A simple Redis-based session store for Rails. But why, you ask,
when there's redis-store?
redis-store is a one-size-fits-all solution, and I found it not to work
properly with Rails, mostly due to a problem that seemed to lie in
Rack's Abstract::ID
class. I wanted something that worked, so I
blatantly stole the code from Rails' MemCacheStore
and turned it
into a Redis version. No support for fancy stuff like distributed
storage across several Redis instances. Feel free to add what you
see fit.
This library doesn't offer anything related to caching, and is only suitable for Rails applications. For other frameworks or drop-in support for caching, check out redis-store.
For Rails 3+, adding this to your Gemfile
will do the trick.
gem 'redis-session-store'
See lib/redis-session-store.rb
for a list of valid options.
In your Rails app, throw in an initializer with the following contents:
My::Application.config.session_store :redis_session_store, {
key: 'your_session_key',
redis: {
db: 2,
expire_after: 120.minutes,
key_prefix: 'myapp:session:',
host: 'host', # Redis host name, default is localhost
port: 12345 # Redis port, default is 6379
}
}
If you want to handle cases where Redis is unavailable, a custom
callable handler may be provided as on_redis_down
:
My::Application.config.session_store :redis_session_store, {
# ... other options ...
on_redis_down: ->(e, env, sid) { do_something_will_ya!(e) }
redis: {
# ... redis options ...
}
}
By default the Marshal serializer is used. With Rails 4, you can use JSON as a custom serializer:
:json
- serialize cookie values withJSON
(Requires Rails 4+):marshal
- serialize cookie values withMarshal
(Default):hybrid
- transparently migrate existingMarshal
cookie values toJSON
(Requires Rails 4+)CustomClass
- You can just pass the constant name of any class that responds to.load
and.dump
My::Application.config.session_store :redis_session_store, {
# ... other options ...
serializer: :hybrid
redis: {
# ... redis options ...
}
}
Note: Rails 4 is required for using the :json
and :hybrid
serializers
because the Flash
object doesn't serialize well in 3.2. See Rails #13945 for more info.
If you want to handle cases where the session data cannot be loaded, a
custom callable handler may be provided as on_session_load_error
which
will be given the error and the session ID.
My::Application.config.session_store :redis_session_store, {
# ... other options ...
on_session_load_error: ->(e, sid) { do_something_will_ya!(e) }
redis: {
# ... redis options ...
}
}
Note The session will always be destroyed when it cannot be loaded.
This gem is currently only compatible with Rails 3+. If you need Rails 2 compatibility, be sure to pin to a lower version like so:
gem 'redis-session-store', '< 0.3'
See CONTRIBUTING.md, AUTHORS.md, and LICENSE, respectively.