Rails: self join scheme with has_and_belongs_to_many?

Here are some resources which may be helpful:

I’ll summarize the information found in those links:

Given that you’re describing a self-referential many-to-many relationship, you will of course end up with a join table. Normally, the join table should be deliberately named in such a way that Rails will automatically figure out which models the table is joining, however the “self-referential” part makes this a tad awkward, but not difficult. You’ll merely have to specify the name of the join table, as well as the joining columns.

You’ll need to create this table using a migration that will probably look something like this:

class CreateFriendships < ActiveRecord::Migration
  def self.up
    create_table :friendships, id: false do |t|
      t.integer :user_id
      t.integer :friend_user_id
    end

    add_index(:friendships, [:user_id, :friend_user_id], :unique => true)
    add_index(:friendships, [:friend_user_id, :user_id], :unique => true)
  end

  def self.down
      remove_index(:friendships, [:friend_user_id, :user_id])
      remove_index(:friendships, [:user_id, :friend_user_id])
      drop_table :friendships
  end
end

I’m not certain whether there is a shortcut way of creating this table, but bare minimum you can simply do rails g migration create_friendships, and fill in the self.up and self.down methods.

And then finally in your user model, you simply add the name of the join table, like so:

class User < ActiveRecord::Base
  has_and_belongs_to_many :friends, 
              class_name: "User", 
              join_table: :friendships, 
              foreign_key: :user_id, 
              association_foreign_key: :friend_user_id
end

As you can see, while you do have a join table in the database, there is no related join model.

Please let me know whether this works for you.

Leave a Comment