Module: ActiveRecord::SecureToken::ClassMethods
- Defined in:
- lib/active_record/secure_token.rb
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #generate_unique_secure_token ⇒ Object
-
#has_secure_token(attribute = :token) ⇒ Object
Example using #has_secure_token.
Instance Method Details
#generate_unique_secure_token ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/active_record/secure_token.rb', line 35 def generate_unique_secure_token SecureRandom.base58(24) end |
#has_secure_token(attribute = :token) ⇒ Object
Example using #has_secure_token
# Schema: User(token:string, auth_token:string)
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_secure_token
has_secure_token :auth_token
end
user = User.new
user.save
user.token # => "pX27zsMN2ViQKta1bGfLmVJE"
user.auth_token # => "77TMHrHJFvFDwodq8w7Ev2m7"
user.regenerate_token # => true
user.regenerate_auth_token # => true
SecureRandom::base58
is used to generate the 24-character unique token, so collisions are highly unlikely.
Note that it's still possible to generate a race condition in the database in the same way that validates_uniqueness_of can. You're encouraged to add a unique index in the database to deal with this even more unlikely scenario.
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# File 'lib/active_record/secure_token.rb', line 28 def has_secure_token(attribute = :token) # Load securerandom only when has_secure_token is used. require "active_support/core_ext/securerandom" define_method("regenerate_#{attribute}") { update! attribute => self.class.generate_unique_secure_token } before_create { send("#{attribute}=", self.class.generate_unique_secure_token) unless send("#{attribute}?") } end |