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ruby - How to create a full Audit log in Rails for every table?

We recently began a compliance push at our company and are required to keep a full history of changes to our data which is currently managed in a Rails application. We've been given the OK to simply push something descriptive for every action to a log file, which is a fairly unobtrusive way to go.

My inclination is to do something like this in ApplicationController:

around_filter :set_logger_username

def set_logger_username
  Thread.current["username"] = current_user.login || "guest"
  yield
  Thread.current["username"] = nil
end

Then create an observer that looks something like this:

class AuditObserver < ActiveRecord::Observer
  observe ... #all models that need to be observed

  def after_create(auditable)
    AUDIT_LOG.info "[#{username}][ADD][#{auditable.class.name}][#{auditable.id}]:#{auditable.inspect}"
  end

  def before_update(auditable)
    AUDIT_LOG.info "[#{username}][MOD][#{auditable.class.name}][#{auditable.id}]:#{auditable.changed.inspect}"
  end

  def before_destroy(auditable)
    AUDIT_LOG.info "[#{username}][DEL][#{auditable.class.name}][#{auditable.id}]:#{auditable.inspect}"
  end

  def username
    (Thread.current['username'] || "UNKNOWN").ljust(30)
  end
end

and in general this works great, but it fails when using the "magic" <association>_ids method that is tacked to has_many :through => associations.

For instance:

# model
class MyModel
  has_many :runway_models, :dependent => :destroy
  has_many :runways, :through => :runway_models
end

#controller
class MyModelController < ApplicationController

  # ...

  # params => {:my_model => {:runways_ids => ['1', '2', '3', '5', '8']}}

  def update
    respond_to do |format|
      if @my_model.update_attributes(params[:my_model])
        flash[:notice] = 'My Model was successfully updated.'
        format.html { redirect_to(@my_model) }
        format.xml  { head :ok }
      else
        format.html { render :action => "edit" }
        format.xml  { render :xml => @my_model.errors, :status => :unprocessable_entity }
      end
    end
  end

  # ...
end

This will end up triggering the after_create when new Runway records are associated, but will not trigger the before_destroy when a RunwayModel is deleted.

My question is... Is there a way to make it work so that it will observe those changes (and/or potentially other deletes)?
Is there a better solution that is still relatively unobtrusive?

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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1 Answer

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by (71.8m points)

I had a similar requirement on a recent project. I ended using the acts_as_audited gem, and it worked great for us.

In my application controller I have line like the following

audit RunWay,RunWayModel,OtherModelName

and it takes care of all the magic, it also keeps a log of all the changes that were made and who made them-- its pretty slick.

Hope it helps


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