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This guide covers the configuration and initialization features available to Rails applications.
After reading this guide, you will know:
- How to adjust the behavior of your Rails applications.
- How to add additional code to be run at application start time.
Rails offers four standard spots to place initialization code:
config/application.rb
- Environment-specific configuration files
- Initializers
- After-initializers
In the rare event that your application needs to run some code before Rails itself is loaded, put it above the call to require "rails/all"
in config/application.rb
.
In general, the work of configuring Rails means configuring the components of Rails, as well as configuring Rails itself. The configuration file config/application.rb
and environment-specific configuration files (such as config/environments/production.rb
) allow you to specify the various settings that you want to pass down to all of the components.
For example, you could add this setting to config/application.rb
file:
config.time_zone = 'Central Time (US & Canada)'
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
:
config.active_record.schema_format = :ruby
Rails will use that particular setting to configure Active Record.
WARNING: Use the public configuration methods over calling directly to the associated class. e.g. Rails.application.config.action_mailer.options
instead of ActionMailer::Base.options
.
NOTE: If you need to apply configuration directly to a class, use a lazy load hook in an initializer to avoid autoloading the class before initialization has completed. This will break because autoloading during initialization cannot be safely repeated when the app reloads.
config.load_defaults
loads default configuration values for a target version and all versions prior. For example, config.load_defaults 6.1
will load defaults for all versions up to and including version 6.1.
Below are the default values associated with each target version. In cases of conflicting values, newer versions take precedence over older versions.
config.action_dispatch.default_headers
:{ "X-Frame-Options" => "SAMEORIGIN", "X-XSS-Protection" => "0", "X-Content-Type-Options" => "nosniff", "X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies" => "none", "Referrer-Policy" => "strict-origin-when-cross-origin" }
config.add_autoload_paths_to_load_path
:false
config.active_support.default_message_encryptor_serializer
::json
config.active_support.default_message_verifier_serializer
::json
config.action_controller.allow_deprecated_parameters_hash_equality
:false
config.log_file_size
:100.megabytes
config.action_controller.raise_on_open_redirects
:true
config.action_view.button_to_generates_button_tag
:true
config.action_view.apply_stylesheet_media_default
:false
config.active_support.key_generator_hash_digest_class
:OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256
config.active_support.hash_digest_class
:OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256
config.active_support.cache_format_version
:7.0
config.active_support.remove_deprecated_time_with_zone_name
:true
config.active_support.executor_around_test_case
:true
config.active_support.use_rfc4122_namespaced_uuids
:true
config.active_support.disable_to_s_conversion
:true
config.action_dispatch.return_only_request_media_type_on_content_type
:false
config.action_dispatch.cookies_serializer
::json
config.action_mailer.smtp_timeout
:5
config.active_storage.video_preview_arguments
:"-vf 'select=eq(n\\,0)+eq(key\\,1)+gt(scene\\,0.015),loop=loop=-1:size=2,trim=start_frame=1' -frames:v 1 -f image2"
config.active_storage.multiple_file_field_include_hidden
:true
config.active_record.automatic_scope_inversing
:true
config.active_record.verify_foreign_keys_for_fixtures
:true
config.active_record.partial_inserts
:false
config.active_storage.variant_processor
::vips
config.action_controller.wrap_parameters_by_default
:true
config.action_dispatch.default_headers
:{ "X-Frame-Options" => "SAMEORIGIN", "X-XSS-Protection" => "0", "X-Content-Type-Options" => "nosniff", "X-Download-Options" => "noopen", "X-Permitted-Cross-Domain-Policies" => "none", "Referrer-Policy" => "strict-origin-when-cross-origin" }
config.active_record.has_many_inversing
:true
config.active_record.legacy_connection_handling
:false
config.active_storage.track_variants
:true
config.active_storage.queues.analysis
:nil
config.active_storage.queues.purge
:nil
config.action_mailbox.queues.incineration
:nil
config.action_mailbox.queues.routing
:nil
config.action_mailer.deliver_later_queue_name
:nil
config.active_job.retry_jitter
:0.15
config.action_dispatch.cookies_same_site_protection
::lax
config.action_dispatch.ssl_default_redirect_status
=308
ActiveSupport.utc_to_local_returns_utc_offset_times
:true
config.action_controller.urlsafe_csrf_tokens
:true
config.action_view.form_with_generates_remote_forms
:false
config.action_view.preload_links_header
:true
config.action_view.default_enforce_utf8
:false
config.action_dispatch.use_cookies_with_metadata
:true
config.action_mailer.delivery_job
:"ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob"
config.active_storage.queues.analysis
::active_storage_analysis
config.active_storage.queues.purge
::active_storage_purge
config.active_storage.replace_on_assign_to_many
:true
config.active_record.collection_cache_versioning
:true
config.active_record.cache_versioning
:true
config.action_dispatch.use_authenticated_cookie_encryption
:true
config.active_support.use_authenticated_message_encryption
:true
config.active_support.hash_digest_class
:OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1
config.action_controller.default_protect_from_forgery
:true
config.action_view.form_with_generates_ids
:true
config.assets.unknown_asset_fallback
:false
config.action_view.form_with_generates_remote_forms
:true
config.action_controller.per_form_csrf_tokens
:true
config.action_controller.forgery_protection_origin_check
:true
ActiveSupport.to_time_preserves_timezone
:true
config.active_record.belongs_to_required_by_default
:true
config.ssl_options
:{ hsts: { subdomains: true } }
The following configuration methods are to be called on a Rails::Railtie
object, such as a subclass of Rails::Engine
or Rails::Application
.
Takes a block which will be run after Rails has finished initializing the application. That includes the initialization of the framework itself, engines, and all the application's initializers in config/initializers
. Note that this block will be run for rake tasks. Useful for configuring values set up by other initializers:
config.after_initialize do
ActionView::Base.sanitized_allowed_tags.delete 'div'
end
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
.
Accepts an array of paths from which Rails will autoload constants that won't be wiped per request. Relevant if reloading is enabled, which it is by default in the development
environment. Otherwise, all autoloading happens only once. All elements of this array must also be in autoload_paths
. Default is an empty array.
Accepts an array of paths from which Rails will autoload constants. Default is an empty array. Since Rails 6, it is not recommended to adjust this. See Autoloading and Reloading Constants.
Says whether autoload paths have to be added to $LOAD_PATH
. It is recommended to be set to false
in :zeitwerk
mode early, in config/application.rb
. Zeitwerk uses absolute paths internally, and applications running in :zeitwerk
mode do not need require_dependency
, so models, controllers, jobs, etc. do not need to be in $LOAD_PATH
. Setting this to false
saves Ruby from checking these directories when resolving require
calls with relative paths, and saves Bootsnap work and RAM, since it does not need to build an index for them.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
7.1 | false |
If config.enable_reloading
is true, application classes and modules are reloaded in between web requests if they change. Defaults to true
in the development
environment, and false
in the production
environment.
The predicate config.reloading_enabled?
is also defined.
Old setting equivalent to !config.enable_reloading
. Supported for backwards compatibility.
Sets the default beginning of week for the
application. Accepts a valid day of week as a symbol (e.g. :monday
).
Configures which cache store to use for Rails caching. Options include one of the symbols :memory_store
, :file_store
, :mem_cache_store
, :null_store
, :redis_cache_store
, or an object that implements the cache API. Defaults to :file_store
. See Cache Stores for per-store configuration options.
Specifies whether or not to use ANSI color codes when logging information. Defaults to true
.
Is a flag. If true
then any error will cause detailed debugging information to be dumped in the HTTP response, and the Rails::Info
controller will show the application runtime context in /rails/info/properties
. true
by default in the development and test environments, and false
in production. For finer-grained control, set this to false
and implement show_detailed_exceptions?
in controllers to specify which requests should provide debugging information on errors.
Allows you to set the class that will be used as console when you run bin/rails console
. It's best to run it in the console
block:
console do
# this block is called only when running console,
# so we can safely require pry here
require "pry"
config.console = Pry
end
Controls whether or not someone can start a console in sandbox mode. This is helpful to avoid a long running session of sandbox console, that could lead a database server to run out of memory. Defaults to false
.
When true
, eager loads all registered config.eager_load_namespaces
. This includes your application, engines, Rails frameworks, and any other registered namespace.
Registers namespaces that are eager loaded when config.eager_load
is set to true
. All namespaces in the list must respond to the eager_load!
method.
Accepts an array of paths from which Rails will eager load on boot if config.eager_load
is true. Defaults to every folder in the app
directory of the application.
Sets up the application-wide encoding. Defaults to UTF-8.
Sets the exceptions application invoked by the ShowException
middleware when an exception happens. Defaults to ActionDispatch::PublicExceptions.new(Rails.public_path)
.
Sets the format used in responses when errors occur in the development environment. Defaults to :api
for API only apps and :default
for normal apps.
Is the class used to detect file updates in the file system when config.reload_classes_only_on_change
is true
. Rails ships with ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker
, the default, and ActiveSupport::EventedFileUpdateChecker
(this one depends on the listen gem). Custom classes must conform to the ActiveSupport::FileUpdateChecker
API.
Used for filtering out the parameters that you don't want shown in the logs,
such as passwords or credit card numbers. It also filters out sensitive values
of database columns when calling #inspect
on an Active Record object. By
default, Rails filters out passwords by adding the following filters in
config/initializers/filter_parameter_logging.rb
.
Rails.application.config.filter_parameters += [
:passw, :secret, :token, :_key, :crypt, :salt, :certificate, :otp, :ssn
]
Parameters filter works by partial matching regular expression.
Forces all requests to be served over HTTPS, and sets "https://" as the default protocol when generating URLs. Enforcement of HTTPS is handled by the ActionDispatch::SSL
middleware, which can be configured via config.ssl_options
.
Sets the path where your app's JavaScript lives relative to the app
directory. The default is javascript
, used by webpacker. An app's configured javascript_path
will be excluded from autoload_paths
.
Defines the maximum size of the Rails log file. Defaults to 100 MB in development and test, and unlimited in all other environments.
Defines the formatter of the Rails logger. This option defaults to an instance of ActiveSupport::Logger::SimpleFormatter
for all environments. If you are setting a value for config.logger
you must manually pass the value of your formatter to your logger before it is wrapped in an ActiveSupport::TaggedLogging
instance, Rails will not do it for you.
Defines the verbosity of the Rails logger. This option defaults to :debug
for all environments except production, where it defaults to :info
. The available log levels are: :debug
, :info
, :warn
, :error
, :fatal
, and :unknown
.
Accepts a list of methods that the request
object responds to, a Proc
that accepts the request
object, or something that responds to to_s
. 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.
Is the logger that will be used for Rails.logger
and any related Rails logging such as ActiveRecord::Base.logger
. It defaults to an instance of ActiveSupport::TaggedLogging
that wraps an instance of ActiveSupport::Logger
which outputs a log to the log/
directory. You can supply a custom logger, to get full compatibility you must follow these guidelines:
- To support a formatter, you must manually assign a formatter from the
config.log_formatter
value to the logger. - To support tagged logs, the log instance must be wrapped with
ActiveSupport::TaggedLogging
. - To support silencing, the logger must include
ActiveSupport::LoggerSilence
module. TheActiveSupport::Logger
class already includes these modules.
class MyLogger < ::Logger
include ActiveSupport::LoggerSilence
end
mylogger = MyLogger.new(STDOUT)
mylogger.formatter = config.log_formatter
config.logger = ActiveSupport::TaggedLogging.new(mylogger)
Allows you to configure the application's middleware. This is covered in depth in the Configuring Middleware section below.
When true
, eager load the application when running Rake tasks. Defaults to false
.
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.enable_reloading
is false
, this option is ignored.
Configures lookup path for encrypted credentials.
Configures lookup path for encryption key.
The fallback for specifying the input secret for an application's key generator.
It is recommended to leave this unset, and instead to specify a secret_key_base
in config/credentials.yml.enc
. See the secret_key_base
API documentation
for more information and alternative configuration methods.
Causes the app to not boot if a master key hasn't been made available through ENV["RAILS_MASTER_KEY"]
or the config/master.key
file.
Configures Rails to serve static files from the public directory. This option defaults to true
, but in the production environment it is set to false
because the server software (e.g. NGINX or Apache) used to run the application should serve static files instead. If you are running or testing your app in production using WEBrick (it is not recommended to use WEBrick in production) set the option to true
. Otherwise, you won't be able to use page caching and request for files that exist under the public directory.
Specifies what class to use to store the session. Possible values are :cache_store
, :cookie_store
, :mem_cache_store
, a custom store, or :disabled
. :disabled
tells Rails not to deal with sessions.
This setting is configured via a regular method call, rather than a setter. This allows additional options to be passed:
config.session_store :cookie_store, key: "_your_app_session"
If a custom store is specified as a symbol, it will be resolved to the ActionDispatch::Session
namespace:
# use ActionDispatch::Session::MyCustomStore as the session store
config.session_store :my_custom_store
The default store is a cookie store with the application name as the session key.
Configuration options for the ActionDispatch::SSL
middleware.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | {} |
5.0 | { hsts: { subdomains: true } } |
Sets the default time zone for the application and enables time zone awareness for Active Record.
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.
Defines the JavaScript compressor to use. Possible values are :terser
, :closure
, :uglifier
, and :yui
, which require the use of the terser
, closure-compiler
, uglifier
, or yui-compressor
gems respectively.
A flag that enables the creation of gzipped version of compiled assets, along with non-gzipped assets. Set to true
by default.
Contains the paths which are used to look for assets. Appending paths to this configuration option will cause those paths to be used in the search for assets.
Allows you to specify additional assets (other than application.css
and application.js
) which are to be precompiled when rake assets:precompile
is run.
Allows you to modify the behavior of the asset pipeline when an asset is not in the pipeline, if you use sprockets-rails 3.2.0 or newer.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
5.1 | false |
Defines the prefix where assets are served from. Defaults to /assets
.
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.
Enables the use of SHA256 fingerprints in asset names. Set to true
by default.
Disables the concatenation and compression of assets. Set to true
by default in development.rb
.
Is an option string that is used in SHA256 hash generation. This can be changed to force all files to be recompiled.
Is a boolean that can be used to turn on live Sprockets compilation in production.
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger
class. Defaults to the same configured at config.logger
. Setting config.assets.logger
to false
will turn off served assets logging.
Disables logging of assets requests. Set to true
by default in development.rb
.
Rails allows you to alter what generators are used with the config.generators
method. This method takes a block:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.test_framework :test_unit
end
The full set of methods that can be used in this block are as follows:
force_plural
allows pluralized model names. Defaults tofalse
.helper
defines whether or not to generate helpers. Defaults totrue
.integration_tool
defines which integration tool to use to generate integration tests. Defaults to:test_unit
.system_tests
defines which integration tool to use to generate system tests. Defaults to:test_unit
.orm
defines which orm to use. Defaults tofalse
and will use Active Record by default.resource_controller
defines which generator to use for generating a controller when usingbin/rails generate resource
. Defaults to:controller
.resource_route
defines whether a resource route definition should be generated or not. Defaults totrue
.scaffold_controller
different fromresource_controller
, defines which generator to use for generating a scaffolded controller when usingbin/rails generate scaffold
. Defaults to:scaffold_controller
.test_framework
defines which test framework to use. Defaults tofalse
and will use minitest by default.template_engine
defines which template engine to use, such as ERB or Haml. Defaults to:erb
.
Every Rails application comes with a standard set of middleware which it uses in this order in the development environment:
Prevents against DNS rebinding and other Host
header attacks.
It is included in the development environment by default with the following configuration:
Rails.application.config.hosts = [
IPAddr.new("0.0.0.0/0"), # All IPv4 addresses.
IPAddr.new("::/0"), # All IPv6 addresses.
"localhost", # The localhost reserved domain.
ENV["RAILS_DEVELOPMENT_HOSTS"] # Additional comma-separated hosts for development.
]
In other environments Rails.application.config.hosts
is empty and no
Host
header checks will be done. If you want to guard against header
attacks on production, you have to manually permit the allowed hosts
with:
Rails.application.config.hosts << "product.com"
The host of a request is checked against the hosts
entries with the case
operator (#===
), which lets hosts
support entries of type Regexp
,
Proc
and IPAddr
to name a few. Here is an example with a regexp.
# Allow requests from subdomains like `www.product.com` and
# `beta1.product.com`.
Rails.application.config.hosts << /.*\.product\.com/
The provided regexp will be wrapped with both anchors (\A
and \z
) so it
must match the entire hostname. /product.com/
, for example, once anchored,
would fail to match www.product.com
.
A special case is supported that allows you to permit all sub-domains:
# Allow requests from subdomains like `www.product.com` and
# `beta1.product.com`.
Rails.application.config.hosts << ".product.com"
You can exclude certain requests from Host Authorization checks by setting
config.host_authorization.exclude
:
# Exclude requests for the /healthcheck/ path from host checking
Rails.application.config.host_authorization = {
exclude: ->(request) { request.path =~ /healthcheck/ }
}
When a request comes to an unauthorized host, a default Rack application
will run and respond with 403 Forbidden
. This can be customized by setting
config.host_authorization.response_app
. For example:
Rails.application.config.host_authorization = {
response_app: -> env do
[400, { "Content-Type" => "text/plain" }, ["Bad Request"]]
end
}
Forces every request to be served using HTTPS. Enabled if config.force_ssl
is set to true
. Options passed to this can be configured by setting config.ssl_options
.
Is used to serve static assets. Disabled if config.public_file_server.enabled
is false
. Set config.public_file_server.index_name
if you need to serve a static directory index file that is not named index
. For example, to serve main.html
instead of index.html
for directory requests, set config.public_file_server.index_name
to "main"
.
Allows thread safe code reloading. Disabled if config.allow_concurrency
is false
, which causes Rack::Lock
to be loaded. Rack::Lock
wraps the app in mutex so it can only be called by a single thread at a time.
Serves as a basic memory backed cache. This cache is not thread safe and is intended only for serving as a temporary memory cache for a single thread.
Sets an X-Runtime
header, containing the time (in seconds) taken to execute the request.
Notifies the logs that the request has begun. After request is complete, flushes all the logs.
Rescues any exception returned by the application and renders nice exception pages if the request is local or if config.consider_all_requests_local
is set to true
. If config.action_dispatch.show_exceptions
is set to false
, exceptions will be raised regardless.
Makes a unique X-Request-Id header available to the response and enables the ActionDispatch::Request#uuid
method. Configurable with config.action_dispatch.request_id_header
.
Checks for IP spoofing attacks and gets valid client_ip
from request headers. Configurable with the config.action_dispatch.ip_spoofing_check
, and config.action_dispatch.trusted_proxies
options.
Intercepts responses whose body is being served from a file and replaces it with a server specific X-Sendfile header. Configurable with config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header
.
Runs the prepare callbacks before serving the request.
Sets cookies for the request.
Is responsible for storing the session in cookies. An alternate middleware can be used for this by changing config.session_store
.
Sets up the flash
keys. Only available if config.session_store
is set to a value.
Allows the method to be overridden if params[:_method]
is set. This is the middleware which supports the PATCH, PUT, and DELETE HTTP method types.
Converts HEAD requests to GET requests and serves them as so.
Besides these usual middleware, you can add your own by using the config.middleware.use
method:
config.middleware.use Magical::Unicorns
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.
config.middleware.insert_before Rack::Head, Magical::Unicorns
Or you can insert a middleware to exact position by using indexes. For example, if you want to insert Magical::Unicorns
middleware on top of the stack, you can do it, like so:
config.middleware.insert_before 0, Magical::Unicorns
There's also insert_after
which will insert a middleware after another:
config.middleware.insert_after Rack::Head, Magical::Unicorns
Middlewares can also be completely swapped out and replaced with others:
config.middleware.swap ActionController::Failsafe, Lifo::Failsafe
Middlewares can be moved from one place to another:
config.middleware.move_before ActionDispatch::Flash, Magical::Unicorns
This will move the Magical::Unicorns
middleware before
ActionDispatch::Flash
. You can also move it after:
config.middleware.move_after ActionDispatch::Flash, Magical::Unicorns
They can also be removed from the stack completely:
config.middleware.delete Rack::MethodOverride
All these configuration options are delegated to the I18n
library.
Defines the permitted available locales for the app. Defaults to all locale keys found in locale files, usually only :en
on a new application.
Sets the default locale of an application used for i18n. Defaults to :en
.
Ensures that all locales passed through i18n must be declared in the available_locales
list, raising an I18n::InvalidLocale
exception when setting an unavailable locale. Defaults to true
. It is recommended not to disable this option unless strongly required, since this works as a security measure against setting any invalid locale from user input.
Sets the path Rails uses to look for locale files. Defaults to config/locales/**/*.{yml,rb}
.
Determines whether an error should be raised for missing translations
in controllers and views. This defaults to false
.
Sets fallback behavior for missing translations. Here are 3 usage examples for this option:
-
You can set the option to
true
for using default locale as fallback, like so:config.i18n.fallbacks = true
-
Or you can set an array of locales as fallback, like so:
config.i18n.fallbacks = [:tr, :en]
-
Or you can set different fallbacks for locales individually. For example, if you want to use
:tr
for:az
and:de
,:en
for:da
as fallbacks, you can do it, like so:config.i18n.fallbacks = { az: :tr, da: [:de, :en] } #or config.i18n.fallbacks.map = { az: :tr, da: [:de, :en] }
Is a boolean value which controls whether the full_message
error format can be overridden at the attribute or model level in the locale files. This is false
by default.
config.active_record
includes a variety of configuration options:
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then passed on to any new database connections made. You can retrieve this logger by calling logger
on either an Active Record model class or an Active Record model instance. Set to nil
to disable logging.
Lets you adjust the naming for primary key columns. By default, Rails assumes that primary key columns are named id
(and this configuration option doesn't need to be set). There are two other choices:
:table_name
would make the primary key for the Customer classcustomerid
.:table_name_with_underscore
would make the primary key for the Customer classcustomer_id
.
Lets you set a global string to be prepended to table names. If you set this to northwest_
, then the Customer class will look for northwest_customers
as its table. The default is an empty string.
Lets you set a global string to be appended to table names. If you set this to _northwest
, then the Customer class will look for customers_northwest
as its table. The default is an empty string.
Lets you set a string to be used as the name of the schema migrations table.
Lets you set a string to be used as the name of the internal metadata table.
Lets you set an array of names of environments where destructive actions should be prohibited.
Specifies whether Rails will look for singular or plural table names in the database. If set to true
(the default), then the Customer class will use the customers
table. If set to false
, then the Customer class will use the customer
table.
Determines whether to use Time.local
(if set to :local
) or Time.utc
(if set to :utc
) when pulling dates and times from the database. The default is :utc
.
Controls the format for dumping the database schema to a file. The options are :ruby
(the default) for a database-independent version that depends on migrations, or :sql
for a set of (potentially database-dependent) SQL statements.
Specifies if an error should be raised if the order of a query is ignored during a batch query. The options are true
(raise error) or false
(warn). Default is false
.
Controls whether migrations are numbered with serial integers or with timestamps. The default is true
, to use timestamps, which are preferred if there are multiple developers working on the same application.
Controls whether Active Record will use optimistic locking and is true
by default.
Controls the format of the timestamp value in the cache key. Default is :usec
.
Is a boolean value which controls whether or not timestamping of create
and update
operations on a model occur. The default value is true
.
Is a boolean value and controls whether or not partial writes are used when creating new records (i.e. whether inserts only set attributes that are different from the default).
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
7.0 | false |
Is a boolean value and controls whether or not partial writes are used when updating existing records (i.e. whether updates only set attributes that are dirty). Note that when using partial updates, 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
.
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
.
Is a flag which controls whether or not schema dump should happen
(db/schema.rb
or db/structure.sql
) when you run migrations. This is set to
false
in config/environments/production.rb
which is generated by Rails. The
default value is true
if this configuration is not set.
Controls which database schemas will be dumped when calling db:schema:dump
.
The options are :schema_search_path
(the default) which dumps any schemas listed in schema_search_path
,
:all
which always dumps all schemas regardless of the schema_search_path
,
or a string of comma separated schemas.
Is a boolean value and controls whether a record fails validation if
belongs_to
association is not present.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | nil |
5.0 | true |
Enables raising or logging an exception if strict_loading is set on an
association. The default value is :raise
in all environments. It can be
changed to :log
to send violations to the logger instead of raising.
Is a boolean value that either enables or disables strict_loading mode by
default. Defaults to false
.
Allows setting a warning threshold for query result size. If the number of records returned by a query exceeds the threshold, a warning is logged. This can be used to identify queries which might be causing a memory bloat.
Allows errors for nested has_many
relationships to be displayed with an index
as well as the error. Defaults to false
.
Enables users to get schema cache information from db/schema_cache.yml
(generated by bin/rails db:schema:cache:dump
), instead of having to send a
query to the database to get this information. Defaults to true
.
Indicates whether to use a stable #cache_key
method that is accompanied by a
changing version in the #cache_version
method.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.2 | true |
Enables the same cache key to be reused when the object being cached of type
ActiveRecord::Relation
changes by moving the volatile information (max
updated at and count) of the relation's cache key into the cache version to
support recycling cache key.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.0 | true |
Enables setting the inverse record when traversing belongs_to
to has_many
associations.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.1 | true |
Enables automatically inferring the inverse_of
for associations with a scope.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Allows to enable new connection handling API. For applications using multiple databases, this new API provides support for granular connection swapping.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
6.1 | false |
Allows specifying the job that will be used to destroy the associated records in background. It defaults to ActiveRecord::DestroyAssociationAsyncJob
.
Allows specifying the maximum number of records that will be destroyed in a background job by the dependent: :destroy_async
association option. All else equal, a lower batch size will enqueue more, shorter-running background jobs, while a higher batch size will enqueue fewer, longer-running background jobs. This option defaults to nil
, which will cause all dependent records for a given association to be destroyed in the same background job.
Allows specifying the Active Job queue to use for destroy jobs. When this option is nil
, purge jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
). It defaults to nil
.
When true
, will always include column names in SELECT
statements, and avoid wildcard SELECT * FROM ...
queries. This avoids prepared statement cache errors when adding columns to a PostgreSQL database for example. Defaults to false
.
Ensures all foreign key constraints are valid after fixtures are loaded in tests. Supported by PostgreSQL and SQLite only.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Specifies whether or not to enable adapter-level query comments. Defaults to
false
.
Define an Array
specifying the key/value tags to be inserted in an SQL
comment. Defaults to [ :application ]
, a predefined tag returning the
application name.
Specifies whether or not to enable caching of query log tags. For applications
that have a large number of queries, caching query log tags can provide a
performance benefit when the context does not change during the lifetime of the
request or job execution. Defaults to false
.
Define the list of table that should be ignored when generating the schema
cache. It accepts an Array
of strings, representing the table names, or
regular expressions.
Specifies if source locations of methods that call database queries should be logged below relevant queries. By default, the flag is true
in development and false
in all other environments.
Specifies how asynchronous queries are pooled.
It defaults to nil
, which means load_async
is disabled and instead directly executes queries in the foreground.
For queries to actually be performed asynchronously, it must be set to either :global_thread_pool
or :multi_thread_pool
.
:global_thread_pool
will use a single pool for all databases the application connects to. This is the preferred configuration
for applications with only a single database, or applications which only ever query one database shard at a time.
:multi_thread_pool
will use one pool per database, and each pool size can be configured individually in database.yml
through the
max_threads
and min_thread
properties. This can be useful to applications regularly querying multiple databases at a time, and that need to more precisely define the max concurrency.
Used in conjunction with config.active_record.async_query_executor = :global_thread_pool
, defines how many asynchronous
queries can be executed concurrently.
Defaults to 4
.
This number must be considered in accordance with the database pool size configured in database.yml
. The connection pool
should be large enough to accommodate both the foreground threads (.e.g web server or job worker threads) and background threads.
Controls whether the Active Record MySQL adapter will consider all tinyint(1)
columns as booleans. Defaults to true
.
Controls whether database tables created by PostgreSQL should be "unlogged", which can speed
up performance but adds a risk of data loss if the database crashes. It is
highly recommended that you do not enable this in a production environment.
Defaults to false
in all environments.
Controls what native type the Active Record PostgreSQL adapter should use when you call datetime
in
a migration or schema. It takes a symbol which must correspond to one of the
configured NATIVE_DATABASE_TYPES
. The default is :timestamp
, meaning
t.datetime
in a migration will create a "timestamp without time zone" column.
To use "timestamp with time zone", change this to :timestamptz
in an
initializer. You should run bin/rails db:migrate
to rebuild your schema.rb
if you change this.
Accepts an array of tables that should not be included in any generated schema file.
Allows setting a different regular expression that will be used to decide
whether a foreign key's name should be dumped to db/schema.rb or not. By
default, foreign key names starting with fk_rails_
are not exported to the
database schema dump. Defaults to /^fk_rails_[0-9a-f]{10}$/
.
config.action_controller
includes a number of configuration settings:
Sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets rather than the application server itself. You should only use this if you have a different configuration for Action Mailer, otherwise use config.asset_host
.
Configures whether the application should perform the caching features provided by the Action Controller component or not. Set to false
in the development environment, true
in production. If it's not specified, the default will be true
.
Configures the extension used for cached pages. Defaults to .html
.
Configures whether all view helpers are available everywhere or are scoped to the corresponding controller. If set to false
, UsersHelper
methods are only available for views rendered as part of UsersController
. If true
, UsersHelper
methods are available everywhere. The default configuration behavior (when this option is not explicitly set to true
or false
) is that all view helpers are available to each controller.
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action Controller. Set to nil
to disable logging.
Sets the token parameter name for RequestForgery. Calling protect_from_forgery
sets it to :authenticity_token
by default.
Enables or disables CSRF protection. By default this is false
in the test environment and true
in all other environments.
Configures whether the HTTP Origin
header should be checked against the site's origin as an additional CSRF defense.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.0 | true |
Configures whether CSRF tokens are only valid for the method/action they were generated for.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.0 | true |
Determines whether forgery protection is added on ActionController::Base
.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.2 | true |
Configures whether generated CSRF tokens are URL-safe.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.1 | true |
Can be used to tell Rails that you are deploying to a subdirectory. The default is ENV['RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT']
.
Sets all the parameters for mass assignment to be permitted by default. The default value is false
.
Controls behavior when parameters that are not explicitly permitted are found. The default value is :log
in test and development environments, false
otherwise. The values can be:
false
to take no action:log
to emit anActiveSupport::Notifications.instrument
event on theunpermitted_parameters.action_controller
topic and log at the DEBUG level:raise
to raise aActionController::UnpermittedParameters
exception
Sets a list of permitted parameters that are permitted by default. The default values are ['controller', 'action']
.
Determines whether to log fragment cache reads and writes in verbose format as follows:
Read fragment views/v1/2914079/v1/2914079/recordings/70182313-20160225015037000000/d0bdf2974e1ef6d31685c3b392ad0b74 (0.6ms)
Rendered messages/_message.html.erb in 1.2 ms [cache hit]
Write fragment views/v1/2914079/v1/2914079/recordings/70182313-20160225015037000000/3b4e249ac9d168c617e32e84b99218b5 (1.1ms)
Rendered recordings/threads/_thread.html.erb in 1.5 ms [cache miss]
By default it is set to false
which results in following output:
Rendered messages/_message.html.erb in 1.2 ms [cache hit]
Rendered recordings/threads/_thread.html.erb in 1.5 ms [cache miss]
Raises an ArgumentError
when an unpermitted open redirect occurs.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Determines whether controller context for query tags will be automatically
updated via an around_filter
. The default value is true
.
Configures the ParamsWrapper
to wrap json
request by default.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Configures the ParamsWrapper
. This can be called at
the top level, or on individual controllers.
Controls behavior of ActionController::Parameters#==
with Hash
arguments.
Value of the setting determines whether an ActionController::Parameters
instance is equal to an equivalent Hash
.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
7.1 | false |
Specifies which serializer to use for cookies. For more information, see Action Controller Cookies.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :marshal |
7.0 | :json |
Is a hash with HTTP headers that are set by default in each response.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) |
|
7.0 |
|
7.1 |
|
Specifies the default character set for all renders. Defaults to nil
.
Sets the TLD (top-level domain) length for the application. Defaults to 1
.
Is used to determine whether to ignore accept headers from a request. Defaults to false
.
Specifies server specific X-Sendfile header. This is useful for accelerated file sending from server. For example it can be set to 'X-Sendfile' for Apache.
Sets the HTTP Auth salt value. Defaults
to 'http authentication'
.
Sets the signed cookies salt value.
Defaults to 'signed cookie'
.
Sets the encrypted cookies salt value. Defaults to 'encrypted cookie'
.
Sets the signed encrypted cookies salt value. Defaults to 'signed encrypted cookie'
.
Sets the authenticated encrypted cookie salt. Defaults to 'authenticated encrypted cookie'
.
Sets the cipher to be used for encrypted cookies. This defaults to
"aes-256-gcm"
.
Sets the digest to be used for signed cookies. This defaults to "SHA1"
.
Allows rotating secrets, ciphers, and digests for encrypted and signed cookies.
Controls whether signed and encrypted cookies use the AES-256-GCM cipher or the older AES-256-CBC cipher.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.2 | true |
Enables writing cookies with the purpose metadata embedded.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.0 | true |
Configures whether deep_munge
method should be performed on the parameters.
See Security Guide for more
information. It defaults to true
.
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:
config.action_dispatch.rescue_responses = {
'ActionController::RoutingError'
=> :not_found,
'AbstractController::ActionNotFound'
=> :not_found,
'ActionController::MethodNotAllowed'
=> :method_not_allowed,
'ActionController::UnknownHttpMethod'
=> :method_not_allowed,
'ActionController::NotImplemented'
=> :not_implemented,
'ActionController::UnknownFormat'
=> :not_acceptable,
'ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken'
=> :unprocessable_entity,
'ActionController::InvalidCrossOriginRequest'
=> :unprocessable_entity,
'ActionDispatch::Http::Parameters::ParseError'
=> :bad_request,
'ActionController::BadRequest'
=> :bad_request,
'ActionController::ParameterMissing'
=> :bad_request,
'Rack::QueryParser::ParameterTypeError'
=> :bad_request,
'Rack::QueryParser::InvalidParameterError'
=> :bad_request,
'ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound'
=> :not_found,
'ActiveRecord::StaleObjectError'
=> :conflict,
'ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid'
=> :unprocessable_entity,
'ActiveRecord::RecordNotSaved'
=> :unprocessable_entity
}
Any exceptions that are not configured will be mapped to 500 Internal Server Error.
Change the return value of ActionDispatch::Request#content_type
to the
Content-Type header without modification.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
7.0 | false |
Configures the default value of the SameSite
attribute when setting cookies.
When set to nil
, the SameSite
attribute is not added. To allow the value of
the SameSite
attribute to be configured dynamically based on the request, a
proc may be specified. For example:
config.action_dispatch.cookies_same_site_protection = ->(request) do
:strict unless request.user_agent == "TestAgent"
end
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | nil |
6.1 | :lax |
Configures the default HTTP status code used when redirecting non-GET/HEAD
requests from HTTP to HTTPS in the ActionDispatch::SSL
middleware.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | 307 |
6.1 | 308 |
Enables logging those unhandled exceptions configured in rescue_responses
. It
defaults to true
.
Takes a block of code to run before the request.
Takes a block of code to run after the request.
config.action_view
includes a small number of configuration settings:
Controls whether or not templates should be reloaded on each request. Defaults to !config.enable_reloading
.
Provides an HTML generator for displaying errors that come from Active Model. The block is evaluated within the context of an Action View template. The default is
Proc.new { |html_tag, instance| content_tag :div, html_tag, class: "field_with_errors" }
Tells Rails which form builder to use by default. The default is
ActionView::Helpers::FormBuilder
. If you want your form builder class to be
loaded after initialization (so it's reloaded on each request in development),
you can pass it as a String
.
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action View. Set to nil
to disable logging.
Gives the trim mode to be used by ERB. It defaults to '-'
, which turns on trimming of tail spaces and newline when using <%= -%>
or <%= =%>
. See the Erubis documentation for more information.
Compiles the ERB template with the # frozen_string_literal: true
magic comment, making all string literals frozen and saving allocations. Set to true
to enable it for all views.
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
.
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:
<%= render @article %>
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
.
Determines whether submit_tag
should automatically disable on click, this
defaults to true
.
Determines whether to wrap the missing translations key in a <span>
tag or not. This defaults to true
.
Determines whether form_with
generates remote forms or not.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
5.1 | true |
6.1 | false |
Determines whether form_with
generates ids on inputs.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.2 | true |
Determines whether forms are generated with a hidden tag that forces older versions of Internet Explorer to submit forms encoded in UTF-8.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
6.0 | false |
Specifies a default value for the loading
attribute of <img>
tags rendered by the image_tag
helper. For example, when set to "lazy"
, <img>
tags rendered by image_tag
will include loading="lazy"
, which instructs the browser to wait until an image is near the viewport to load it. (This value can still be overridden per image by passing e.g. loading: "eager"
to image_tag
.) Defaults to nil
.
Specifies a default value for the decoding
attribute of <img>
tags rendered by the image_tag
helper. Defaults to nil
.
Determines whether to annotate rendered view with template file names. This defaults to false
.
Determines whether javascript_include_tag
and stylesheet_link_tag
will generate a Link
header that preload assets.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | nil |
6.1 | true |
Determines whether button_to
will render <button>
element, regardless of whether or not the content is passed as the first argument or as a block.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Determines whether stylesheet_link_tag
will render screen
as the default value for the attribute media
when it's not provided.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | true |
7.0 | false |
config.action_mailbox
provides the following configuration options:
Contains the logger used by Action Mailbox. It accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class. The default is Rails.logger
.
config.action_mailbox.logger = ActiveSupport::Logger.new(STDOUT)
Accepts an ActiveSupport::Duration
indicating how long after processing ActionMailbox::InboundEmail
records should be destroyed. It defaults to 30.days
.
# Incinerate inbound emails 14 days after processing.
config.action_mailbox.incinerate_after = 14.days
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Job queue to use for incineration jobs. When this option is nil
, incineration jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
).
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :action_mailbox_incineration |
6.1 | nil |
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Job queue to use for routing jobs. When this option is nil
, routing jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
).
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :action_mailbox_routing |
6.1 | nil |
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Storage service to use for uploading emails. When this option is nil
, emails are uploaded to the default Active Storage service (see config.active_storage.service
).
There are a number of settings available on config.action_mailer
:
Sets the host for the assets. Useful when CDNs are used for hosting assets rather than the application server itself. You should only use this if you have a different configuration for Action Controller, otherwise use config.asset_host
.
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Action Mailer. Set to nil
to disable logging.
Allows detailed configuration for the :smtp
delivery method. It accepts a hash of options, which can include any of these options:
:address
- Allows you to use a remote mail server. Just change it from its default "localhost" setting.:port
- On the off chance that your mail server doesn't run on port 25, you can change it.:domain
- If you need to specify a HELO domain, you can do it here.:user_name
- If your mail server requires authentication, set the username in this setting.:password
- If your mail server requires authentication, set the password in this setting.:authentication
- If your mail server requires authentication, you need to specify the authentication type here. This is a symbol and one of:plain
,:login
,:cram_md5
.:enable_starttls
- Use STARTTLS when connecting to your SMTP server and fail if unsupported. It defaults tofalse
.:enable_starttls_auto
- Detects if STARTTLS is enabled in your SMTP server and starts to use it. It defaults totrue
.:openssl_verify_mode
- When using TLS, you can set how OpenSSL checks the certificate. This is useful if you need to validate a self-signed and/or a wildcard certificate. This can be one of the OpenSSL verify constants,:none
or:peer
-- or the constant directlyOpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_NONE
orOpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER
, respectively.:ssl/:tls
- Enables the SMTP connection to use SMTP/TLS (SMTPS: SMTP over direct TLS connection).:open_timeout
- Number of seconds to wait while attempting to open a connection.:read_timeout
- Number of seconds to wait until timing-out a read(2) call.
Additionally, it is possible to pass any configuration option Mail::SMTP
respects.
Allows to configure both the :open_timeout
and :read_timeout
values for :smtp
delivery method.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | nil |
7.0 | 5 |
Allows detailed configuration for the sendmail
delivery method. It accepts a hash of options, which can include any of these options:
:location
- The location of the sendmail executable. Defaults to/usr/sbin/sendmail
.:arguments
- The command line arguments. Defaults to-i
.
Specifies whether to raise an error if email delivery cannot be completed. It defaults to true
.
Defines the delivery method and defaults to :smtp
. See the configuration section in the Action Mailer guide for more info.
Specifies whether mail will actually be delivered and is true
by default. It can be convenient to set it to false
for testing.
Configures Action Mailer defaults. Use to set options like from
or reply_to
for every mailer. These default to:
mime_version: "1.0",
charset: "UTF-8",
content_type: "text/plain",
parts_order: ["text/plain", "text/enriched", "text/html"]
Assign a hash to set additional options:
config.action_mailer.default_options = {
from: "noreply@example.com"
}
Registers observers which will be notified when mail is delivered.
config.action_mailer.observers = ["MailObserver"]
Registers interceptors which will be called before mail is sent.
config.action_mailer.interceptors = ["MailInterceptor"]
Registers interceptors which will be called before mail is previewed.
config.action_mailer.preview_interceptors = ["MyPreviewMailInterceptor"]
Specifies the location of mailer previews.
config.action_mailer.preview_path = "#{Rails.root}/lib/mailer_previews"
Enable or disable mailer previews. By default this is true
in development.
config.action_mailer.show_previews = false
Specifies the Active Job queue to use for delivery jobs. When this option is set to nil
, delivery jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
). Make sure that your Active Job adapter is also configured to process the specified queue, otherwise delivery jobs may be silently ignored.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :mailers |
6.1 | nil |
Specifies whether the mailer templates should perform fragment caching or not. If it's not specified, the default will be true
.
Specifies delivery job for mail.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob |
6.0 | "ActionMailer::MailDeliveryJob" |
There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:
Enables or disables the loading of active_support/all
when booting Rails. Defaults to nil
, which means active_support/all
is loaded.
Sets the order in which the test cases are executed. Possible values are :random
and :sorted
. Defaults to :random
.
Enables or disables the escaping of HTML entities in JSON serialization. Defaults to true
.
Enables or disables serializing dates to ISO 8601 format. Defaults to true
.
Sets the precision of JSON encoded time values. Defaults to 3
.
Allows configuring the digest class to use to generate non-sensitive digests, such as the ETag header.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | OpenSSL::Digest::MD5 |
5.2 | OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1 |
7.0 | OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256 |
Allows configuring the digest class to use to derive secrets from the configured secret base, such as for encrypted cookies.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1 |
7.0 | OpenSSL::Digest::SHA256 |
Specifies whether to use AES-256-GCM authenticated encryption as the default cipher for encrypting messages instead of AES-256-CBC.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.2 | true |
Specifies which version of the cache serializer to use. Possible values are 6.1
and 7.0
.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | 6.1 |
7.0 | 7.0 |
Configures the behavior of deprecation warnings. The options are :raise
, :stderr
, :log
, :notify
, or :silence
. The default is :stderr
. Alternatively, you can set ActiveSupport::Deprecation.behavior
.
Configures the behavior of disallowed deprecation warnings. The options are :raise
, :stderr
, :log
, :notify
, or :silence
. The default is :raise
. Alternatively, you can set ActiveSupport::Deprecation.disallowed_behavior
.
Configures deprecation warnings that the Application considers disallowed. This allows, for example, specific deprecations to be treated as hard failures. Alternatively, you can set ActiveSupport::Deprecation.disallowed_warnings
.
Allows you to disable all deprecation warnings (including disallowed deprecations); it makes ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn
a no-op. This is enabled by default in production.
Specifies whether to remove the deprecated override of the ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone.name
method, to avoid triggering its deprecation warning.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | nil |
7.0 | true |
Configures the locality of most of Rails internal state. If you use a fiber based server or job processor (e.g. falcon
), you should set it to :fiber
. Otherwise it is best to use :thread
locality. Defaults to :thread
.
Specifies whether generated namespaced UUIDs follow the RFC 4122 standard for namespace IDs provided as a String
to Digest::UUID.uuid_v3
or Digest::UUID.uuid_v5
method calls.
If set to true
:
- Only UUIDs are allowed as namespace IDs. If a namespace ID value provided is not allowed, an
ArgumentError
will be raised. - No deprecation warning will be generated, no matter if the namespace ID used is one of the constants defined on
Digest::UUID
or aString
. - Namespace IDs are case-insensitive.
- All generated namespaced UUIDs should be compliant to the standard.
If set to false
:
- Any
String
value can be used as namespace ID (although not recommended). NoArgumentError
will be raised in this case in order to preserve backwards-compatibility. - A deprecation warning will be generated if the namespace ID provided is not one of the constants defined on
Digest::UUID
. - Namespace IDs are case-sensitive.
- Only namespaced UUIDs generated using one of the namespace ID constants defined on
Digest::UUID
are compliant to the standard.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Configure the test suite to call Rails.application.executor.wrap
around test cases.
This makes test cases behave closer to an actual request or job.
Several features that are normally disabled in test, such as Active Record query cache
and asynchronous queries will then be enabled.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Disables the override of the #to_s
methods in some Ruby core classes. This config is for applications that want to
take advantage early of a Ruby 3.1 optimization.
This configuration needs to be set in config/application.rb
inside the application class, otherwise it will not take
effect.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Is set to false
to disable the ability to silence logging in a block. The default is true
.
Specifies the logger to use within cache store operations.
Specifies whether to_time
methods preserve the UTC offset of their receivers. If false
, to_time
methods will convert to the local system UTC offset instead.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
5.0 | true |
Configures ActiveSupport::TimeZone.utc_to_local
to return a time with a UTC
offset instead of a UTC time incorporating that offset.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.1 | true |
Specifies what serializer the MessageEncryptor
class will use by default.
Options are :json
, :hybrid
, and :marshal
. :hybrid
uses the JsonWithMarshalFallback
class.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :marshal |
7.1 | :json |
Specifies if the ActiveSupport::JsonWithMarshalFallback
class will fallback to Marshal
when it encounters a ::JSON::ParserError
.
Defaults to true
.
Specifies if the ActiveSupport::JsonWithMarshalFallback
class will use Marshal
to serialize payloads.
If this is set to false
, it will use JSON
to serialize payloads.
Used to help migrate apps from Marshal
to JSON
as the default serializer for the MessageEncryptor
class.
Defaults to true
.
Specifies what serializer the MessageVerifier
class will use by default.
Options are :json
, :hybrid
, and :marshal
. :hybrid
uses the JsonWithMarshalFallback
class.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :marshal |
7.1 | :json |
config.active_job
provides the following configuration options:
Sets the adapter for the queuing backend. The default adapter is :async
. For an up-to-date list of built-in adapters see the ActiveJob::QueueAdapters API documentation.
# Be sure to have the adapter's gem in your Gemfile
# and follow the adapter's specific installation
# and deployment instructions.
config.active_job.queue_adapter = :sidekiq
Can be used to change the default queue name. By default this is "default"
.
config.active_job.default_queue_name = :medium_priority
Allows you to set an optional, non-blank, queue name prefix for all jobs. By default it is blank and not used.
The following configuration would queue the given job on the production_high_priority
queue when run in production:
config.active_job.queue_name_prefix = Rails.env
class GuestsCleanupJob < ActiveJob::Base
queue_as :high_priority
#....
end
Has a default value of '_'
. If queue_name_prefix
is set, then queue_name_delimiter
joins the prefix and the non-prefixed queue name.
The following configuration would queue the provided job on the video_server.low_priority
queue:
# prefix must be set for delimiter to be used
config.active_job.queue_name_prefix = 'video_server'
config.active_job.queue_name_delimiter = '.'
class EncoderJob < ActiveJob::Base
queue_as :low_priority
#....
end
Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class, which is then used to log information from Active Job. You can retrieve this logger by calling logger
on either an Active Job class or an Active Job instance. Set to nil
to disable logging.
Allows to set custom argument serializers. Defaults to []
.
Controls if the arguments of a job are logged. Defaults to true
.
Controls the amount of "jitter" (random variation) applied to the delay time calculated when retrying failed jobs.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | 0.0 |
6.1 | 0.15 |
Determines whether job context for query tags will be automatically updated via
an around_perform
. The default value is true
.
Accepts a string for the URL for where you are hosting your Action Cable server. You would use this option if you are running Action Cable servers that are separated from your main application.
Accepts a string for where to mount Action Cable, as part of the main server
process. Defaults to /cable
. You can set this as nil to not mount Action
Cable as part of your normal Rails server.
You can find more detailed configuration options in the Action Cable Overview.
Determines whether the Action Cable assets should be added to the asset pipeline precompilation. It
has no effect if Sprockets is not used. The default value is true
.
config.active_storage
provides the following configuration options:
Accepts a symbol :mini_magick
or :vips
, specifying whether variant transformations and blob analysis will be performed with MiniMagick or ruby-vips.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | :mini_magick |
7.0 | :vips |
Accepts an array of classes indicating the analyzers available for Active Storage blobs. By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.analyzers = [ActiveStorage::Analyzer::ImageAnalyzer::Vips, ActiveStorage::Analyzer::ImageAnalyzer::ImageMagick, ActiveStorage::Analyzer::VideoAnalyzer, ActiveStorage::Analyzer::AudioAnalyzer]
The image analyzers can extract width and height of an image blob; the video analyzer can extract width, height, duration, angle, aspect ratio, and presence/absence of video/audio channels of a video blob; the audio analyzer can extract duration and bit rate of an audio blob.
Accepts an array of classes indicating the image previewers available in Active Storage blobs. By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.previewers = [ActiveStorage::Previewer::PopplerPDFPreviewer, ActiveStorage::Previewer::MuPDFPreviewer, ActiveStorage::Previewer::VideoPreviewer]
PopplerPDFPreviewer
and MuPDFPreviewer
can generate a thumbnail from the first page of a PDF blob; VideoPreviewer
from the relevant frame of a video blob.
Accepts a hash of options indicating the locations of previewer/analyzer commands. The default is {}
, meaning the commands will be looked for in the default path. Can include any of these options:
:ffprobe
- The location of the ffprobe executable.:mutool
- The location of the mutool executable.:ffmpeg
- The location of the ffmpeg executable.
config.active_storage.paths[:ffprobe] = '/usr/local/bin/ffprobe'
Accepts an array of strings indicating the content types that Active Storage can transform through ImageMagick. By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.variable_content_types = %w(image/png image/gif image/jpeg image/tiff image/bmp image/vnd.adobe.photoshop image/vnd.microsoft.icon image/webp image/avif image/heic image/heif)
Accepts an array of strings regarded as web image content types in which
variants can be processed without being converted to the fallback PNG format.
If you want to use WebP
or AVIF
variants in your application you can add
image/webp
or image/avif
to this array.
By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.web_image_content_types = %w(image/png image/jpeg image/gif)
Accepts an array of strings indicating the content types that Active Storage will always serve as an attachment, rather than inline. By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.content_types_to_serve_as_binary = %w(text/html image/svg+xml application/postscript application/x-shockwave-flash text/xml application/xml application/xhtml+xml application/mathml+xml text/cache-manifest)
Accepts an array of strings indicating the content types that Active Storage allows to serve as inline. By default, this is defined as:
config.active_storage.content_types_allowed_inline` = %w(image/png image/gif image/jpeg image/tiff image/vnd.adobe.photoshop image/vnd.microsoft.icon application/pdf)
Since Rails 7, Active Storage will warn if you use an invalid content type that was incorrectly supported in Rails 6. You can use this config to turn the warning off.
config.active_storage.silence_invalid_content_types_warning = false
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Job queue to use for analysis jobs. When this option is nil
, analysis jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
).
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
6.0 | :active_storage_analysis |
6.1 | nil |
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Job queue to use for purge jobs. When this option is nil
, purge jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
).
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
6.0 | :active_storage_purge |
6.1 | nil |
Accepts a symbol indicating the Active Job queue to use for direct upload mirroring jobs. When this option is nil
, mirroring jobs are sent to the default Active Job queue (see config.active_job.default_queue_name
). The default is nil
.
Can be used to set the logger used by Active Storage. Accepts a logger conforming to the interface of Log4r or the default Ruby Logger class.
config.active_storage.logger = ActiveSupport::Logger.new(STDOUT)
Determines the default expiry of URLs generated by:
ActiveStorage::Blob#url
ActiveStorage::Blob#service_url_for_direct_upload
ActiveStorage::Variant#url
The default is 5 minutes.
Determines the default expiry of URLs in the Rails application generated by Active Storage. The default is nil.
Can be used to set the route prefix for the routes served by Active Storage. Accepts a string that will be prepended to the generated routes.
config.active_storage.routes_prefix = '/files'
The default is /rails/active_storage
.
Determines whether assigning to a collection of attachments declared with has_many_attached
replaces any existing attachments or appends to them.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.0 | true |
Determines whether variants are recorded in the database.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
6.1 | true |
Can be used to toggle Active Storage route generation. The default is true
.
Can be used to globally change how Active Storage files are delivered.
Allowed values are:
:rails_storage_redirect
: Redirect to signed, short-lived service URLs.:rails_storage_proxy
: Proxy files by downloading them.
The default is :rails_storage_redirect
.
Can be used to alter the way ffmpeg generates video preview images.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | "-y -vframes 1 -f image2" |
7.0 | "-vf 'select=eq(n\\,0)+eq(key\\,1)+gt(scene\\,0.015)" 1 + ",loop=loop=-1:size=2,trim=start_frame=1'" 2+ " -frames:v 1 -f image2"
|
config.active_storage.multiple_file_field_include_hidden
In Rails 7.1 and beyond, Active Storage has_many_attached
relationships will
default to replacing the current collection instead of appending to it. Thus
to support submitting an empty collection, when multiple_file_field_include_hidden
is true
, the file_field
helper will render an auxiliary hidden field, similar to the auxiliary field
rendered by the check_box
helper.
The default value depends on the config.load_defaults
target version:
Starting with version | The default value is |
---|---|
(original) | false |
7.0 | true |
Determines whether the Active Storage assets should be added to the asset pipeline precompilation. It
has no effect if Sprockets is not used. The default value is true
.
Accepts a string for the HTML tag used to wrap attachments. Defaults to "action-text-attachment"
.
Just about every Rails application will interact with a database. You can connect to the database by setting an environment variable ENV['DATABASE_URL']
or by using a configuration file called config/database.yml
.
Using the config/database.yml
file you can specify all the information needed to access your database:
development:
adapter: postgresql
database: blog_development
pool: 5
This will connect to the database named blog_development
using the postgresql
adapter. This same information can be stored in a URL and provided via an environment variable like this:
ENV['DATABASE_URL'] # => "postgresql://localhost/blog_development?pool=5"
The config/database.yml
file contains sections for three different environments in which Rails can run by default:
- The
development
environment is used on your development/local computer as you interact manually with the application. - The
test
environment is used when running automated tests. - The
production
environment is used when you deploy your application for the world to use.
If you wish, you can manually specify a URL inside of your config/database.yml
development:
url: postgresql://localhost/blog_development?pool=5
The config/database.yml
file can contain ERB tags <%= %>
. Anything in the tags will be evaluated as Ruby code. You can use this to pull out data from an environment variable or to perform calculations to generate the needed connection information.
TIP: You don't have to update the database configurations manually. If you look at the options of the application generator, you will see that one of the options is named --database
. This option allows you to choose an adapter from a list of the most used relational databases. You can even run the generator repeatedly: cd .. && rails new blog --database=mysql
. When you confirm the overwriting of the config/database.yml
file, your application will be configured for MySQL instead of SQLite. Detailed examples of the common database connections are below.
Since there are two ways to configure your connection (using config/database.yml
or using an environment variable) it is important to understand how they can interact.
If you have an empty config/database.yml
file but your ENV['DATABASE_URL']
is present, then Rails will connect to the database via your environment variable:
$ cat config/database.yml
$ echo $DATABASE_URL
postgresql://localhost/my_database
If you have a config/database.yml
but no ENV['DATABASE_URL']
then this file will be used to connect to your database:
$ cat config/database.yml
development:
adapter: postgresql
database: my_database
host: localhost
$ echo $DATABASE_URL
If you have both config/database.yml
and ENV['DATABASE_URL']
set then Rails will merge the configuration together. To better understand this we must see some examples.
When duplicate connection information is provided the environment variable will take precedence:
$ cat config/database.yml
development:
adapter: sqlite3
database: NOT_my_database
host: localhost
$ echo $DATABASE_URL
postgresql://localhost/my_database
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fd50e209a28>
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.inspect'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fc8eab02880 @configurations=[
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations::UrlConfig:0x00007fc8eab020b0
@env_name="development", @spec_name="primary",
@config={"adapter"=>"postgresql", "database"=>"my_database", "host"=>"localhost"}
@url="postgresql://localhost/my_database">
]
Here the adapter, host, and database match the information in ENV['DATABASE_URL']
.
If non-duplicate information is provided you will get all unique values, environment variable still takes precedence in cases of any conflicts.
$ cat config/database.yml
development:
adapter: sqlite3
pool: 5
$ echo $DATABASE_URL
postgresql://localhost/my_database
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fd50e209a28>
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.inspect'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fc8eab02880 @configurations=[
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations::UrlConfig:0x00007fc8eab020b0
@env_name="development", @spec_name="primary",
@config={"adapter"=>"postgresql", "database"=>"my_database", "host"=>"localhost", "pool"=>5}
@url="postgresql://localhost/my_database">
]
Since pool is not in the ENV['DATABASE_URL']
provided connection information its information is merged in. Since adapter
is duplicate, the ENV['DATABASE_URL']
connection information wins.
The only way to explicitly not use the connection information in ENV['DATABASE_URL']
is to specify an explicit URL connection using the "url"
sub key:
$ cat config/database.yml
development:
url: sqlite3:NOT_my_database
$ echo $DATABASE_URL
postgresql://localhost/my_database
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fd50e209a28>
$ bin/rails runner 'puts ActiveRecord::Base.configurations.inspect'
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations:0x00007fc8eab02880 @configurations=[
#<ActiveRecord::DatabaseConfigurations::UrlConfig:0x00007fc8eab020b0
@env_name="development", @spec_name="primary",
@config={"adapter"=>"sqlite3", "database"=>"NOT_my_database"}
@url="sqlite3:NOT_my_database">
]
Here the connection information in ENV['DATABASE_URL']
is ignored, note the different adapter and database name.
Since it is possible to embed ERB in your config/database.yml
it is best practice to explicitly show you are using the ENV['DATABASE_URL']
to connect to your database. This is especially useful in production since you should not commit secrets like your database password into your source control (such as Git).
$ cat config/database.yml
production:
url: <%= ENV['DATABASE_URL'] %>
Now the behavior is clear, that we are only using the connection information in ENV['DATABASE_URL']
.
Rails comes with built-in support for SQLite3, which is a lightweight serverless database application. While a busy production environment may overload SQLite, it works well for development and testing. Rails defaults to using an SQLite database when creating a new project, but you can always change it later.
Here's the section of the default configuration file (config/database.yml
) with connection information for the development environment:
development:
adapter: sqlite3
database: db/development.sqlite3
pool: 5
timeout: 5000
NOTE: Rails uses an SQLite3 database for data storage by default because it is a zero configuration database that just works. Rails also supports MySQL (including MariaDB) and PostgreSQL "out of the box", and has plugins for many database systems. If you are using a database in a production environment Rails most likely has an adapter for it.
If you choose to use MySQL or MariaDB instead of the shipped SQLite3 database, your config/database.yml
will look a little different. Here's the development section:
development:
adapter: mysql2
encoding: utf8mb4
database: blog_development
pool: 5
username: root
password:
socket: /tmp/mysql.sock
If your development database has a root user with an empty password, this configuration should work for you. Otherwise, change the username and password in the development
section as appropriate.
NOTE: If your MySQL version is 5.5 or 5.6 and want to use the utf8mb4
character set by default, please configure your MySQL server to support the longer key prefix by enabling innodb_large_prefix
system variable.
Advisory Locks are enabled by default on MySQL and are used to make database migrations concurrent safe. You can disable advisory locks by setting advisory_locks
to false
:
production:
adapter: mysql2
advisory_locks: false
If you choose to use PostgreSQL, your config/database.yml
will be customized to use PostgreSQL databases:
development:
adapter: postgresql
encoding: unicode
database: blog_development
pool: 5
By default Active Record uses database features like prepared statements and advisory locks. You might need to disable those features if you're using an external connection pooler like PgBouncer:
production:
adapter: postgresql
prepared_statements: false
advisory_locks: false
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:
production:
adapter: postgresql
statement_limit: 200
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.
If you choose to use SQLite3 and are using JRuby, your config/database.yml
will look a little different. Here's the development section:
development:
adapter: jdbcsqlite3
database: db/development.sqlite3
If you choose to use MySQL or MariaDB and are using JRuby, your config/database.yml
will look a little different. Here's the development section:
development:
adapter: jdbcmysql
database: blog_development
username: root
password:
If you choose to use PostgreSQL and are using JRuby, your config/database.yml
will look a little different. Here's the development section:
development:
adapter: jdbcpostgresql
encoding: unicode
database: blog_development
username: blog
password:
Change the username and password in the development
section as appropriate.
By default Rails will store information about your Rails environment and schema
in an internal table named ar_internal_metadata
.
To turn this off per connection, set use_metadata_table
in your database
configuration. This is useful when working with a shared database and/or
database user that cannot create tables.
development:
adapter: postgresql
use_metadata_table: false
By default Rails ships with three environments: "development", "test", and "production". While these are sufficient for most use cases, there are circumstances when you want more environments.
Imagine you have a server which mirrors the production environment but is only used for testing. Such a server is commonly called a "staging server". To define an environment called "staging" for this server, just create a file called config/environments/staging.rb
. Please use the contents of any existing file in config/environments
as a starting point and make the necessary changes from there.
That environment is no different than the default ones, start a server with bin/rails server -e staging
, a console with bin/rails console -e staging
, Rails.env.staging?
works, etc.
By default Rails expects that your application is running at the root
(e.g. /
). This section explains how to run your application inside a directory.
Let's assume we want to deploy our application to "/app1". Rails needs to know this directory to generate the appropriate routes:
config.relative_url_root = "/app1"
alternatively you can set the RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT
environment
variable.
Rails will now prepend "/app1" when generating links.
Passenger makes it easy to run your application in a subdirectory. You can find the relevant configuration in the Passenger manual.
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.
Many modern web servers can be used as a proxy server to balance third-party elements such as caching servers or application servers.
One such application server you can use is Unicorn to run behind a reverse proxy.
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.
You can find more information in the Unicorn readme and understand the philosophy behind it.
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:
upstream application_server {
server 0.0.0.0:8080;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name localhost;
root /root/path/to/your_app/public;
try_files $uri/index.html $uri.html @app;
location @app {
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
proxy_redirect off;
proxy_pass http://application_server;
}
# some other configuration
}
Be sure to read the NGINX documentation for the most up-to-date information.
Some parts of Rails can also be configured externally by supplying environment variables. The following environment variables are recognized by various parts of Rails:
-
ENV["RAILS_ENV"]
defines the Rails environment (production, development, test, and so on) that Rails will run under. -
ENV["RAILS_RELATIVE_URL_ROOT"]
is used by the routing code to recognize URLs when you deploy your application to a subdirectory. -
ENV["RAILS_CACHE_ID"]
andENV["RAILS_APP_VERSION"]
are used to generate expanded cache keys in Rails' caching code. This allows you to have multiple separate caches from the same application.
After loading the framework and any gems in your application, Rails turns to
loading initializers. An initializer is any Ruby file stored under
config/initializers
in your application. You can use initializers to hold
configuration settings that should be made after all of the frameworks and gems
are loaded, such as options to configure settings for these parts.
The files in config/initializers
(and any subdirectories of
config/initializers
) are sorted and loaded one by one as part of
the load_config_initializers
initializer.
If an initializer has code that relies on code in another initializer, you can
combine them into a single initializer instead. This makes the dependencies more
explicit, and can help surface new concepts within your application. Rails also
supports numbering of initializer file names, but this can lead to file name
churn. Explicitly loading initializers with require
is not recommended, since
it will cause the initializer to get loaded twice.
NOTE: There is no guarantee that your initializers will run after all the gem
initializers, so any initialization code that depends on a given gem having been
initialized should go into a config.after_initialize
block.
Rails has 5 initialization events which can be hooked into (listed in the order that they are run):
-
before_configuration
: This is run as soon as the application constant inherits fromRails::Application
. Theconfig
calls are evaluated before this happens. -
before_initialize
: This is run directly before the initialization process of the application occurs with the:bootstrap_hook
initializer near the beginning of the Rails initialization process. -
to_prepare
: Run after the initializers are run for all Railties (including the application itself), but before eager loading and the middleware stack is built. More importantly, will run upon every code reload indevelopment
, but only once (during boot-up) inproduction
andtest
. -
before_eager_load
: This is run directly before eager loading occurs, which is the default behavior for theproduction
environment and not for thedevelopment
environment. -
after_initialize
: Run directly after the initialization of the application, after the application initializers inconfig/initializers
are run.
To define an event for these hooks, use the block syntax within a Rails::Application
, Rails::Railtie
or Rails::Engine
subclass:
module YourApp
class Application < Rails::Application
config.before_initialize do
# initialization code goes here
end
end
end
Alternatively, you can also do it through the config
method on the Rails.application
object:
Rails.application.config.before_initialize do
# initialization code goes here
end
WARNING: Some parts of your application, notably routing, are not yet set up at the point where the after_initialize
block is called.
Rails has several initializers that run on startup that are all defined by using the initializer
method from Rails::Railtie
. Here's an example of the set_helpers_path
initializer from Action Controller:
initializer "action_controller.set_helpers_path" do |app|
ActionController::Helpers.helpers_path = app.helpers_paths
end
The initializer
method takes three arguments with the first being the name for the initializer and the second being an options hash (not shown here) and the third being a block. The :before
key in the options hash can be specified to specify which initializer this new initializer must run before, and the :after
key will specify which initializer to run this initializer after.
Initializers defined using the initializer
method will be run in the order they are defined in, with the exception of ones that use the :before
or :after
methods.
WARNING: You may put your initializer before or after any other initializer in the chain, as long as it is logical. Say you have 4 initializers called "one" through "four" (defined in that order) and you define "four" to go before "two" but after "three", that just isn't logical and Rails will not be able to determine your initializer order.
The block argument of the initializer
method is the instance of the application itself, and so we can access the configuration on it by using the config
method as done in the example.
Because Rails::Application
inherits from Rails::Railtie
(indirectly), you can use the initializer
method in config/application.rb
to define initializers for the application.
Below is a comprehensive list of all the initializers found in Rails in the order that they are defined (and therefore run in, unless otherwise stated).
-
load_environment_hook
: Serves as a placeholder so that:load_environment_config
can be defined to run before it. -
load_active_support
: Requiresactive_support/dependencies
which sets up the basis for Active Support. Optionally requiresactive_support/all
ifconfig.active_support.bare
is un-truthful, which is the default. -
initialize_logger
: Initializes the logger (anActiveSupport::Logger
object) for the application and makes it accessible atRails.logger
, provided that no initializer inserted before this point has definedRails.logger
. -
initialize_cache
: IfRails.cache
isn't set yet, initializes the cache by referencing the value inconfig.cache_store
and stores the outcome asRails.cache
. If this object responds to themiddleware
method, its middleware is inserted beforeRack::Runtime
in the middleware stack. -
set_clear_dependencies_hook
: This initializer - which runs only ifconfig.enable_reloading
is set totrue
- usesActionDispatch::Callbacks.after
to remove the constants which have been referenced during the request from the object space so that they will be reloaded during the following request. -
bootstrap_hook
: Runs all configuredbefore_initialize
blocks. -
i18n.callbacks
: In the development environment, sets up ato_prepare
callback which will callI18n.reload!
if any of the locales have changed since the last request. In production this callback will only run on the first request. -
active_support.deprecation_behavior
: Sets up deprecation reporting for environments, defaulting to:log
for development,:silence
for production, and:stderr
for test. Can be set to an array of values. This initializer also sets up behaviors for disallowed deprecations, defaulting to:raise
for development and test and:silence
for production. Disallowed deprecation warnings default to an empty array. -
active_support.initialize_time_zone
: Sets the default time zone for the application based on theconfig.time_zone
setting, which defaults to "UTC". -
active_support.initialize_beginning_of_week
: Sets the default beginning of week for the application based onconfig.beginning_of_week
setting, which defaults to:monday
. -
active_support.set_configs
: Sets up Active Support by using the settings inconfig.active_support
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActiveSupport
and passing the values through. -
action_dispatch.configure
: Configures theActionDispatch::Http::URL.tld_length
to be set to the value ofconfig.action_dispatch.tld_length
. -
action_view.set_configs
: Sets up Action View by using the settings inconfig.action_view
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActionView::Base
and passing the values through. -
action_controller.assets_config
: Initializes theconfig.action_controller.assets_dir
to the app's public directory if not explicitly configured. -
action_controller.set_helpers_path
: Sets Action Controller'shelpers_path
to the application'shelpers_path
. -
action_controller.parameters_config
: Configures strong parameters options forActionController::Parameters
. -
action_controller.set_configs
: Sets up Action Controller by using the settings inconfig.action_controller
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActionController::Base
and passing the values through. -
action_controller.compile_config_methods
: Initializes methods for the config settings specified so that they are quicker to access. -
active_record.initialize_timezone
: SetsActiveRecord::Base.time_zone_aware_attributes
totrue
, as well as settingActiveRecord::Base.default_timezone
to UTC. When attributes are read from the database, they will be converted into the time zone specified byTime.zone
. -
active_record.logger
: SetsActiveRecord::Base.logger
- if it's not already set - toRails.logger
. -
active_record.migration_error
: Configures middleware to check for pending migrations. -
active_record.check_schema_cache_dump
: Loads the schema cache dump if configured and available. -
active_record.warn_on_records_fetched_greater_than
: Enables warnings when queries return large numbers of records. -
active_record.set_configs
: Sets up Active Record by using the settings inconfig.active_record
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActiveRecord::Base
and passing the values through. -
active_record.initialize_database
: Loads the database configuration (by default) fromconfig/database.yml
and establishes a connection for the current environment. -
active_record.log_runtime
: IncludesActiveRecord::Railties::ControllerRuntime
andActiveRecord::Railties::JobRuntime
which are responsible for reporting the time taken by Active Record calls for the request back to the logger. -
active_record.set_reloader_hooks
: Resets all reloadable connections to the database ifconfig.enable_reloading
is set totrue
. -
active_record.add_watchable_files
: Addsschema.rb
andstructure.sql
files to watchable files. -
active_job.logger
: SetsActiveJob::Base.logger
- if it's not already set - toRails.logger
. -
active_job.set_configs
: Sets up Active Job by using the settings inconfig.active_job
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActiveJob::Base
and passing the values through. -
action_mailer.logger
: SetsActionMailer::Base.logger
- if it's not already set - toRails.logger
. -
action_mailer.set_configs
: Sets up Action Mailer by using the settings inconfig.action_mailer
bysend
'ing the method names as setters toActionMailer::Base
and passing the values through. -
action_mailer.compile_config_methods
: Initializes methods for the config settings specified so that they are quicker to access. -
set_load_path
: This initializer runs beforebootstrap_hook
. Adds paths specified byconfig.load_paths
and all autoload paths to$LOAD_PATH
. -
set_autoload_paths
: This initializer runs beforebootstrap_hook
. Adds all sub-directories ofapp
and paths specified byconfig.autoload_paths
,config.eager_load_paths
andconfig.autoload_once_paths
toActiveSupport::Dependencies.autoload_paths
. -
add_routing_paths
: Loads (by default) allconfig/routes.rb
files (in the application and railties, including engines) and sets up the routes for the application. -
add_locales
: Adds the files inconfig/locales
(from the application, railties, and engines) toI18n.load_path
, making available the translations in these files. -
add_view_paths
: Adds the directoryapp/views
from the application, railties, and engines to the lookup path for view files for the application. -
load_environment_config
: Loads theconfig/environments
file for the current environment. -
prepend_helpers_path
: Adds the directoryapp/helpers
from the application, railties, and engines to the lookup path for helpers for the application. -
load_config_initializers
: Loads all Ruby files fromconfig/initializers
in the application, railties, and engines. The files in this directory can be used to hold configuration settings that should be made after all of the frameworks are loaded. -
engines_blank_point
: Provides a point-in-initialization to hook into if you wish to do anything before engines are loaded. After this point, all railtie and engine initializers are run. -
add_generator_templates
: Finds templates for generators atlib/templates
for the application, railties, and engines, and adds these to theconfig.generators.templates
setting, which will make the templates available for all generators to reference. -
ensure_autoload_once_paths_as_subset
: Ensures that theconfig.autoload_once_paths
only contains paths fromconfig.autoload_paths
. If it contains extra paths, then an exception will be raised. -
add_to_prepare_blocks
: The block for everyconfig.to_prepare
call in the application, a railtie, or engine is added to theto_prepare
callbacks for Action Dispatch which will be run per request in development, or before the first request in production. -
add_builtin_route
: If the application is running under the development environment then this will append the route forrails/info/properties
to the application routes. This route provides the detailed information such as Rails and Ruby version forpublic/index.html
in a default Rails application. -
build_middleware_stack
: Builds the middleware stack for the application, returning an object which has acall
method which takes a Rack environment object for the request. -
eager_load!
: Ifconfig.eager_load
istrue
, runs theconfig.before_eager_load
hooks and then callseager_load!
which will load allconfig.eager_load_namespaces
. -
finisher_hook
: Provides a hook for after the initialization of process of the application is complete, as well as running all theconfig.after_initialize
blocks for the application, railties, and engines. -
set_routes_reloader_hook
: Configures Action Dispatch to reload the routes file usingActiveSupport::Callbacks.to_run
. -
disable_dependency_loading
: Disables the automatic dependency loading if theconfig.eager_load
is set totrue
.
Active Record database connections are managed by ActiveRecord::ConnectionAdapters::ConnectionPool
which ensures that a connection pool synchronizes the amount of thread access to a limited number of database connections. This limit defaults to 5 and can be configured in database.yml
.
development:
adapter: sqlite3
database: db/development.sqlite3
pool: 5
timeout: 5000
Since the connection pooling is handled inside of Active Record by default, all application servers (Thin, Puma, Unicorn, etc.) should behave the same. The database connection pool is initially empty. As demand for connections increases it will create them until it reaches the connection pool limit.
Any one request will check out a connection the first time it requires access to the database. At the end of the request it will check the connection back in. This means that the additional connection slot will be available again for the next request in the queue.
If you try to use more connections than are available, Active Record will block you and wait for a connection from the pool. If it cannot get a connection, a timeout error similar to that given below will be thrown.
ActiveRecord::ConnectionTimeoutError - could not obtain a database connection within 5.000 seconds (waited 5.000 seconds)
If you get the above error, you might want to increase the size of the
connection pool by incrementing the pool
option in database.yml
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 number of connections.
You can configure your own code through the Rails configuration object with
custom configuration under either the config.x
namespace, or config
directly.
The key difference between these two is that you should be using config.x
if you
are defining nested configuration (ex: config.x.nested.hi
), and just
config
for single level configuration (ex: config.hello
).
config.x.payment_processing.schedule = :daily
config.x.payment_processing.retries = 3
config.super_debugger = true
These configuration points are then available through the configuration object:
Rails.configuration.x.payment_processing.schedule # => :daily
Rails.configuration.x.payment_processing.retries # => 3
Rails.configuration.x.payment_processing.not_set # => nil
Rails.configuration.super_debugger # => true
You can also use Rails::Application.config_for
to load whole configuration files:
# config/payment.yml
production:
environment: production
merchant_id: production_merchant_id
public_key: production_public_key
private_key: production_private_key
development:
environment: sandbox
merchant_id: development_merchant_id
public_key: development_public_key
private_key: development_private_key
# config/application.rb
module MyApp
class Application < Rails::Application
config.payment = config_for(:payment)
end
end
Rails.configuration.payment['merchant_id'] # => production_merchant_id or development_merchant_id
Rails::Application.config_for
supports a shared
configuration to group common
configurations. The shared configuration will be merged into the environment
configuration.
# config/example.yml
shared:
foo:
bar:
baz: 1
development:
foo:
bar:
qux: 2
# development environment
Rails.application.config_for(:example)[:foo][:bar] #=> { baz: 1, qux: 2 }
Sometimes, you may want to prevent some pages of your application to be visible
on search sites like Google, Bing, Yahoo, or Duck Duck Go. The robots that index
these sites will first analyze the http://your-site.com/robots.txt
file to
know which pages it is allowed to index.
Rails creates this file for you inside the /public
folder. By default, it allows
search engines to index all pages of your application. If you want to block
indexing on all pages of your application, use this:
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
To block just specific pages, it's necessary to use a more complex syntax. Learn it on the official documentation.
If the listen gem is loaded Rails uses an evented file system monitor to detect changes when reloading is enabled:
group :development do
gem 'listen', '~> 3.3'
end
Otherwise, in every request Rails walks the application tree to check if anything has changed.
On Linux and macOS no additional gems are needed, but some are required for *BSD and for Windows.
Note that some setups are unsupported.