Rails active_model_serializer with pagination

https://github.com/x1wins/tutorial-rails-rest-api/blob/master/lib/pagination.rb

# /lib/pagination.rb
class Pagination
  def self.build_json object, param_page = {}
    ob_name = object.name.downcase.pluralize
    json = Hash.new
    json[ob_name] = ActiveModelSerializers::SerializableResource.new(object.to_a, param_page: param_page)
    json[:pagination] = {
        current_page: object.current_page,
        next_page: object.next_page,
        prev_page: object.prev_page,
        total_pages: object.total_pages,
        total_count: object.total_count
    }
    return json
  end
end

how to use

#app/controller/posts_controller.rb
#post#index
render json: Pagination.build_json(@posts)

full source https://github.com/x1wins/tutorial-rails-rest-api


2020 update: active_model_serializer now supports this out of the box if you use json_api schema, but the docs also teach you how to add it if you use the json schema.

The docs are here: https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/blob/v0.10.6/docs/howto/add_pagination_links.md

Below I explain how to achieve the desired results if you are using the json_api or the json adapters. Check which one you're using on ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter.

If you are using the JSON API adapter (your ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = :json_api)

Pagination links will be included in your response automatically as long as the resource is paginated and if you are using the JsonApi adapter.

If you want pagination links in your response, use Kaminari or WillPaginate.

Kaminari examples
#array
@posts = Kaminari.paginate_array([1, 2, 3]).page(3).per(1)
render json: @posts

#active_record
@posts = Post.page(3).per(1)
render json: @posts
WillPaginate examples
#array
@posts = [1,2,3].paginate(page: 3, per_page: 1)
render json: @posts

#active_record
@posts = Post.page(3).per_page(1)
render json: @posts
ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = :json_api

ex:

{
  "data": [
    {
      "type": "articles",
      "id": "3",
      "attributes": {
        "title": "JSON API paints my bikeshed!",
        "body": "The shortest article. Ever.",
        "created": "2015-05-22T14:56:29.000Z",
        "updated": "2015-05-22T14:56:28.000Z"
      }
    }
  ],
  "links": {
    "self": "http://example.com/articles?page[number]=3&page[size]=1",
    "first": "http://example.com/articles?page[number]=1&page[size]=1",
    "prev": "http://example.com/articles?page[number]=2&page[size]=1",
    "next": "http://example.com/articles?page[number]=4&page[size]=1",
    "last": "http://example.com/articles?page[number]=13&page[size]=1"
  }
}

ActiveModelSerializers pagination relies on a paginated collection with the methods current_page, total_pages, and size, such as are supported by both Kaminari or WillPaginate.

If you are using the JSON adapter (your ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = :json)

If you are not using JSON adapter, pagination links will not be included automatically, but it is possible to do so using meta key.

Add this method to your base API controller.

def pagination_dict(collection)
  {
    current_page: collection.current_page,
    next_page: collection.next_page,
    prev_page: collection.prev_page, # use collection.previous_page when using will_paginate
    total_pages: collection.total_pages,
    total_count: collection.total_count
  }
end

Then, use it on your render method.

render json: posts, meta: pagination_dict(posts)

ex.

{
  "posts": [
    {
      "id": 2,
      "title": "JSON API paints my bikeshed!",
      "body": "The shortest article. Ever."
    }
  ],
  "meta": {
    "current_page": 3,
    "next_page": 4,
    "prev_page": 2,
    "total_pages": 10,
    "total_count": 10
  }
}

You can also achieve the same result if you have a helper method that adds the pagination info in the meta tag. For instance, in your action specify a custom serializer.

render json: @posts, each_serializer: PostPreviewSerializer, meta: meta_attributes(@posts)
#expects pagination!
def meta_attributes(collection, extra_meta = {})
  {
    current_page: collection.current_page,
    next_page: collection.next_page,
    prev_page: collection.prev_page, # use collection.previous_page when using will_paginate
    total_pages: collection.total_pages,
    total_count: collection.total_count
  }.merge(extra_meta)
end

Attributes adapter

This adapter does not allow us to use meta key, due to that it is not possible to add pagination links.


Single Use Solution

Regular serializers are only concerned with single items - not paginated lists. The most straight forward way to add pagination is in the controller:

customers = Customer.page(params[:page])
respond_with customers, meta: {
  current_page: customers.current_page,
  next_page: customers.next_page,
  prev_page: customers.prev_page,
  total_pages: customers.total_pages,
  total_count: customers.total_count
}

Reusable Solution

However, this is pretty tedious if you need pagination logic for multiple objects. Looking through the documentation for active_model_serializers you'll come across an ArraySerializer for serializing an array of objects. What I did was create pagination_serializer.rb using ArraySerializer to automatically add the meta tag for paginated arrays:

# my_app/app/serializers/pagination_serializer.rb
class PaginationSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer::ArraySerializer
  def initialize(object, options={})
    meta_key = options[:meta_key] || :meta
    options[meta_key] ||= {}
    options[meta_key][:pagination] = {
      current_page: object.current_page,
      next_page: object.next_page,
      prev_page: object.prev_page,
      total_pages: object.total_pages,
      total_count: object.total_count
    }
    super(object, options)
  end
end

Once you have PaginationSerializer added to your rails app, you simple need to call it when you need pagination meta tags from your controller:

customers = Customer.page(params[:page])
respond_with customers, serializer: PaginationSerializer

Note: I wrote this to use Kaminari as the paginator. However, it can easily be modified to work with any pagination gem or custom solution.