A drop-in guest user implementation for devise
(I'm using "user" to mean my devise model, but you should be able to use any model you want, just like devise)
# install devise first
# gem install devise
# rails g devise:install
# rails g devise User
gem install devise-guests
rails g devise_guests User
# Where you might use current_user; now you can use
current_or_guest_user
# which returns
current_user # (for logged in users)
=> User<id: 1, email: ...>
# or
guest_user # ( for anonymous users)
=> User<id: 2, email: guest_RANDOMENOUGHSTRING_@example.com, guest: true>
During the login process you may want to transfer things from your guest user to the account they logged into. To do so, add the following method to your ApplicationController:
private
def transfer_guest_to_user
# At this point you have access to:
# * current_user - the user they've just logged in as
# * guest_user - the guest user they were previously identified by
#
# After this block runs, the guest_user will be destroyed!
if current_user.cart
guest_user.cart.line_items.update_all(cart_id: current_user.cart.id)
else
guest_user.cart.update!(user: current_user)
end
# In this example we've moved `LineItem` records from the guest
# user's cart to the logged-in user's cart.
#
# To prevent these being deleted when the guest user & cart are
# destroyed, we need to reload the guest record:
guest_user.reload
end
If you have added additional authentication_keys, or have other attributes on your Devise model that you need to set when creating a guest user, you can do so by overriding the set_guest_user_params method in your ApplicationController:
private
def guest_user_params
{ site_id: current_site.id }
end
By default Devise will use :email
as the authentication key for your model. If for some reason you have modified your
Devise config to use an alternative attribute (such as :phone_number
) you will need to provide a method to generate
the value of this attribute for any guest users which are created.
Sticking with the :phone_number
example, you should define the following method in your application_controller.rb
:
private
def guest_phone_number_authentication_key(key)
key &&= nil unless key.to_s.match(/^guest/)
key ||= "guest_447" + 9.times.map { SecureRandom.rand(0..9) }.join
end
Validations are skipped when creating guest users, but if you need to rely on future modifications to the guest record passing validations, then you should ensure that this default value for guests is generated in such a way as to be valid.
By default, when signing in from a guest account to an authenticated account, the guest user is destroyed. You have an
opportunity through the logging_in_user
callback (or logging_in_MODEL
if you're not using User
) to transfer data
from the guest to the main account before destruction occurs.
However, for some situations such as guest-checkout, you may desire that any guest account which makes a purchase does
not get destroyed. In that case you can use the skip_destroy_guest_user
method to identify when to skip deleting these
records. By default this method returns false
, indicating that every record is acceptable for destruction, but you
could use something like the following to optionally prevent it:
def skip_destroy_guest_user
guest_user.orders.any?
end