Borutus is based on the bloom_changes
branch of bloom-solutions/plutus, which is a fork of
mbulat/plutus.
Please submit pull requests to plutus instead; we created this to manage changes required by our apps.
The Borutus plugin is a Ruby on Rails Engine which provides a double entry accounting system for your application.
- Rails versions: ~> 5.0
- PostgreSQL: > 9.4
- Add the gem to your Gemfile
gem "borutus"
- Generate migration files
rake borutus:install:migrations
- Run migrations
rake db:migrate
The borutus plugin provides a complete double entry accounting system for use in any Ruby on Rails application. The plugin follows general Double Entry Bookkeeping practices. All calculations are done using BigDecimal in order to prevent floating point rounding errors. The plugin requires a decimal type on your database as well.
Borutus consists of tables that maintain your accounts, entries and debits and credits. Each entry can have many debits and credits. The entry table, which records your business transactions is, essentially, your accounting Journal.
Posting to a Ledger can be considered to happen automatically, since Accounts have the reverse has_many
relationship to either its credit or debit entries.
The Account class represents accounts in the system. The Account table uses single table inheritance to store information on each type of account (Asset, Liability, Equity, Revenue, Expense). Each account must be sub-classed as one of the following types:
TYPE | NORMAL BALANCE | DESCRIPTION
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Asset | Debit | Resources owned by the Business Entity
Liability | Credit | Debts owed to outsiders
Equity | Credit | Owners rights to the Assets
Revenue | Credit | Increases in owners equity
Expense | Debit | Assets or services consumed in the generation of revenue
Your Book of Accounts needs to be created prior to recording any entries. The simplest method is to have a number of create
methods in your db/seeds.rb file like so:
Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Accounts Receivable")
Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Cash")
Borutus::Revenue.create(name: "Sales Revenue")
Borutus::Liability.create(name: "Unearned Revenue")
Borutus::Liability.create(name: "Sales Tax Payable")
Then simply run rake db:seed
Each account can also be marked as a "Contra Account". A contra account will have its normal balance swapped. For example, to remove equity, a "Drawing" account may be created as a contra equity account as follows:
Borutus::Equity.create(name: "Drawing", contra: true)
At all times the balance of all accounts should conform to the Accounting Equation
Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity
Every account object has a has_many
association of credit and debit entries, which means that each account object also acts as its own Ledger, and exposes a method to calculate the balance of the account.
See the Borutus::Account
, Borutus::Entry
, and Borutus::Amount
classes for more information.
Let's assume we're accounting on an Accrual basis. We've just taken a customer's order for some widgets, which we've also billed him for. At this point we've actually added a liability to the company until we deliver the goods. To record this entry we'd need two accounts:
>> Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Cash")
>> Borutus::Liability.create(name: "Unearned Revenue")
Next we'll build the entry we want to record. Borutus uses ActiveRecord conventions to build the transaction and its associated amounts.
entry = Borutus::Entry.new(
description: "Order placed for widgets",
date: Date.yesterday,
debits: [{ account_name: "Cash", amount: 100.00 }],
credits: [{ account_name: "Unearned Revenue", amount: 100.00 }]
)
Entries must specify a description, as well as at least one credit and debit amount. Specifying the date is optional; by default, the current date will be assigned to the entry before the record is saved. debits
and credits
must specify an array of hashes, with an amount value as well as an account, either by providing a Borutus::Account
to account
or by passing in an account_name
string.
Finally, save the entry.
>> entry.save
If there are any issues with your credit and debit amounts, the save will fail and return false. You can inspect the errors via entry.errors
. Because we are doing double-entry accounting, the sum total of your credit and debit amounts must always cancel out to keep the accounts in balance.
Often times a single entry requires more than one type of account. A classic example would be a entry in which a tax is charged. We'll assume that we have not yet received payment for the order, so we'll need an "Accounts Receivable" Asset:
>> Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Accounts Receivable")
>> Borutus::Revenue.create(name: "Sales Revenue")
>> Borutus::Liability.create(name: "Sales Tax Payable")
And here's the entry:
entry = Borutus::Entry.build(
description: "Sold some widgets",
debits: [{ account_name: "Accounts Receivable", :amount: 50}],
credits: [
{ account_name: "Sales Revenue", amount: 45},
{ account_name: "Sales Tax Payable", amount: 5}
]
)
entry.save
Although Borutus does not provide a mechanism for generating invoices or orders, it is possible to associate any such commercial document with a given entry.
Suppose we pull up our latest invoice in order to generate a entry for borutus (we'll assume you already have an Invoice model):
>> invoice = Invoice.last
Let's assume we're using the same entry from the last example
entry = Borutus::Entry.new(
description: "Sold some widgets",
commercial_document: invoice,
debits: [
{ account_name: "Accounts Receivable", amount: invoice.total_amount}],
credits: [
{ account_name: "Sales Revenue", amount: invoice.sales_amount},
{ account_name: "Sales Tax Payable", amount: invoice.tax_amount}])
entry.save
The commercial document attribute on the entry is a polymorphic association allowing you to associate any record from your models with a entry (i.e. Bills, Invoices, Receipts, Returns, etc.)
Each account can report on its own balance. This number should normally be positive. If the number is negative, you may have a problem.
>> cash = Borutus::Asset.find_by_name("Cash")
>> cash.balance
=> #<BigDecimal:103259bb8,'0.2E4',4(12)>
The balance can also be calculated within a specified date range. Dates can be strings in the format of "yyyy-mm-dd" or Ruby Date objects.
>> cash = Borutus::Asset.find_by_name("Cash")
>> cash.balance(from_date: "2014-01-01", to_date: Date.today)
=> #<BigDecimal:103259bb8,'0.2E4',4(12)>
Each subclass of accounts can report on the total balance of all the accounts of that type. This number should normally be positive. If the number is negative, you may have a problem.
>> Borutus::Asset.balance
=> #<BigDecimal:103259bb8,'0.2E4',4(12)>
Again, a date range can be given
>> Borutus::Asset.balance(from_date: "2014-01-01", to_date: Date.today)
=> #<BigDecimal:103259bb8,'0.2E4',4(12)>
The Trial Balance for all accounts on the system can be found through the abstract Account class. This value should be 0 unless there is an error in the system.
>> Borutus::Account.trial_balance
=> #<BigDecimal:1031c0d28,'0.0',4(12)>
For complex entries, you should always ensure that you are balancing your accounts via the Accounting Equation.
Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity
For example, let's assume the owner of a business wants to withdraw cash. First we'll assume that we have an asset account for "Cash" which the funds will be drawn from. We'll then need an Equity account to record where the funds are going, however, in this case, we can't simply create a regular Equity account. The "Cash" account must be credited for the decrease in its balance since it's an Asset. Likewise, Equity accounts are typically credited when there is an increase in their balance. Equity is considered an owner's rights to Assets in the business. In this case however, we are not simply increasing the owner's rights to assets within the business; we are actually removing capital from the business altogether. Hence both sides of our accounting equation will see a decrease. In order to accomplish this, we need to create a Contra-Equity account we'll call "Drawings". Since Equity accounts normally have credit balances, a Contra-Equity account will have a debit balance, which is what we need for our entry.
>> Borutus::Equity.create(name: "Drawing", contra: true)
>> Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Cash")
We would then create the following entry:
entry = Borutus::Entry.new(
description: "Owner withdrawing cash",
debits: [{ account_name: "Drawing", amount: 1000}],
credits: [{ account_name: "Cash", amount: 1000}],
)
entry.save
To make the example clearer, imagine instead that the owner decides to invest his money into the business in exchange for some type of equity security. In this case we might have the following accounts:
>> Borutus::Equity.create(name: "Common Stock")
>> Borutus::Asset.create(name: "Cash")
And out entry would be:
entry = Borutus::Entry.new(
description: "Owner investing cash",
debits: [{ account_name: "Cash", amount: 1000}],
credits: [{ account_name: "Common Stock", amount: 1000}]
)
entry.save
In this case, we've increase our cash Asset, and simultaneously increased the other side of our accounting equation in Equity, keeping everything balanced.
Borutus aims to be agnostic about the values used for amounts. All fields are maintained as BigDecimal values, with :precision: 20, :scale: 10
, which means that any currency can be safely stored in the tables.
Borutus is also compatible with the Money gem. With Money versions greater than 6.0, the money.amount
will returns a BigDecimal which you can use with borutus as follows:
entry = Borutus::Entry.build(
description: "Order placed for widgets",
debits: [{ account_name: "Cash", amount: money.amount}],
credits: [{ account_name: "Unearned Revenue", amount: money.amount}]
)
Borutus supports multitenant applications. Multitenancy is achieved by associating all Accounts under Borutus::Account
with a "Tenant" object (typically some model in your Rails application). To add multi-tenancy support to Borutus, you must do the following:
- Generate the migration which will add
tenant_id
to the borutus accounts table
bundle exec rails g borutus:tenancy
- Run the migration
rake db:migrate
- Add an initializer to your Rails application, i.e.
config/initializers/borutus.rb
Borutus.config do |config|
config.enable_tenancy = true
config.tenant_class = 'Tenant'
end
NOTE: When building entries, be sure to specify the account directly, rather than use the account_name
feature. Otherwise you'll probably end up with the wrong account.
debit_account = Borutus::Account.where(name: "Cash", tenant: my_tenant).last
credit_account = Borutus::Account.where(name: "Unearned Revenue", tenant: my_tenant).last
entry = Borutus::Entry.new(
description: "Order placed for widgets",
date: Date.yesterday,
debits: [{ account: debit_account, amount: 100.00}],
credits: [{ account: credit_account, amount: 100.00}]
)
The Engine provides controllers and views for rendering basic reports, including a Balance Sheet and Income Statement.
These views and controllers are read-only for reporting purposes. It is assumed entry creation will occur within your applications code.
Routing is supplied via an engine mount point. Borutus can be mounted on a subpath in your existing Rails 3 app by adding the following to your routes.rb:
mount Borutus::Engine => "/borutus", as: "borutus"
NOTE: The Borutus::ApplicationController
does not currently support authentication. If you enable routing, the views will be publicly available on your mount point. Authentication can be added by overriding the controller.
Future versions of borutus will allow for customization of authentication.
Run docker-compose up pg
, this will create a local postgresql database. Then create a DB name borutus_fixture_test
, you can do this via:
createdb --username=postgres --host=localhost --port=5432 --template=template0 borutus_fixture_test
Rspec tests are provided. Run bundle install
then bundle exec rspec spec
.
There's a guide to contributing to Borutus (both code and general help) over in CONTRIBUTING
Many thanks to all our contributors! Check them all at:
https://github.com/bloom-solutions/borutus/graphs/contributors
For a complete reference on Accounting principles, we recommend the following textbook