1 Usage
To apply a template, you need to provide the Rails generator with the location of the template you wish to apply, using -m option. This can either be path to a file or a URL.
$ rails new blog -m ~/template.rb $ rails new blog -m http://example.com/template.rb
You can use the rake task rails:template to apply templates to an existing Rails application. The location of the template needs to be passed in to an environment variable named LOCATION. Again, this can either be path to a file or a URL.
$ rake rails:template LOCATION=~/template.rb $ rake rails:template LOCATION=http://example.com/template.rb
2 Template API
Rails templates API is very self explanatory and easy to understand. Here’s an example of a typical Rails template:
# template.rb run "rm public/index.html" generate(:scaffold, "person name:string") route "root :to => 'people#index'" rake("db:migrate") git :init git :add => "." git :commit => "-a -m 'Initial commit'"
The following sections outlines the primary methods provided by the API:
2.1 gem(name, options = {})
Adds a gem entry for the supplied gem to the generated application’s Gemfile.
For example, if your application depends on the gems bj and nokogiri:
gem "bj" gem "nokogiri"
Please note that this will NOT install the gems for you and you will have to run bundle install to do that.
bundle install
2.2 gem_group(*names, &block)
Wraps gem entries inside a group.
For example, if you want to load rspec-rails only in development and test group:
gem_group :development, :test do gem "rspec-rails" end
2.3 add_source(source, options = {})
Adds the given source to the generated application’s Gemfile.
For example, if you need to source a gem from “http://code.whytheluckystiff.net”:
add_source "http://code.whytheluckystiff.net"
2.4 plugin(name, options = {})
Installs a plugin to the generated application.
Plugin can be installed from Git:
plugin 'authentication', :git => 'git://github.com/foor/bar.git'
You can even install plugins as git submodules:
plugin 'authentication', :git => 'git://github.com/foor/bar.git', :submodule => true
Please note that you need to git :init before you can install a plugin as a submodule.
Or use plain old SVN:
plugin 'usingsvn', :svn => 'svn://example.com/usingsvn/trunk'
2.5 vendor/lib/file/initializer(filename, data = nil, &block)
Adds an initializer to the generated application’s config/initializers directory.
Lets say you like using Object#not_nil? and Object#not_blank?:
initializer 'bloatlol.rb', <<-CODE class Object def not_nil? !nil? end def not_blank? !blank? end end CODE
Similarly lib() creates a file in the lib/ directory and vendor() creates a file in the vendor/ directory.
There is even file(), which accepts a relative path from Rails.root and creates all the directories/file needed:
file 'app/components/foo.rb', <<-CODE class Foo end CODE
That’ll create app/components directory and put foo.rb in there.
2.6 rakefile(filename, data = nil, &block)
Creates a new rake file under lib/tasks with the supplied tasks:
rakefile("bootstrap.rake") do <<-TASK namespace :boot do task :strap do puts "i like boots!" end end TASK end
The above creates lib/tasks/bootstrap.rake with a boot:strap rake task.
2.7 generate(what, args)
Runs the supplied rails generator with given arguments.
generate(:scaffold, "person", "name:string", "address:text", "age:number")
2.8 run(command)
Executes an arbitrary command. Just like the backticks. Let’s say you want to remove the public/index.html file:
run "rm public/index.html"
2.9 rake(command, options = {})
Runs the supplied rake tasks in the Rails application. Let’s say you want to migrate the database:
rake "db:migrate"
You can also run rake tasks with a different Rails environment:
rake "db:migrate", :env => 'production'
2.10 route(routing_code)
This adds a routing entry to the config/routes.rb file. In above steps, we generated a person scaffold and also removed public/index.html. Now to make PeopleController#index as the default page for the application:
route "root :to => 'person#index'"
2.11 inside(dir)
Enables you to run a command from the given directory. For example, if you have a copy of edge rails that you wish to symlink from your new apps, you can do this:
inside('vendor') do run "ln -s ~/commit-rails/rails rails" end
2.12 ask(question)
ask() gives you a chance to get some feedback from the user and use it in your templates. Lets say you want your user to name the new shiny library you’re adding:
lib_name = ask("What do you want to call the shiny library ?") lib_name << ".rb" unless lib_name.index(".rb") lib lib_name, <<-CODE class Shiny end CODE
2.13 yes?(question) or no?(question)
These methods let you ask questions from templates and decide the flow based on the user’s answer. Lets say you want to freeze rails only if the user want to:
rake("rails:freeze:gems") if yes?("Freeze rails gems ?") no?(question) acts just the opposite.
2.14 git(:command)
Rails templates let you run any git command:
git :init git :add => "." git :commit => "-a -m 'Initial commit'"
Feedback
You're encouraged to help improve the quality of this guide.
If you see any typos or factual errors you are confident to patch, please clone docrails and push the change yourself. That branch of Rails has public write access. Commits are still reviewed, but that happens after you've submitted your contribution. docrails is cross-merged with master periodically.
You may also find incomplete content, or stuff that is not up to date. Please do add any missing documentation for master. Check the Ruby on Rails Guides Guidelines for style and conventions.
If for whatever reason you spot something to fix but cannot patch it yourself, please open an issue.
And last but not least, any kind of discussion regarding Ruby on Rails documentation is very welcome in the rubyonrails-docs mailing list.