Home

Awesome

<div align="center"> <a href="https://bemi.io"> <img width="1201" alt="bemi-banner" src="https://docs.bemi.io/img/bemi-banner.png"> </a> <p align="center"> <a href="https://bemi.io">Website</a> · <a href="https://docs.bemi.io">Docs</a> · <a href="https://github.com/BemiHQ/bemi-rails-example">Example</a> · <a href="https://github.com/BemiHQ/bemi-rails/issues/new">Report Bug</a> · <a href="https://github.com/BemiHQ/bemi-rails/issues/new">Request Feature</a> · <a href="https://discord.gg/mXeZ6w2tGf">Discord</a> · <a href="https://twitter.com/BemiHQ">Twitter</a> · <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/company/bemihq/about">LinkedIn</a> </p> </div>

Bemi Rails

Bemi plugs into Ruby on Rails with Active Record and your existing PostgreSQL database to track data changes automatically. It unlocks robust context-aware audit trails and time travel querying inside your application.

Designed with simplicity and non-invasiveness in mind, Bemi doesn't require any alterations to your existing database structure. It operates in the background, empowering you with data change tracking features.

This Ruby gem is a recommended Ruby on Rails integration, enabling you to pass application-specific context when performing database changes. This can include context such as the 'where' (API endpoint, worker, etc.), 'who' (user, cron job, etc.), and 'how' behind a change, thereby enriching the information captured by Bemi.

Contents

Highlights

See an example repo for a Ruby on Rails app that automatically tracks all changes.

Use cases

There's a wide range of use cases that Bemi is built for! The tech was initially built as a compliance engineering system for fintech that supported $15B worth of assets under management, but has since been extracted into a general-purpose utility. Some use cases include:

Quickstart

Install the gem by adding it to your Gemfile

gem 'bemi-rails'

Specify custom application context that will be automatically passed with all data changes

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  before_action :set_bemi_context

  private

  def set_bemi_context
    Bemi.set_context(
      user_id: current_user&.id,
      endpoint: "#{request.method} #{request.path}",
      method: "#{self.class}##{action_name}",
    )
  end
end

Make database changes and make sure they're all stored in a table called changes in the destination DB

psql -h [HOSTNAME] -U [USERNAME] -d [DATABASE] -c 'SELECT "primary_key", "table", "operation", "before", "after", "context", "committed_at" FROM changes;'

 primary_key | table  | operation |                       before                    |                       after                      |                                context                                                   |      committed_at
-------------+--------+-----------+-------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+------------------------
 26          | todos  | CREATE    | {}                                              | {"id": 26, "task": "Sleep", "completed": false}  | {"user_id": 187234, "endpoint": "POST /todos", "method": "TodosController#create"}       | 2023-12-11 17:09:09+00
 27          | todos  | CREATE    | {}                                              | {"id": 27, "task": "Eat", "completed": false}    | {"user_id": 187234, "endpoint": "POST /todos", "method": "TodosController#create"}       | 2023-12-11 17:09:11+00
 28          | todos  | CREATE    | {}                                              | {"id": 28, "task": "Repeat", "completed": false} | {"user_id": 187234, "endpoint": "POST /todos", "method": "TodosController#create"}       | 2023-12-11 17:09:13+00
 26          | todos  | UPDATE    | {"id": 26, "task": "Sleep", "completed": false} | {"id": 26, "task": "Sleep", "completed": true}   | {"user_id": 187234, "endpoint": "POST /todos/26", "method": "TodosController#update"}    | 2023-12-11 17:09:15+00
 27          | todos  | DELETE    | {"id": 27, "task": "Eat", "completed": false}   | {}                                               | {"user_id": 187234, "endpoint": "DELETE /todos/27", "method": "TodosController#destroy"} | 2023-12-11 17:09:18+00

Check out our docs for more details.

Architecture overview

Bemi is designed to be lightweight and secure. It takes a practical approach to achieving the benefits of event sourcing without requiring rearchitecting existing code, switching to highly specialized databases, or using unnecessary git-like abstractions on top of databases. We want your system to work the way it already does with your existing database to allow keeping things as simple as possible.

Bemi plugs into both the database and application levels, ensuring 100% reliability and a comprehensive understanding of every change.

On the database level, Bemi securely connects to PostgreSQL's Write-Ahead Log and implements Change Data Capture. This allows tracking even the changes that get triggered via direct SQL.

On the application level, this gem automatically passes application context to the replication logs to enhance the low-level database changes. For example, information about a user who made a change, an API endpoint where the change was triggered, a worker name that automatically triggered database changes, etc.

Bemi workers then stitch the low-level data with the application context and store this information in a structured easily queryable format, as depicted below:

bemi-architechture

The cloud solution includes worker ingesters, queues for fault tolerance, and an automatically scalable cloud-hosted PostgreSQL. Bemi currently doesn't support a self hosted option, but contact us if this is required.

Alternatives

Bemi          PaperTrailAudited    Logidze    
Open source
Capturing record deletions
Reliability and accuracy
Scalability
No performance impact
Easy-to-use UI

Learn more about Ruby alternatives

License

Distributed under the terms of the LGPL-3.0 License. If you need to modify and distribute the code, please release it to contribute back to the open-source community.