breadboard 1.0.0.alpha.1 → 1.0.0.alpha.2
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- data/.gitignore +1 -0
- data/CHANGELOG +6 -0
- data/VERSION +1 -1
- data/features/active_resource.feature +1 -1
- data/features/step_definitions/active_resource_steps.rb +5 -5
- data/features/step_definitions/configure_steps.rb +11 -11
- data/features/step_definitions/reset_steps.rb +1 -1
- data/lib/breadboard/environment.rb +2 -2
- data/readme.md +109 -31
- metadata +3 -3
data/.gitignore
CHANGED
data/CHANGELOG
CHANGED
data/VERSION
CHANGED
@@ -1 +1 @@
|
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1
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-
1.0.0.alpha.
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1
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+
1.0.0.alpha.2
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@@ -137,15 +137,15 @@ Given /^my Rails environment is "([^"]*)"$/ do |environment|
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137
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end
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Then /^I should recieve the value configured in the Breadboard "([^"]*)" environment settings for that model$/ do |environment|
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-
NoSiteAttribute.site.
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+
NoSiteAttribute.site.should == Breadboard.config.NoSiteAttribute.send(environment.to_sym)
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end
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Then /^I should recieve the value configured in the Breadboard "([^"]*)" environment settings for the ancestor of that model$/ do |environment|
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-
NoSiteAttribute.site.
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+
NoSiteAttribute.site.should == Breadboard.config.Parent.send(environment.to_sym)
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end
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Then /^I should recieve the value configured in the Breadboard "([^"]*)" environment settings in the breadboard defaults section$/ do |environment|
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-
NoSiteAttribute.site.
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+
NoSiteAttribute.site.should == Breadboard.config.default.send(environment.to_sym)
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end
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Then /^ActiveResource should ignore more generic configurations in Breadboard$/ do
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@@ -154,6 +154,6 @@ end
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Given /^an empty Breadboard configuration$/ do
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end
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-
Then /^I should recieve
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-
NoSiteAttribute.site.
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+
Then /^I should recieve nil$/ do
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158
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+
NoSiteAttribute.site.should be_nil
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end
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@@ -17,8 +17,8 @@ Then /^I should be able to configure breadboard via Ruby blocks$/ do
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end
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end
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-
Breadboard.config.default.all.should == "http://localhost:3000"
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-
Breadboard.config.default.production.should == "http://test.com"
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+
Breadboard.config.default.all.to_s.should == "http://localhost:3000"
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+
Breadboard.config.default.production.to_s.should == "http://test.com"
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end
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Then /^I should be able to create a default configuration via the "default" Config method$/ do
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@@ -31,8 +31,8 @@ Then /^I should be able to create a default configuration via the "default" Conf
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end
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end
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34
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-
Breadboard.config.default.all.should == "http://localhost:3000"
|
35
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-
Breadboard.config.default.production.should == "http://test.com"
|
34
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+
Breadboard.config.default.all.to_s.should == "http://localhost:3000"
|
35
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+
Breadboard.config.default.production.to_s.should == "http://test.com"
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end
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Then /^I should be able to configure models via their lowercased, underscored method equivalents$/ do
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@@ -40,11 +40,11 @@ Then /^I should be able to configure models via their lowercased, underscored me
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Breadboard.configure do
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article do
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-
production "haha"
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+
production "http://haha"
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end
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end
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-
Breadboard.config.Article.production.should == "haha"
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47
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+
Breadboard.config.Article.production.to_s.should == "http://haha"
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end
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Then /^I should be able to configure a model by passing the constant for the model to the "model" method$/ do
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@@ -52,11 +52,11 @@ Then /^I should be able to configure a model by passing the constant for the mod
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Breadboard.configure do
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model Smarticle do
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-
production "haha"
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+
production "http://haha"
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end
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end
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58
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59
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-
Breadboard.config.Smarticle.production.should == "haha"
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59
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+
Breadboard.config.Smarticle.production.to_s.should == "http://haha"
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end
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Then /^I should be able to configure multiple models simultaneously by passing their constants to the "models" method$/ do
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@@ -65,12 +65,12 @@ Then /^I should be able to configure multiple models simultaneously by passing t
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65
65
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Breadboard.configure do
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models Particle, Yarticle do
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-
production "haha"
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68
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+
production "http://haha"
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end
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end
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71
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72
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-
Breadboard.config.Particle.production.should == "haha"
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73
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-
Breadboard.config.Yarticle.production.should == "haha"
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72
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+
Breadboard.config.Particle.production.to_s.should == "http://haha"
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Breadboard.config.Yarticle.production.to_s.should == "http://haha"
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end
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Then /^I should be able to override the default Rails\.env environment retrieval in case I'm not in a rails app$/ do
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@@ -7,12 +7,12 @@ module Breadboard
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7
7
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8
8
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def test(url=nil)
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9
9
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return @environments[:test] if url.nil?
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10
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-
@environments[:test] = url
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10
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+
@environments[:test] = URI.parse url
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end
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12
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def method_missing(method_name, *args, &block)
|
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return @environments[method_name] if args.length == 0
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-
@environments[method_name] = args.first
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+
@environments[method_name] = URI.parse args.first
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end
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end
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end
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data/readme.md
CHANGED
@@ -1,53 +1,131 @@
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1
1
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#Introduction
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-
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3
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+
Change your ActiveResource service providers based on your environment.
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##Install
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Breadboard is available as a gem:
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-
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-
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-
If you'd like to use this in your rails project, add the following to your config/environment.rb:
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-
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13
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-
config.gem 'breadboard'
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9
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+
# gem install breadboard
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10
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##Usage
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-
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If you're using this in a Rails app, you'll want to configure `Breadboard` in an initializer.
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-
In the simplest scenario, all of your ActiveResource models connect to the same service provider in all environments.
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+
In the simplest scenario, all of your `ActiveResource` models connect to the same service provider in all environments.
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+
In this case, you really don't need this gem, but if you're determined to use it just because you know it's the coolest thing ever, then we've got you covered:
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-
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-
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Breadboard.configure do
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default do
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all "http://my.universal.service.provider.com"
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end
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end
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This means: for all ActiveResource models, in all environments, connect them to http://my.universal.service.provider.com
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This means: for all ActiveResource models, in all environments, connect them to `http://my.universal.service.provider.com`
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-
However, it's more likely that you're using this gem because you are in a situation where you need to connect your models to different
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+
However, it's more likely that you're using this gem because you are in a situation where you need to connect your models to different
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services based on a rails environment. This is also trivial with breadboard:
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-
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-
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-
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-
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Breadboard.configure do
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default do
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all "http://my.universal.service.provider.com"
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production "http://my.production.service.provider.com"
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end
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end
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Now suppose you have an 'Author' model that needs to connect to a completely different service from everything else, in all environments:
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-
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default:
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production: http://my.production.service.provider.com
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development: http://my.development.service.provider
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-
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-
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Breadboard.configure do
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default do
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all "http://my.universal.service.provider.com"
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production "http://my.production.service.provider.com"
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end
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author do
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all "http://my.author.service.provider"
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end
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end
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You can use this alternate syntax, if you prefer:
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+
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Breadboard.configure do
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default do
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all "http://my.universal.service.provider.com"
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production "http://my.production.service.provider.com"
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end
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model Author do
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all "http://my.author.service.provider"
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end
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end
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Now suppose you have a 'Book' model that needs to connect to a different service provider than the default when in 'production' mode:
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-
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-
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-
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Breadboard.configure do
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default do
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all "http://my.universal.service.provider.com"
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production "http://my.production.service.provider.com"
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end
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model Author do
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all "http://my.author.service.provider"
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end
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+
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model Book do
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production "http://my.book.production.service.provider"
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end
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end
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+
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## Configuring the environment
|
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+
|
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By default, Breadboard will check `Rails.env` to see what environment your app is in.
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If your using Breadboard in something other than a rails app, you can configure how Breadboard determines your app's environment:
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Breadboard.configure do
|
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env do
|
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# your app environment lookup logic here
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end
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end
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## Mutiple models with the same configuration
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Imagine you have several models that all share the same app configuration. There's two ways to about this configuration:
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+
|
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- Let all of your models inherit from the same parent class and configure the parent class in breadboard
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- use the `models` method
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### Inheritance
|
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|
100
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+
Let's imagine you have three models that should all share the same configuration: `Article`, `Author`, `Comment`. If they all inherited from the same parent,
|
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`Publishing`, then you could simply configure the parent class in breadboard:
|
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+
|
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Breadboard.configure do
|
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model Publishing do
|
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all "http://my.publishing.service.provider"
|
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+
end
|
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end
|
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+
|
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If any of the children needed some configuration override, that will take precedence
|
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+
|
111
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Breadboard.configure do
|
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+
model Publishing do
|
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all "http://my.publishing.service.provider"
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+
end
|
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+
|
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model Article do
|
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production "http://my.article.production.service.provider"
|
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end
|
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+
end
|
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+
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+
### `models` Method
|
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122
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47
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-
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-
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-
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book:
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-
production: http://my.book.production.service.provider
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+
If your `Article`, `Author`, and `Comment` models couldn't all inherit from the same parent, you can still easily provide the same configuration for them
|
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+
via the `models` method:
|
52
125
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|
53
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-
|
126
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+
Breadboard.configure do
|
127
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+
models Article, Author, Comment do
|
128
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+
all "http://my.publishing.service.provider"
|
129
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+
production "http://my.production.publishing.service.provider"
|
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+
end
|
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+
end
|
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,15 +1,15 @@
|
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1
1
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
|
2
2
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name: breadboard
|
3
3
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
|
4
|
-
hash: -
|
4
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+
hash: -3702664328
|
5
5
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prerelease: 6
|
6
6
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segments:
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7
7
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- 1
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8
8
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- 0
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9
9
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- 0
|
10
10
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- alpha
|
11
|
-
-
|
12
|
-
version: 1.0.0.alpha.
|
11
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+
- 2
|
12
|
+
version: 1.0.0.alpha.2
|
13
13
|
platform: ruby
|
14
14
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authors:
|
15
15
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- Matt Parker
|