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264 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
264 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
[Back to Guides](../README.md)
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# Adapters
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ActiveModelSerializers offers the ability to configure which adapter
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to use both globally and/or when serializing (usually when rendering).
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The global adapter configuration is set on [`ActiveModelSerializers.config`](configuration_options.md).
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It should be set only once, preferably at initialization.
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For example:
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```ruby
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ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::JsonApi
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```
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or
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```ruby
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ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = :json_api
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```
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or
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```ruby
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ActiveModelSerializers.config.adapter = :json
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```
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The local adapter option is in the format `adapter: adapter`, where `adapter` is
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any of the same values as set globally.
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The configured adapter can be set as a symbol, class, or class name, as described in
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[Advanced adapter configuration](adapters.md#advanced-adapter-configuration).
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The `Attributes` adapter does not include a root key. It is just the serialized attributes.
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Use either the `JSON` or `JSON API` adapters if you want the response document to have a root key.
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## Built in Adapters
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### Attributes - Default
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It's the default adapter, it generates a json response without a root key.
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Doesn't follow any specific convention.
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##### Example output
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```json
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{
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"title": "Title 1",
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"body": "Body 1",
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"publish_at": "2020-03-16T03:55:25.291Z",
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"author": {
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"first_name": "Bob",
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"last_name": "Jones"
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},
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"comments": [
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{
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"body": "cool"
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},
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{
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"body": "awesome"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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### JSON
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The json response is always rendered with a root key.
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The root key can be overridden by:
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* passing the `root` option in the render call. See details in the [Rendering Guides](rendering.md#overriding-the-root-key).
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* setting the `type` of the serializer. See details in the [Serializers Guide](serializers.md#type).
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Doesn't follow any specific convention.
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##### Example output
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```json
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{
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"post": {
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"title": "Title 1",
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"body": "Body 1",
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"publish_at": "2020-03-16T03:55:25.291Z",
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"author": {
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"first_name": "Bob",
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"last_name": "Jones"
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},
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"comments": [{
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"body": "cool"
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}, {
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"body": "awesome"
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}]
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}
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}
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```
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### JSON API
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This adapter follows **version 1.0** of the [format specified](../jsonapi/schema.md) in
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[jsonapi.org/format](http://jsonapi.org/format).
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##### Example output
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```json
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{
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"data": {
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"id": "1337",
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"type": "posts",
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"attributes": {
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"title": "Title 1",
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"body": "Body 1",
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"publish-at": "2020-03-16T03:55:25.291Z"
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},
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"relationships": {
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"author": {
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"data": {
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"id": "1",
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"type": "authors"
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}
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},
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"comments": {
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"data": [{
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"id": "7",
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"type": "comments"
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}, {
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"id": "12",
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"type": "comments"
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}]
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}
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},
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"links": {
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"post-authors": "https://example.com/post_authors"
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},
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"meta": {
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"rating": 5,
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"favorite-count": 10
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}
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}
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}
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```
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### Include option
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Which [serializer associations](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/blob/master/docs/general/serializers.md#associations) are rendered can be specified using the `include` option. The option usage is consistent with [the include option in the JSON API spec](http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-includes), and is available in all adapters.
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Example of the usage:
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```ruby
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render json: @posts, include: ['author', 'comments', 'comments.author']
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# or
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render json: @posts, include: 'author,comments,comments.author'
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```
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The format of the `include` option can be either:
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- a String composed of a comma-separated list of [relationship paths](http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-includes).
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- an Array of Symbols and Hashes.
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- a mix of both.
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An empty string or an empty array will prevent rendering of any associations.
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In addition, two types of wildcards may be used:
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- `*` includes one level of associations.
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- `**` includes all recursively.
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These can be combined with other paths.
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```ruby
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render json: @posts, include: '**' # or '*' for a single layer
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```
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The following would render posts and include:
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- the author
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- the author's comments, and
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- every resource referenced by the author's comments (recursively).
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It could be combined, like above, with other paths in any combination desired.
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```ruby
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render json: @posts, include: 'author.comments.**'
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```
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**Note:** Wildcards are ActiveModelSerializers-specific, they are not part of the JSON API spec.
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The default include for the JSON API adapter is no associations. The default for the JSON and Attributes adapters is all associations.
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For the JSON API adapter associated resources will be gathered in the `"included"` member. For the JSON and Attributes
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adapters associated resources will be rendered among the other attributes.
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Only for the JSON API adapter you can specify, which attributes of associated resources will be rendered. This feature
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is called [sparse fieldset](http://jsonapi.org/format/#fetching-sparse-fieldsets):
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```ruby
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render json: @posts, include: 'comments', fields: { comments: ['content', 'created_at'] }
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```
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##### Security Considerations
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Since the included options may come from the query params (i.e. user-controller):
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```ruby
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render json: @posts, include: params[:include]
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```
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The user could pass in `include=**`.
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We recommend filtering any user-supplied includes appropriately.
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## Advanced adapter configuration
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### Registering an adapter
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The default adapter can be configured, as above, to use any class given to it.
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An adapter may also be specified, e.g. when rendering, as a class or as a symbol.
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If a symbol, then the adapter must be, e.g. `:great_example`,
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`ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::GreatExample`, or registered.
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There are two ways to register an adapter:
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1) The simplest, is to subclass `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::Base`, e.g. the below will
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register the `Example::UsefulAdapter` as `"example/useful_adapter"`.
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```ruby
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module Example
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class UsefulAdapter < ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::Base
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end
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end
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```
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You'll notice that the name it registers is the underscored namespace and class.
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Under the covers, when the `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::Base` is subclassed, it registers
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the subclass as `register("example/useful_adapter", Example::UsefulAdapter)`
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2) Any class can be registered as an adapter by calling `register` directly on the
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`ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter` class. e.g., the below registers `MyAdapter` as
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`:special_adapter`.
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```ruby
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class MyAdapter; end
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ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.register(:special_adapter, MyAdapter)
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```
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### Looking up an adapter
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| Method | Return value |
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| :------------ |:---------------|
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| `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.adapter_map` | A Hash of all known adapters `{ adapter_name => adapter_class }` |
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| `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.adapters` | A (sorted) Array of all known `adapter_names` |
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| `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.lookup(name_or_klass)` | The `adapter_class`, else raises an `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter::UnknownAdapter` error |
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| `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.adapter_class(adapter)` | Delegates to `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.lookup(adapter)` |
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| `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.configured_adapter` | A convenience method for `ActiveModelSerializers::Adapter.lookup(config.adapter)` |
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The registered adapter name is always a String, but may be looked up as a Symbol or String.
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Helpfully, the Symbol or String is underscored, so that `get(:my_adapter)` and `get("MyAdapter")`
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may both be used.
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For more information, see [the Adapter class on GitHub](https://github.com/rails-api/active_model_serializers/blob/master/lib/active_model_serializers/adapter.rb)
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