ember-rails makes developing an Ember.JS application much easier in Rails 3.1+.
The following functionalities are included in this gem:
- Pre-compiling of your handlebars templates when building your asset pipeline.
- Inclusion of development and production copies of Ember, Ember Data and Handlebars.
- Inclusion of ActiveModel::Serializer for integration with Ember Data.
You can see an example of how to use the gem here. There is also a great tutorial by Dan Gebhardt called "Beginning Ember.js on Rails" which is a great read if you're just starting out with Rails and Ember.js.
- Add the gem to your application Gemfile:
gem 'ember-rails'
gem 'ember-source', '~> 1.9.0' # or the version you need
- Run
bundle install
- Next, generate the application structure:
rails generate ember:bootstrap
- Restart your server (if it's running)
Rails supports the ability to build projects from a template source ruby file.
To build an Ember centric Rails project you can simply type the following into your command line:
rails new my_app -m http://emberjs.com/edge_template.rb
Read more about Rails application templates and take a look at the edge_template.rb source code.
Notes:
To install the latest builds of ember and ember-data. It should be noted that the examples in the getting started guide have been designed to use the released version of ember:
rails generate ember:install
You'll probably need to clear out your cache after doing this with:
rake tmp:clear
Also, ember-rails include some flags for the bootstrap generator:
--ember-path or -d # custom ember path
--skip-git or -g # skip git keeps
--javascript-engine # engine for javascript (js, coffee or em)
--app-name or -n # custom ember app name
Add coffee-rails to the Gemfile
gem 'coffee-rails'
Run the bootstrap generator in step 4 with an extra flag instead:
rails g ember:bootstrap -g --javascript-engine coffee
EmberScript is a dialect of CoffeeScript
with extra support for computed properties (which do not have to be
explicitly declared), the class
/ extends
syntax, and extra syntax
to support observers and mixins.
To get EmberScript support, make sure you have the following in your Gemfile:
gem 'ember_script-rails', :github => 'ghempton/ember-script-rails'
You can now use the flag --javascript-engine=em
to specify EmberScript
assets in your generators, but all of the generators will default to
using an EmberScript variant first.
Note:
Ember-rails include some flags options for bootstrap generator:
--ember-path or -d # custom ember path
--skip-git or -g # skip git keeps
--javascript-engine # engine for javascript (js, coffee or em)
--app-name or -n # custom ember app name
The following options are available for configuration in your application or environment-level
config files (config/application.rb
, config/environments/development.rb
, etc.):
Configuration Option | Description |
---|---|
config.ember.variant |
Determines which Ember variant to use. Valid options: :development , :production . Defaults to :production in production, and :development everywhere else. |
config.ember.app_name |
Specificies a default application name for all generators. |
config.ember.ember_path |
Specifies a default custom root path for all generators. |
config.handlebars.precompile |
Enables or disables precompilation. Default value: true . |
config.handlebars.templates_root |
Sets the root path (under app/assets/javascripts ) for templates to be looked up in. Default value: "templates" . |
config.handlebars.templates_path_separator |
The path separator to use for templates. Default value: '/' . |
config.handlebars.output_type |
Configures the style of output (options are :amd and :global ). Default value: :global . |
config.handlebars.ember_template |
Default which Ember template type to compile. Valid options: 'Handlebars', HTMLBars. Defaults to 'Handlebars ' when Ember::VERSION is under 1.10.0, HTMLBars when Ember::VERSION is over 1.10.0. |
Note:
In a mountable engine, ember-rails will not recognize any configurations. Instead, use command line options.
See the guide and check features.json for the version of Ember you're using.
If a feature is set to false, you will need to compile ember from source yourself to include it.
ember-rails includes active_model_serializers which affects how ActiveModel and ActiveRecord objects get serialized to JSON, such as when using render json:
or respond_with
. By default active_model_serializers adds root elements to these responses (such as adding {"posts": [...]}
for render json: @posts
) which will affect the structure of your JSON responses.
To disable this effect on your JSON responses, put this in an initializer:
# Stop active_model_serializers from adding root elements to JSON responses.
ActiveModel::Serializer.root = false
ActiveModel::ArraySerializer.root = false
See the active_model_serializers documentation for a more complete understanding of other effects this dependency might have on your app.
Ember does not require an organized file structure. However, ember-rails allows you
to use rails g ember:bootstrap
to create the following directory structure under app/assets/javascripts
:
├── adapters
├── components
├── controllers
├── helpers
├── mixins
├── models
├── practicality.js.coffee
├── router.js.coffee
├── routes
├── store.js.coffee
├── templates
│ └── components
└── views
Additionally, it will add the following lines to app/assets/javascripts/application.js
.
By default, it uses the Rails Application's name and creates an rails_app_name.js
file to set up application namespace and initial requires:
//= require handlebars
//= require ember
//= require ember-data
//= require_self
//= require rails_app_name
RailsAppName = Ember.Application.create();
Example:
rails g ember:bootstrap
insert app/assets/javascripts/application.js
create app/assets/javascripts/models
create app/assets/javascripts/models/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/controllers
create app/assets/javascripts/controllers/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/views
create app/assets/javascripts/views/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/helpers
create app/assets/javascripts/helpers/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/components
create app/assets/javascripts/components/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/templates
create app/assets/javascripts/templates/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/templates/components
create app/assets/javascripts/templates/components/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/mixins
create app/assets/javascripts/mixins/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/adapters
create app/assets/javascripts/adapters/.gitkeep
create app/assets/javascripts/app.js
If you want to avoid .gitkeep
files, use the skip git
option like
this: rails g ember:bootstrap -g
.
Ask Rails to serve HandlebarsJS and pre-compile templates to Ember
by putting each template in a dedicated ".js.hjs", ".hbs" or ".handlebars" file
(e.g. app/assets/javascripts/templates/admin_panel.handlebars
)
and including the assets in your layout:
<%= javascript_include_tag "templates/admin_panel" %>
If you want to avoid the templates
prefix, set the templates_root
option in your application configuration block:
config.handlebars.templates_root = 'ember_templates'
If you store templates in a file like app/assets/javascripts/ember_templates/admin_panel.handlebars
after setting the above config,
it will be made available to Ember as the admin_panel
template.
(Note: you must clear the local sprockets cache after modifying templates_root
, stored by default in tmp/cache/assets
)
Default behavior for ember-rails is to precompile handlebars templates.
If you don't want this behavior you can turn it off in your application configuration (or per environment in: config/environments/development.rb
) block:
config.handlebars.precompile = false
(Note: you must clear the local sprockets cache if you disable precompilation, stored by default in tmp/cache/assets
)
Bundle all templates together thanks to Sprockets,
e.g create app/assets/javascripts/templates/all.js
with:
//= require_tree .
Now a single line in the layout loads everything:
<%= javascript_include_tag "templates/all" %>
When necessary, ember-rails adheres to a conventional folder structure. To create an ember component you must define the handlebars file inside the components folder under the templates folder of your project to properly register your handlebars component file.
Example
Given the following folder structure:
├── adapters
├── components
├── controllers
├── helpers
├── mixins
├── models
├── practicality.js.coffee
├── router.js.coffee
├── routes
├── store.js.coffee
├── templates
│ └── components
│ └── my-component.handlebars
└── views
and a my-component.handlebars
file with the following contents:
<h1>My Component</h1>
It will produce the following handlebars output:
<script type="text/x-handlebars" id="components/my-component">
<h1>My Component</h1>
</script>
You can reference your component inside your other handlebars template files by the handlebars file name:
{{ my-component }}
By default, ember-rails ships with the latest version of Ember, Handlebars, and Ember-Data.
To specify a different version that'll be used for both template precompilation and serving to the browser, you can specify the desired version of one of the above-linked gems in the Gemfile, e.g.:
gem 'ember-source', '1.7.0'
You can also specify versions of 'handlebars-source' and 'ember-data-source', but note that an appropriate 'handlebars-source' will be automatically chosen depending on the version of 'ember-source' that's specified.
You can also override the specific ember.js, handlebars.js, and
ember-data.js files that'll be require
d by the Asset pipeline by
placing these files in vendor/assets/ember/development
and
vendor/assets/ember/production
, depending on the config.ember.variant
you've specified in your app's configuration, e.g.:
config.ember.variant = :production
#config.ember.variant = :development
If at any point you need to update Ember.js from any of the release channels, you can do that with
rails generate ember:install --channel=<channel>
This will fetch both Ember.js and Ember Data from http://builds.emberjs.com/ and copy to the right directory. You can choose between the following channels:
- canary - This references the 'master' branch and is not recommended for production use.
- beta - This references the 'beta' branch, and will ultimately become the next stable version. It is not recommended for production use.
- release - This references the 'stable' branch, and is recommended for production use.
When you don't specify a channel, the release channel is used.
It is also possible to download a specific tagged release. To do this, use the following syntax:
rails generate ember:install --tag=v1.2.0-beta.2 --ember
or for ember-data
rails generate ember:install --tag=v1.0.0-beta.2 --ember-data
Rails protect_from_forgery
requires CSRF token for every XHR except GET.
The CSRF token is normally found in app/views/layouts/application.html.*
inserted with the rails helper: csrf_meta_tags
.
When you use jquery-ujs, the CSRF token will be send to rails application on every XHR automatically. If not so, the following JavaScript is required in your code.
$.ajaxPrefilter(function(options, originalOptions, xhr) {
var token = $('meta[name="csrf-token"]').attr('content');
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-CSRF-Token', token);
});
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.