View Source Create Actions

Create actions are used to create new records in the data layer. For example:

# on a ticket resource
create :open do
  accept [:title]
  change set_attribute(:status, :open)
end

Here we have a create action called :open that allows setting the title, and sets the status to :open. It could be called like so:

Ticket
|> Ash.Changeset.for_create(:open, %{title: "Need help!"})
|> Ash.create!()

See the Code Interface guide for creating an interface to call the action more elegantly, like so:

Support.open_ticket!("Need help!")

Bulk creates

Bulk creates take a list or stream of inputs for a given action, and batches calls to the underlying data layer.

Given our example above, you could call Ash.bulk_create like so:

Ash.bulk_create([%{title: "Foo"}, %{title: "Bar"}], Ticket, :open)

Check the docs!

Make sure to thoroughly read and understand the documentation in Ash.bulk_create/4 before using. Read each option and note the default values. By default, bulk creates don't return records or errors, and don't emit notifications.

Performance

Generally speaking, all regular Ash create actions are compatible (or can be made to be compatible) with bulk create actions. However, there are some important considerations.

  • Ash.Resource.Change modules can be optimized for bulk actions by implementing batch_change/3, before_batch/3 and after_batch/3. If you implement batch_change/3, the change function will no longer be called, and you should swap any behavior implemented with before_action and after_action hooks to logic in the before_batch and after_batch callbacks.

  • Actions that reference arguments in changes, i.e change set_attribute(:attr, ^arg(:arg)) will prevent us from using the batch_change/3 behavior. This is usually not a problem, for instance that change is lightweight and would not benefit from being optimized with batch_change/3

  • If your action uses after_action hooks, or has after_batch/3 logic defined for any of its changes, then we must ask the data layer to return the records it inserted. Again, this is not generally a problem because we throw away the results of each batch by default. If you are using return_records?: true then you are already requesting all of the results anyway.

Returning a Stream

Returning a stream allows you to work with a bulk action as an Elixir Stream. For example:

input_stream()
|> Ash.bulk_create(Resource, :action, return_stream?: true, return_records?: true)
|> Stream.map(fn {:ok, result} ->
  # process results
  {:error, error} ->
  # process errors
end)
|> Enum.reduce(%{}, fn {:ok, result}, acc ->
   # process results
   {:error, error} ->
   # process errors
end)

Be careful with streams

Because streams are lazily evaluated, if you were to do something like this:

[input1, input2, ...] # has 300 things in it
|> Ash.bulk_create(
  Resource,
  :action,
  return_stream?: true,
  return_records?: true,
  batch_size: 100 #  default is 100
)
|> Enum.take(150) # stream has 300, but we only take 150

What would happen is that we would insert 200 records. The stream would end after we process the first two batches of 100. Be sure you aren't using things like Stream.take or Enum.take to limit the amount of things pulled from the stream, unless you actually want to limit the number of records created.

Upserts

Upserting is the process of "creating or updating" a record, modeled with a single simple create. Both bulk creates and regular creates support upserts. Upserts can be declared in the action, like so:

create :create_user do
  accept [:email]
  upsert? true
  upsert_identity :unique_email
end

Or they can be done with options when calling the create action.

Ash.create!(changeset, upsert?: true, upsert_identity: :unique_email)

Upserts do not use an update action

While an upsert is conceptually a "create or update" operation, it does not result in an update action being called. The data layer contains the upsert implementation. This means that if you have things like global changes that are only run on update, they will not be run on upserts that result in an update. Additionally, notifications for updates will not be emitted from upserts. Most importantly, there are no read or update policies applied! You must take care that an upsert can only target records that the user has permission to update.

Targeting Upserts

Lets imagine that you want a user to upsert an article by its slug, but only if it is their article:

If your action looked like this:

create :upsert_article_by_slug do
  upsert? true
  accept [:slug, :title, :body]
  upsert_identity :unique_slug
end

and there was a different user's article with the same slug, the upsert would fail.

What we must do instead is use a filter change to further scope the upsert:

create :upsert_article_by_slug do
  upsert? true
  accept [:slug, :title, :body]
  upsert_identity :unique_slug

  change filter(expr(user_id == ^actor(:id)))
end

With this in place, the user can upsert against their own article's slugs, but if someone else has an article with that slug, they will get an error about slug being taken.

Atomic Updates

Upserts support atomic updates. These atomic updates do not apply to the data being created. They are only applied in the case of an update. For example:

create :create_game do
  accept [:identifier]
  upsert? true
  upsert_identity :identifier
  change set_attribute(:score, 0)
  change atomic_update(:score, expr(score + 1))
end

This will result in creating a game with a score of 0, and if the game already exists, it will increment the score by 1.

For information on options configured in the action, see Ash.Resource.Dsl.actions.create. For information on options when calling the action, see Ash.create/2.

What happens when you run a create Action

All actions are run in a transaction if the data layer supports it. You can opt out of this behavior by supplying transaction?: false when creating the action. When an action is being run in a transaction, all steps inside of it are serialized because transactions cannot be split across processes.

  • Authorization is performed on the changes
  • A before action hook is added to set up belongs_to relationships that are managed. This means potentially creating/modifying the destination of the relationship, and then changing the destination_attribute of the relationship.
  • before_transaction and around_transaction hooks are called (Ash.Changeset.before_transaction/2). Keep in mind, any validations that are marked as before_action? true (or all global validations if your action has delay_global_validations? true) will not have happened at this point.
  • A transaction is opened if the action is configured for it (by default they are) and the data layer supports transactions
  • before_action hooks are performed in order
  • The main action is sent to the data layer
  • after_action hooks are performed in order
  • Non-belongs-to relationships are managed, creating/updating/destroying related records.
  • The transaction is closed, if one was opened
  • after_transaction hooks are invoked with the result of the transaction (even if it was an error)