct == true)]) /
count(answers, query: [filter: expr(correct == false)])
)
See the Expressions guide for more.