Thanks Neener54, but I think I found the answer. Instead of running:
> rails g model Blogpost I need to run > rails g active_record:model Blogpost and that should generate all the ActiveRecord files, even though I have mongoid installed. However, now I am running into issues with migration and trying to use the Devise plugin. After installing the Devise plugin and auto-generating a User ActiveRecord model using: > rails g active_record:devise User I try to run my migrations. Here is the error output: > rake db:migrate rake aborted! undefined method `devise' for User(Table doesn't exist):Class Tasks: TOP => db:migrate => environment (See full trace by running task with --trace) I tried the same flow in a separate project, except using only ActiveRecord with no Mongoid and I was able to run migrations successfully. Apparently, Mongoid is messing up my ActiveRecord classes when I try to run rake. Would anyone have a solution? For example, is there a similar way to force rake to use ActiveRecord, such as when using rails-generate (rails g active_record:***)? By the way, I'm using ruby 1.9.2p290, Rails 3.1.0, Mongoid 2.3, bson_ext 1.4, and devise 1.5.3. Thanks in advance Mike On Jan 22, 12:18 pm, Neener54 <micharc...@gmail.com> wrote: > You could just go into the model and change it's inheritance. I've > never usedmongoidbut I think that push comes to shove, simply > switching << [modeltype] wouldn't be too hard. I'll keep an eye open > for you though and see if I can figure it out. > > On Jan 21, 7:41 pm, Mike Kim <fourcatra...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > I'm trying to use mongodb and postgresql simultaneously with Rails > > 3.1. I believe I have everything set up correctly. > > > What I'm interested in knowing is how to get rails to flip-flop back- > > and-forth betweenmongoidand activerecord. > > > For example, if I want to generate an ActiveRecord model afterusing > >mongoid, rails automatically defaults to theMongoidgem. > > > > rails g model Blogpost > > > invokemongoid > > create app/models/blogpost.rb > > invoke rspec > > create spec/models/blogpost_spec.rb > > > How would I get rails to use ActiveRecord instead, and vice versa? > > > Thanks in advance > > > Mike -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Ruby on Rails: Talk" group. To post to this group, send email to rubyonrails-talk@googlegroups.com. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to rubyonrails-talk+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rubyonrails-talk?hl=en.