rails 4.1.14.2 → 4.2.11.1
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- checksums.yaml +5 -5
- data/README.md +12 -10
- data/guides/CHANGELOG.md +34 -37
- data/guides/Rakefile +21 -6
- data/guides/assets/images/getting_started/article_with_comments.png +0 -0
- data/guides/assets/javascripts/guides.js +6 -0
- data/guides/assets/stylesheets/main.css +4 -1
- data/guides/bug_report_templates/action_controller_gem.rb +1 -1
- data/guides/bug_report_templates/action_controller_master.rb +1 -0
- data/guides/bug_report_templates/active_record_gem.rb +1 -1
- data/guides/bug_report_templates/generic_gem.rb +1 -1
- data/guides/rails_guides/helpers.rb +1 -1
- data/guides/rails_guides/levenshtein.rb +27 -21
- data/guides/rails_guides/markdown/renderer.rb +1 -1
- data/guides/rails_guides/markdown.rb +11 -7
- data/guides/rails_guides.rb +2 -2
- data/guides/source/2_2_release_notes.md +1 -1
- data/guides/source/2_3_release_notes.md +4 -4
- data/guides/source/3_0_release_notes.md +8 -8
- data/guides/source/3_1_release_notes.md +5 -2
- data/guides/source/3_2_release_notes.md +6 -3
- data/guides/source/4_0_release_notes.md +6 -3
- data/guides/source/4_1_release_notes.md +5 -6
- data/guides/source/4_2_release_notes.md +877 -0
- data/guides/source/_license.html.erb +1 -1
- data/guides/source/_welcome.html.erb +6 -8
- data/guides/source/action_controller_overview.md +25 -8
- data/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.md +97 -29
- data/guides/source/action_view_overview.md +142 -183
- data/guides/source/active_job_basics.md +339 -0
- data/guides/source/active_model_basics.md +371 -17
- data/guides/source/active_record_basics.md +25 -24
- data/guides/source/active_record_callbacks.md +12 -9
- data/guides/source/{migrations.md → active_record_migrations.md} +95 -220
- data/guides/source/active_record_postgresql.md +433 -0
- data/guides/source/active_record_querying.md +264 -268
- data/guides/source/active_record_validations.md +23 -13
- data/guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md +114 -75
- data/guides/source/active_support_instrumentation.md +10 -18
- data/guides/source/api_documentation_guidelines.md +63 -17
- data/guides/source/asset_pipeline.md +258 -119
- data/guides/source/association_basics.md +96 -80
- data/guides/source/autoloading_and_reloading_constants.md +1311 -0
- data/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md +32 -7
- data/guides/source/command_line.md +52 -30
- data/guides/source/configuring.md +161 -33
- data/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md +198 -114
- data/guides/source/credits.html.erb +2 -2
- data/guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md +440 -286
- data/guides/source/development_dependencies_install.md +47 -36
- data/guides/source/documents.yaml +19 -7
- data/guides/source/engines.md +189 -189
- data/guides/source/form_helpers.md +79 -56
- data/guides/source/generators.md +24 -11
- data/guides/source/getting_started.md +359 -219
- data/guides/source/i18n.md +110 -66
- data/guides/source/index.html.erb +1 -0
- data/guides/source/initialization.md +109 -62
- data/guides/source/layout.html.erb +5 -11
- data/guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md +26 -26
- data/guides/source/maintenance_policy.md +6 -3
- data/guides/source/nested_model_forms.md +7 -4
- data/guides/source/plugins.md +27 -27
- data/guides/source/rails_application_templates.md +21 -3
- data/guides/source/rails_on_rack.md +8 -5
- data/guides/source/routing.md +113 -73
- data/guides/source/ruby_on_rails_guides_guidelines.md +11 -12
- data/guides/source/security.md +39 -33
- data/guides/source/testing.md +199 -119
- data/guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md +287 -29
- data/guides/source/working_with_javascript_in_rails.md +19 -17
- data/guides/w3c_validator.rb +2 -0
- metadata +40 -95
- data/guides/code/getting_started/Gemfile +0 -40
- data/guides/code/getting_started/Gemfile.lock +0 -125
- data/guides/code/getting_started/README.rdoc +0 -28
- data/guides/code/getting_started/Rakefile +0 -6
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/javascripts/application.js +0 -15
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/javascripts/comments.js.coffee +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/javascripts/posts.js.coffee +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/javascripts/welcome.js.coffee +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/stylesheets/application.css +0 -13
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/stylesheets/comments.css.scss +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/stylesheets/posts.css.scss +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/assets/stylesheets/welcome.css.scss +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/controllers/application_controller.rb +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/controllers/comments_controller.rb +0 -23
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/controllers/posts_controller.rb +0 -53
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/controllers/welcome_controller.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/helpers/application_helper.rb +0 -2
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/helpers/comments_helper.rb +0 -2
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/helpers/posts_helper.rb +0 -2
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/helpers/welcome_helper.rb +0 -2
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/models/comment.rb +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/models/post.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/comments/_comment.html.erb +0 -15
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/comments/_form.html.erb +0 -13
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/layouts/application.html.erb +0 -14
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/posts/_form.html.erb +0 -27
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/posts/edit.html.erb +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/posts/index.html.erb +0 -21
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/posts/new.html.erb +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/posts/show.html.erb +0 -18
- data/guides/code/getting_started/app/views/welcome/index.html.erb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/bin/bundle +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/bin/rails +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/bin/rake +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/application.rb +0 -18
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/boot.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/database.yml +0 -25
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/environment.rb +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/environments/development.rb +0 -30
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/environments/production.rb +0 -80
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/environments/test.rb +0 -36
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/backtrace_silencers.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/filter_parameter_logging.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/inflections.rb +0 -16
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/locale.rb +0 -9
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/mime_types.rb +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/secret_token.rb +0 -12
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/session_store.rb +0 -3
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/initializers/wrap_parameters.rb +0 -14
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/locales/en.yml +0 -23
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config/routes.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/config.ru +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/db/migrate/20130122042648_create_posts.rb +0 -10
- data/guides/code/getting_started/db/migrate/20130122045842_create_comments.rb +0 -11
- data/guides/code/getting_started/db/schema.rb +0 -33
- data/guides/code/getting_started/db/seeds.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/public/404.html +0 -60
- data/guides/code/getting_started/public/422.html +0 -60
- data/guides/code/getting_started/public/500.html +0 -59
- data/guides/code/getting_started/public/favicon.ico +0 -0
- data/guides/code/getting_started/public/robots.txt +0 -5
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/controllers/comments_controller_test.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/controllers/posts_controller_test.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/controllers/welcome_controller_test.rb +0 -9
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/fixtures/comments.yml +0 -11
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/fixtures/posts.yml +0 -9
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/helpers/comments_helper_test.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/helpers/posts_helper_test.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/helpers/welcome_helper_test.rb +0 -4
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/models/comment_test.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/models/post_test.rb +0 -7
- data/guides/code/getting_started/test/test_helper.rb +0 -12
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### Page Caching
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Page caching is a Rails mechanism which allows the request for a generated page to be fulfilled by the webserver (i.e. Apache or
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Page caching is a Rails mechanism which allows the request for a generated page to be fulfilled by the webserver (i.e. Apache or NGINX), without ever having to go through the Rails stack at all. Obviously, this is super-fast. Unfortunately, it can't be applied to every situation (such as pages that need authentication) and since the webserver is literally just serving a file from the filesystem, cache expiration is an issue that needs to be dealt with.
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INFO: Page Caching has been removed from Rails 4. See the [actionpack-page_caching gem](https://github.com/rails/actionpack-page_caching). See [DHH's key-based cache expiration overview](http://
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INFO: Page Caching has been removed from Rails 4. See the [actionpack-page_caching gem](https://github.com/rails/actionpack-page_caching). See [DHH's key-based cache expiration overview](http://signalvnoise.com/posts/3113-how-key-based-cache-expiration-works) for the newly-preferred method.
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### Action Caching
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Page Caching cannot be used for actions that have before filters - for example, pages that require authentication. This is where Action Caching comes in. Action Caching works like Page Caching except the incoming web request hits the Rails stack so that before filters can be run on it before the cache is served. This allows authentication and other restrictions to be run while still serving the result of the output from a cached copy.
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INFO: Action Caching has been removed from Rails 4. See the [actionpack-action_caching gem](https://github.com/rails/actionpack-action_caching). See [DHH's key-based cache expiration overview](http://
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INFO: Action Caching has been removed from Rails 4. See the [actionpack-action_caching gem](https://github.com/rails/actionpack-action_caching). See [DHH's key-based cache expiration overview](http://signalvnoise.com/posts/3113-how-key-based-cache-expiration-works) for the newly-preferred method.
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### Fragment Caching
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<% end %>
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```
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If you want to cache a fragment under certain condition you can use `cache_if` or `cache_unless`
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If you want to cache a fragment under certain condition you can use `cache_if` or `cache_unless`
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```erb
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<% cache_if (condition, cache_key_for_products) do %>
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It's called "Russian Doll Caching" because it nests multiple fragments. The advantage is that if a single product is updated, all the other inner fragments can be reused when regenerating the outer fragment.
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### Low-Level Caching
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Sometimes you need to cache a particular value or query result, instead of caching view fragments. Rails caching mechanism works great for storing __any__ kind of information.
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The most efficient way to implement low-level caching is using the `Rails.cache.fetch` method. This method does both reading and writing to the cache. When passed only a single argument, the key is fetched and value from the cache is returned. If a block is passed, the result of the block will be cached to the given key and the result is returned.
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Consider the following example. An application has a `Product` model with an instance method that looks up the product’s price on a competing website. The data returned by this method would be perfect for low-level caching:
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```ruby
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def competing_price
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NOTE: Notice that in this example we used `cache_key` method, so the resulting cache-key will be something like `products/233-20140225082222765838000/competing_price`. `cache_key` generates a string based on the model’s `id` and `updated_at` attributes. This is a common convention and has the benefit of invalidating the cache whenever the product is updated. In general, when you use low-level caching for instance level information, you need to generate a cache key.
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### SQL Caching
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Query caching is a Rails feature that caches the result set returned by each query so that if Rails encounters the same query again for that request, it will use the cached result set as opposed to running the query against the database again.
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Cache Stores
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------------
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Rails provides different stores for the cached data created by **action** and **fragment** caches.
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TIP: Page caches are always stored on disk.
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If you don't have any special response processing and are using the default rendering mechanism (i.e. you're not using `respond_to` or calling render yourself) then you've got an easy helper in `fresh_when`:
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```ruby
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class ProductsController < ApplicationController
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* How to generate models, controllers, database migrations, and unit tests.
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* How to start a development server.
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* How to experiment with objects through an interactive shell.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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$ cd commandsapp
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=> Booting WEBrick
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=> Rails 4.
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=> Rails 4.2.0 application starting in development on http://localhost:3000
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[2013-08-07 02:00:01] INFO WEBrick 1.3.1
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The `-b` option binds Rails to the specified IP, by default it is localhost. You can run a server as a daemon by passing a `-d` option.
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### `rails generate`
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...
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`rails generate controller CreditCards open debit credit close`
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Credit card controller with URLs like /
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Views: app/views/credit_cards/debit.html.erb [...]
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The controller generator is expecting parameters in the form of `generate controller ControllerName action1 action2`. Let's make a `Greetings` controller with an action of **hello**, which will say something nice to us.
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The generator checks that there exist the directories for models, controllers, helpers, layouts, functional and unit tests, stylesheets, creates the views, controller, model and database migration for HighScore (creating the `high_scores` table and fields), takes care of the route for the **resource**, and new tests for everything.
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The migration requires that we **migrate**, that is, run some Ruby code (living in that `20130717151933_create_high_scores.rb`) to modify the schema of our database. Which database? The
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The migration requires that we **migrate**, that is, run some Ruby code (living in that `20130717151933_create_high_scores.rb`) to modify the schema of our database. Which database? The SQLite3 database that Rails will create for you when we run the `rake db:migrate` command. We'll talk more about Rake in-depth in a little while.
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Any modifications you make will be rolled back on exit
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#### The app and helper objects
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Middleware Rack::Sendfile, ActionDispatch::Static, Rack::Lock, #<ActiveSupport::Cache::Strategy::LocalCache::Middleware:0x007ffd131a7c88>, Rack::Runtime, Rack::MethodOverride, ActionDispatch::RequestId, Rails::Rack::Logger, ActionDispatch::ShowExceptions, ActionDispatch::DebugExceptions, ActionDispatch::RemoteIp, ActionDispatch::Reloader, ActionDispatch::Callbacks, ActiveRecord::Migration::CheckPending, ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionManagement, ActiveRecord::QueryCache, ActionDispatch::Cookies, ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore, ActionDispatch::Flash, ActionDispatch::ParamsParser, Rack::Head, Rack::ConditionalGet, Rack::ETag
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You can precompile the assets in `app/assets` using `rake assets:precompile`, and remove older compiled assets using `rake assets:clean`. The `assets:clean` task allows for rolling deploys that may still be linking to an old asset while the new assets are being built.
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`rake notes` will search through your code for comments beginning with FIXME, OPTIMIZE or TODO. The search is done in files with extension `.builder`, `.rb`, `.rake`, `.yml`, `.yaml`, `.ruby`, `.css`, `.js` and `.erb` for both default and custom annotations.
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(in /home/foobar/commandsapp)
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app/models/
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The `Rails.root/tmp` directory is, like the *nix /tmp directory, the holding place for temporary files like sessions (if you're using a file store for sessions), process id files, and cached actions.
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The `tmp:` namespaced tasks will help you clear and create the `Rails.root/tmp` directory:
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This is a setting for Rails itself. If you want to pass settings to individual Rails components, you can do so via the same `config` object in `config/application.rb`:
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* `config.asset_host` sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets, or when you want to work around the concurrency constraints
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* `config.asset_host` sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets, or when you want to work around the concurrency constraints built-in in browsers using different domain aliases. Shorter version of `config.action_controller.asset_host`.
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* `config.autoload_once_paths` accepts an array of paths from which Rails will autoload constants that won't be wiped per request. Relevant if `config.cache_classes` is false, which is the case in development mode by default. Otherwise, all autoloading happens only once. All elements of this array must also be in `autoload_paths`. Default is an empty array.
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* `config.cache_classes` controls whether or not application classes and modules should be reloaded on each request. Defaults to false in development mode, and true in test and production modes.
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* `config.dependency_loading` is a flag that allows you to disable constant autoloading setting it to false. It only has effect if `config.cache_classes` is true, which it is by default in production mode.
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* `config.log_tags` accepts a list of methods that the `request` object responds to. This makes it easy to tag log lines with debug information like subdomain and request id - both very helpful in debugging multi-user production applications.
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* `config.reload_classes_only_on_change` enables or disables reloading of classes only when tracked files change. By default tracks everything on autoload paths and is set to true. If `config.cache_classes` is true, this option is ignored.
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* `
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* `secrets.secret_key_base` is used for specifying a key which allows sessions for the application to be verified against a known secure key to prevent tampering. Applications get `secrets.secret_key_base` initialized to a random key present in `config/secrets.yml`.
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* `config.
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* `config.serve_static_files` configures Rails itself to serve static files. Defaults to true, but in the production environment is turned off as the server software (e.g. NGINX or Apache) used to run the application should serve static assets instead. Unlike the default setting set this to true when running (absolutely not recommended!) or testing your app in production mode using WEBrick. Otherwise you won't be able use page caching and requests for files that exist regularly under the public directory will anyway hit your Rails app.
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* `config.session_store` is usually set up in `config/initializers/session_store.rb` and specifies what class to use to store the session. Possible values are `:cookie_store` which is the default, `:mem_cache_store`, and `:disabled`. The last one tells Rails not to deal with sessions. Custom session stores can also be specified:
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* `config.assets.raise_runtime_errors` Set this flag to `true` to enable additional runtime error checking. Recommended in `config/environments/development.rb` to minimize unexpected behavior when deploying to `production`.
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* `config.assets.css_compressor` defines the CSS compressor to use. It is set by default by `sass-rails`. The unique alternative value at the moment is `:yui`, which uses the `yui-compressor` gem.
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* `config.assets.
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* `config.assets.manifest` defines the full path to be used for the asset precompiler's manifest file. Defaults to a file named `manifest-<random>.json` in the `config.assets.prefix` directory within the public folder.
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* `config.assets.digest` enables the use of MD5 fingerprints in asset names. Set to `true` by default in `production.rb` and `development.rb`.
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Every Rails application comes with a standard set of middleware which it uses in this order in the development environment:
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* `ActionDispatch::SSL` forces every request to be under HTTPS protocol. Will be available if `config.force_ssl` is set to `true`. Options passed to this can be configured by using `config.ssl_options`.
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* `ActionDispatch::Static` is used to serve static assets. Disabled if `config.
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* `ActionDispatch::Static` is used to serve static assets. Disabled if `config.serve_static_files` is `false`.
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* `Rack::Lock` wraps the app in mutex so it can only be called by a single thread at a time. Only enabled when `config.cache_classes` is `false`.
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* `Rack::Head` converts HEAD requests to GET requests and serves them as so.
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Besides these usual middleware, you can add your own by using the `config.middleware.use` method:
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This will put the `Magical::Unicorns` middleware on the end of the stack. You can use `insert_before` if you wish to add a middleware before another.
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Middlewares can also be completely swapped out and replaced with others:
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* `config.active_record.partial_writes` is a boolean value and controls whether or not partial writes are used (i.e. whether updates only set attributes that are dirty). Note that when using partial writes, you should also use optimistic locking `config.active_record.lock_optimistically` since concurrent updates may write attributes based on a possibly stale read state. The default value is `true`.
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* `config.active_record.attribute_types_cached_by_default` sets the attribute types that `ActiveRecord::AttributeMethods` will cache by default on reads. The default is `[:datetime, :timestamp, :time, :date]`.
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* `config.active_record.maintain_test_schema` is a boolean value which controls whether Active Record should try to keep your test database schema up-to-date with `db/schema.rb` (or `db/structure.sql`) when you run your tests. The default is true.
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* `config.action_controller.action_on_unpermitted_parameters` enables logging or raising an exception if parameters that are not explicitly permitted are found. Set to `:log` or `:raise` to enable. The default value is `:log` in development and test environments, and `false` in all other environments.
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* `config.action_controller.always_permitted_parameters` sets a list of whitelisted parameters that are permitted by default. The default values are `['controller', 'action']`.
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### Configuring Action Dispatch
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* `config.action_dispatch.session_store` sets the name of the store for session data. The default is `:cookie_store`; other valid options include `:active_record_store`, `:mem_cache_store` or the name of your own custom class.
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* `config.action_dispatch.rescue_responses` configures what exceptions are assigned to an HTTP status. It accepts a hash and you can specify pairs of exception/status. By default, this is defined as:
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```ruby
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config.action_dispatch.rescue_responses = {
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'ActionController::NotImplemented' => :not_implemented,
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'ActionController::UnknownFormat' => :not_acceptable,
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'ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken' => :unprocessable_entity,
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'ActionController::InvalidCrossOriginRequest' => :unprocessable_entity,
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'ActionDispatch::ParamsParser::ParseError' => :bad_request,
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'ActionController::BadRequest' => :bad_request,
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'ActionController::ParameterMissing' => :bad_request,
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'ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError' => :conflict,
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'ActiveRecord::RecordNotSaved' => :unprocessable_entity
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|
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```
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Any exceptions that are not configured will be mapped to 500 Internal Server Error.
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* `ActionDispatch::Callbacks.before` takes a block of code to run before the request.
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* `ActionDispatch::Callbacks.to_prepare` takes a block to run after `ActionDispatch::Callbacks.before`, but before the request. Runs for every request in `development` mode, but only once for `production` or environments with `cache_classes` set to `true`.
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* `config.action_view.embed_authenticity_token_in_remote_forms` allows you to set the default behavior for `authenticity_token` in forms with `:remote => true`. By default it's set to false, which means that remote forms will not include `authenticity_token`, which is helpful when you're fragment-caching the form. Remote forms get the authenticity from the `meta` tag, so embedding is unnecessary unless you support browsers without JavaScript. In such case you can either pass `:authenticity_token => true` as a form option or set this config setting to `true`
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* `config.action_view.prefix_partial_path_with_controller_namespace` determines whether or not partials are looked up from a subdirectory in templates rendered from namespaced controllers. For example, consider a controller named `Admin::
|
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+
* `config.action_view.prefix_partial_path_with_controller_namespace` determines whether or not partials are looked up from a subdirectory in templates rendered from namespaced controllers. For example, consider a controller named `Admin::ArticlesController` which renders this template:
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```erb
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-
<%= render @
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+
<%= render @article %>
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```
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-
The default setting is `true`, which uses the partial at `/admin/
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The default setting is `true`, which uses the partial at `/admin/articles/_article.erb`. Setting the value to `false` would render `/articles/_article.erb`, which is the same behavior as rendering from a non-namespaced controller such as `ArticlesController`.
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* `config.action_view.raise_on_missing_translations` determines whether an error should be raised for missing translations
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@@ -451,12 +475,26 @@ There are a number of settings available on `config.action_mailer`:
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config.action_mailer.interceptors = ["MailInterceptor"]
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```
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+
* `config.action_mailer.preview_path` specifies the location of mailer previews.
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+
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+
```ruby
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+
config.action_mailer.preview_path = "#{Rails.root}/lib/mailer_previews"
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+
```
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+
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+
* `config.action_mailer.show_previews` enable or disable mailer previews. By default this is `true` in development.
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+
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+
```ruby
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+
config.action_mailer.show_previews = false
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+
```
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+
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### Configuring Active Support
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There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:
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* `config.active_support.bare` enables or disables the loading of `active_support/all` when booting Rails. Defaults to `nil`, which means `active_support/all` is loaded.
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* `config.active_support.test_order` sets the order that test cases are executed. Possible values are `:sorted` and `:random`. Currently defaults to `:sorted`. In Rails 5.0, the default will be changed to `:random` instead.
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+
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* `config.active_support.escape_html_entities_in_json` enables or disables the escaping of HTML entities in JSON serialization. Defaults to `false`.
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* `config.active_support.use_standard_json_time_format` enables or disables serializing dates to ISO 8601 format. Defaults to `true`.
|
@@ -552,7 +590,7 @@ development:
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$ echo $DATABASE_URL
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postgresql://localhost/my_database
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-
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.
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+
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
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{"development"=>{"adapter"=>"postgresql", "host"=>"localhost", "database"=>"my_database"}}
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```
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@@ -569,7 +607,7 @@ development:
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$ echo $DATABASE_URL
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postgresql://localhost/my_database
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|
|
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-
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.
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+
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
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|
{"development"=>{"adapter"=>"postgresql", "host"=>"localhost", "database"=>"my_database", "pool"=>5}}
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|
```
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@@ -585,7 +623,7 @@ development:
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$ echo $DATABASE_URL
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postgresql://localhost/my_database
|
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|
|
588
|
-
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.
|
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|
+
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
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|
{"development"=>{"adapter"=>"sqlite3", "database"=>"NOT_my_database"}}
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|
```
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|
@@ -644,11 +682,9 @@ development:
|
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|
encoding: unicode
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database: blog_development
|
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pool: 5
|
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|
-
username: blog
|
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-
password:
|
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|
```
|
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|
|
651
|
-
Prepared Statements can be
|
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|
+
Prepared Statements are enabled by default on PostgreSQL. You can be disable prepared statements by setting `prepared_statements` to `false`:
|
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|
|
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|
```yaml
|
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|
production:
|
@@ -656,6 +692,16 @@ production:
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|
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|
prepared_statements: false
|
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|
```
|
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|
|
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|
+
If enabled, Active Record will create up to `1000` prepared statements per database connection by default. To modify this behavior you can set `statement_limit` to a different value:
|
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|
+
|
697
|
+
```
|
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|
+
production:
|
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|
+
adapter: postgresql
|
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|
+
statement_limit: 200
|
701
|
+
```
|
702
|
+
|
703
|
+
The more prepared statements in use: the more memory your database will require. If your PostgreSQL database is hitting memory limits, try lowering `statement_limit` or disabling prepared statements.
|
704
|
+
|
659
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|
#### Configuring an SQLite3 Database for JRuby Platform
|
660
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|
|
661
707
|
If you choose to use SQLite3 and are using JRuby, your `config/database.yml` will look a little different. Here's the development section:
|
@@ -721,13 +767,47 @@ Rails will now prepend "/app1" when generating links.
|
|
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|
|
722
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|
#### Using Passenger
|
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769
|
|
724
|
-
Passenger makes it easy to run your application in a subdirectory. You can find
|
725
|
-
the relevant configuration in the
|
726
|
-
[passenger manual](http://www.modrails.com/documentation/Users%20guide%20Apache.html#deploying_rails_to_sub_uri).
|
770
|
+
Passenger makes it easy to run your application in a subdirectory. You can find the relevant configuration in the [Passenger manual](http://www.modrails.com/documentation/Users%20guide%20Apache.html#deploying_rails_to_sub_uri).
|
727
771
|
|
728
772
|
#### Using a Reverse Proxy
|
729
773
|
|
730
|
-
|
774
|
+
Deploying your application using a reverse proxy has definite advantages over traditional deploys. They allow you to have more control over your server by layering the components required by your application.
|
775
|
+
|
776
|
+
Many modern web servers can be used as a proxy server to balance third-party elements such as caching servers or application servers.
|
777
|
+
|
778
|
+
One such application server you can use is [Unicorn](http://unicorn.bogomips.org/) to run behind a reverse proxy.
|
779
|
+
|
780
|
+
In this case, you would need to configure the proxy server (NGINX, Apache, etc) to accept connections from your application server (Unicorn). By default Unicorn will listen for TCP connections on port 8080, but you can change the port or configure it to use sockets instead.
|
781
|
+
|
782
|
+
You can find more information in the [Unicorn readme](http://unicorn.bogomips.org/README.html) and understand the [philosophy](http://unicorn.bogomips.org/PHILOSOPHY.html) behind it.
|
783
|
+
|
784
|
+
Once you've configured the application server, you must proxy requests to it by configuring your web server appropriately. For example your NGINX config may include:
|
785
|
+
|
786
|
+
```
|
787
|
+
upstream application_server {
|
788
|
+
server 0.0.0.0:8080
|
789
|
+
}
|
790
|
+
|
791
|
+
server {
|
792
|
+
listen 80;
|
793
|
+
server_name localhost;
|
794
|
+
|
795
|
+
root /root/path/to/your_app/public;
|
796
|
+
|
797
|
+
try_files $uri/index.html $uri.html @app;
|
798
|
+
|
799
|
+
location @app {
|
800
|
+
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
|
801
|
+
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
|
802
|
+
proxy_redirect off;
|
803
|
+
proxy_pass http://application_server;
|
804
|
+
}
|
805
|
+
|
806
|
+
# some other configuration
|
807
|
+
}
|
808
|
+
```
|
809
|
+
|
810
|
+
Be sure to read the [NGINX documentation](http://nginx.org/en/docs/) for the most up-to-date information.
|
731
811
|
|
732
812
|
#### Considerations when deploying to a subdirectory
|
733
813
|
|
@@ -939,4 +1019,52 @@ ActiveRecord::ConnectionTimeoutError - could not obtain a database connection wi
|
|
939
1019
|
If you get the above error, you might want to increase the size of connection
|
940
1020
|
pool by incrementing the `pool` option in `database.yml`
|
941
1021
|
|
942
|
-
NOTE.
|
1022
|
+
NOTE. If you are running in a multi-threaded environment, there could be a chance that several threads may be accessing multiple connections simultaneously. So depending on your current request load, you could very well have multiple threads contending for a limited amount of connections.
|
1023
|
+
|
1024
|
+
|
1025
|
+
Custom configuration
|
1026
|
+
--------------------
|
1027
|
+
|
1028
|
+
You can configure your own code through the Rails configuration object with custom configuration under the `config.x` property. It works like this:
|
1029
|
+
|
1030
|
+
```ruby
|
1031
|
+
config.x.payment_processing.schedule = :daily
|
1032
|
+
config.x.payment_processing.retries = 3
|
1033
|
+
config.x.super_debugger = true
|
1034
|
+
```
|
1035
|
+
|
1036
|
+
These configuration points are then available through the configuration object:
|
1037
|
+
|
1038
|
+
```ruby
|
1039
|
+
Rails.configuration.x.payment_processing.schedule # => :daily
|
1040
|
+
Rails.configuration.x.payment_processing.retries # => 3
|
1041
|
+
Rails.configuration.x.super_debugger # => true
|
1042
|
+
Rails.configuration.x.super_debugger.not_set # => nil
|
1043
|
+
```
|
1044
|
+
|
1045
|
+
You can also use Rails::Application.config_for to load whole configuration files:
|
1046
|
+
|
1047
|
+
```ruby
|
1048
|
+
# config/payment.yml:
|
1049
|
+
production:
|
1050
|
+
environment: production
|
1051
|
+
merchant_id: production_merchant_id
|
1052
|
+
public_key: production_public_key
|
1053
|
+
private_key: production_private_key
|
1054
|
+
development:
|
1055
|
+
environment: sandbox
|
1056
|
+
merchant_id: development_merchant_id
|
1057
|
+
public_key: development_public_key
|
1058
|
+
private_key: development_private_key
|
1059
|
+
|
1060
|
+
# config/application.rb
|
1061
|
+
module MyApp
|
1062
|
+
class Application < Rails::Application
|
1063
|
+
config.x.payment = config_for(:payment)
|
1064
|
+
end
|
1065
|
+
end
|
1066
|
+
```
|
1067
|
+
|
1068
|
+
```ruby
|
1069
|
+
Rails.configuration.x.payment['merchant_id'] # => production_merchant_id or development_merchant_id
|
1070
|
+
```
|