If your User-Role stuff is looking similar to following:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :user_roles
has_many :roles, :through => :user_roles
# user model has for example following attributes:
# username, email, password, ...
end
class Role < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :user_roles
has_many :users, :through => :user_roles
# role model has for example following attributes:
# name (e.g. Role.first.name => "admin" or "editor" or "whatever"
end
class UserRole < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
belongs_to :role
end
you can do following:
First, extend your User model with a few helper methods or something similar:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
def is_admin?
is_type?("admin")
end
def is_editor?
is_type?("editor")
end
def is_whatever?
is_type?("whatever")
end
private
def is_type? type
self.roles.map(&:name).include?(type) ? true : false # will return true if the param type is included in the user´s role´s names.
end
end
Second, extend your ability class:
class Ability
include CanCan::Ability
def initialize(user)
if user
can :manage, :all if user.is_admin?
can :create, Project if user.is_editor?
can :read, Project if user.is_whatever?
# .. and so on..
# you can work with your different roles on base of the given user instance.
end
end
end
Alternatively you could remove your User-Roles has-many-through associations and replace it with the easy-roles gem - very useful. It is available on github: https://github.com/platform45/easy_roles
Now you should have an idea how you could work with cancan, roles and all the stuff together :-).