aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/guides
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to 'guides')
-rw-r--r--guides/assets/stylesheets/syntaxhighlighter/shThemeRailsGuides.css2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/5_0_release_notes.md3
-rw-r--r--guides/source/action_cable_overview.md620
-rw-r--r--guides/source/action_view_overview.md12
-rw-r--r--guides/source/active_record_basics.md2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/active_record_migrations.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md23
-rw-r--r--guides/source/asset_pipeline.md2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/association_basics.md40
-rw-r--r--guides/source/caching_with_rails.md21
-rw-r--r--guides/source/command_line.md7
-rw-r--r--guides/source/configuring.md11
-rw-r--r--guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md9
-rw-r--r--guides/source/documents.yaml2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/engines.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/getting_started.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/initialization.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md21
-rw-r--r--guides/source/rails_application_templates.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/rails_on_rack.md2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/routing.md4
-rw-r--r--guides/source/security.md6
-rw-r--r--guides/source/testing.md2
-rw-r--r--guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md10
25 files changed, 709 insertions, 122 deletions
diff --git a/guides/assets/stylesheets/syntaxhighlighter/shThemeRailsGuides.css b/guides/assets/stylesheets/syntaxhighlighter/shThemeRailsGuides.css
index 6d2edb2eb8..bc7afd3898 100644
--- a/guides/assets/stylesheets/syntaxhighlighter/shThemeRailsGuides.css
+++ b/guides/assets/stylesheets/syntaxhighlighter/shThemeRailsGuides.css
@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@
}
.syntaxhighlighter .script {
color: #222 !important;
- background-color: none !important;
+ background-color: transparent !important;
}
.syntaxhighlighter .color1, .syntaxhighlighter .color1 a {
color: gray !important;
diff --git a/guides/source/5_0_release_notes.md b/guides/source/5_0_release_notes.md
index dc631e5cb9..7c11fad7bf 100644
--- a/guides/source/5_0_release_notes.md
+++ b/guides/source/5_0_release_notes.md
@@ -300,9 +300,6 @@ Please refer to the [Changelog][action-view] for detailed changes.
button on submit to prevent double submits.
([Pull Request](https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/21135))
-* Downcase model name in form submit tags rather than humanize.
- ([Pull Request](https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/22764))
-
Action Mailer
-------------
diff --git a/guides/source/action_cable_overview.md b/guides/source/action_cable_overview.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..16cfaf94e2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/guides/source/action_cable_overview.md
@@ -0,0 +1,620 @@
+Action Cable Overview
+=====================
+
+In this guide you will learn how Action Cable works and how to use WebSockets to
+incorporate real-time features into your Rails application.
+
+After reading this guide, you will know:
+
+* How to setup Action Cable
+* How to setup channels
+
+Introduction
+------------
+
+Action Cable seamlessly integrates WebSockets with the rest of your Rails application.
+It allows for real-time features to be written in Ruby in the same style and form as
+the rest of your Rails application, while still being performant and scalable. It's
+a full-stack offering that provides both a client-side JavaScript framework and a
+server-side Ruby framework. You have access to your full domain model written with
+Active Record or your ORM of choice.
+
+What is Pub/Sub
+---------------
+
+Pub/Sub, or Publish-Subscribe, refers to a message queue paradigm whereby senders
+of information (publishers), send data to an abstract class of recipients (subscribers),
+without specifying individual recipients. Action Cable uses this approach to communicate
+between the server and many clients.
+
+What is Action Cable
+--------------------
+
+Action Cable is a server which can handle multiple connection instances, with one
+client-server connection instance established per WebSocket connection.
+
+## Server-Side Components
+
+### Connections
+
+Connections form the foundation of the client-server relationship. For every WebSocket
+the cable server is accepting, a Connection object will be instantiated on the server side.
+This instance becomes the parent of all the channel subscriptions that are created from there on.
+The Connection itself does not deal with any specific application logic beyond authentication
+and authorization. The client of a WebSocket connection is called a consumer. An individual
+user will create one consumer-connection pair per browser tab, window, or device they have open.
+
+Connections are instantiated via the `ApplicationCable::Connection` class in Ruby.
+In this class, you authorize the incoming connection, and proceed to establish it
+if the user can be identified.
+
+#### Connection Setup
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/application_cable/connection.rb
+module ApplicationCable
+ class Connection < ActionCable::Connection::Base
+ identified_by :current_user
+
+ def connect
+ self.current_user = find_verified_user
+ end
+
+ protected
+ def find_verified_user
+ if current_user = User.find_by(id: cookies.signed[:user_id])
+ current_user
+ else
+ reject_unauthorized_connection
+ end
+ end
+ end
+end
+```
+
+Here `identified_by` is a connection identifier that can be used to find the
+specific connection later. Note that anything marked as an identifier will automatically
+create a delegate by the same name on any channel instances created off the connection.
+
+This example relies on the fact that you will already have handled authentication of the user
+somewhere else in your application, and that a successful authentication sets a signed
+cookie with the `user_id`.
+
+The cookie is then automatically sent to the connection instance when a new connection
+is attempted, and you use that to set the `current_user`. By identifying the connection
+by this same current_user, you're also ensuring that you can later retrieve all open
+connections by a given user (and potentially disconnect them all if the user is deleted
+or deauthorized).
+
+### Channels
+
+A channel encapsulates a logical unit of work, similar to what a controller does in a
+regular MVC setup. By default, Rails creates a parent `ApplicationCable::Channel` class
+for encapsulating shared logic between your channels.
+
+#### Parent Channel Setup
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/application_cable/channel.rb
+module ApplicationCable
+ class Channel < ActionCable::Channel::Base
+ end
+end
+```
+
+Then you would create your own channel classes. For example, you could have a
+**ChatChannel** and an **AppearanceChannel**:
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/application_cable/chat_channel.rb
+class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+end
+
+# app/channels/application_cable/appearance_channel.rb
+class AppearanceChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+end
+```
+
+A consumer could then be subscribed to either or both of these channels.
+
+#### Subscriptions
+
+When a consumer is subscribed to a channel, they act as a subscriber;
+This connection is called a subscription.
+Incoming messages are then routed to these channel subscriptions based on
+an identifier sent by the cable consumer.
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/application_cable/chat_channel.rb
+class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ # Called when the consumer has successfully become a subscriber of this channel
+ def subscribed
+ end
+end
+```
+
+## Client-Side Components
+
+### Connections
+
+Consumers require an instance of the connection on their side. This can be
+established using the following Javascript, which is generated by default in Rails:
+
+#### Connect Consumer
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable.coffee
+#= require action_cable
+
+@App = {}
+App.cable = ActionCable.createConsumer()
+```
+
+This will ready a consumer that'll connect against /cable on your server by default.
+The connection won't be established until you've also specified at least one subscription
+you're interested in having.
+
+#### Subscriber
+
+When a consumer is subscribed to a channel, they act as a subscriber. A
+consumer can act as a subscriber to a given channel any number of times.
+For example, a consumer could subscribe to multiple chat rooms at the same time.
+(remember that a physical user may have multiple consumers, one per tab/device open to your connection).
+
+A consumer becomes a subscriber, by creating a subscription to a given channel:
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/chat.coffee
+App.cable.subscriptions.create { channel: "ChatChannel", room: "Best Room" }
+
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/appearance.coffee
+App.cable.subscriptions.create { channel: "AppearanceChannel" }
+```
+
+While this creates the subscription, the functionality needed to respond to
+received data will be described later on.
+
+## Client-Server Interactions
+
+### Streams
+
+Streams provide the mechanism by which channels route published content
+(broadcasts) to its subscribers.
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/application_cable/chat_channel.rb
+class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ stream_from "chat_#{params[:room]}"
+ end
+end
+```
+
+If you have a stream that is related to a model, then the broadcasting used
+can be generated from the model and channel. The following example would
+subscribe to a broadcasting like `comments:Z2lkOi8vVGVzdEFwcC9Qb3N0LzE`
+
+```ruby
+class CommentsChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ post = Post.find(params[:id])
+ stream_for post
+ end
+end
+```
+
+You can then broadcast to this channel using: `CommentsChannel.broadcast_to(@post, @comment)`
+
+### Broadcastings
+
+A broadcasting is a pub/sub link where anything transmitted by a publisher
+is routed directly to the channel subscribers who are streaming that named
+broadcasting. Each channel can be streaming zero or more broadcastings.
+Broadcastings are purely an online queue and time dependent;
+If a consumer is not streaming (subscribed to a given channel), they'll not
+get the broadcast should they connect later.
+
+Broadcasts are called elsewhere in your Rails application:
+```ruby
+ WebNotificationsChannel.broadcast_to current_user, title: 'New things!', body: 'All the news fit to print'
+```
+
+The `WebNotificationsChannel.broadcast_to` call places a message in the current
+subscription adapter (Redis by default)'s pubsub queue under a separate
+broadcasting name for each user. For a user with an ID of 1, the broadcasting
+name would be `web_notifications_1`.
+
+The channel has been instructed to stream everything that arrives at
+`web_notifications_1` directly to the client by invoking the `#received(data)`
+callback.
+
+### Subscriptions
+
+When a consumer is subscribed to a channel, they act as a subscriber;
+This connection is called a subscription. Incoming messages are then routed
+to these channel subscriptions based on an identifier sent by the cable consumer.
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/chat.coffee
+# Assumes you've already requested the right to send web notifications
+App.cable.subscriptions.create { channel: "ChatChannel", room: "Best Room" },
+ received: (data) ->
+ @appendLine(data)
+
+ appendLine: (data) ->
+ html = @createLine(data)
+ $("[data-chat-room='Best Room']").append(html)
+
+ createLine: (data) ->
+ """
+ <article class="chat-line">
+ <span class="speaker">#{data["sent_by"]}</span>
+ <span class="body">#{data["body"]}</span>
+ </article>
+ """
+```
+
+### Passing Parameters to Channel
+
+You can pass parameters from the client-side to the server-side when
+creating a subscription. For example:
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/chat_channel.rb
+class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ stream_from "chat_#{params[:room]}"
+ end
+end
+```
+
+Pass an object as the first argument to `subscriptions.create`, and that object
+will become your params hash in your cable channel. The keyword `channel` is required.
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/chat.coffee
+App.cable.subscriptions.create { channel: "ChatChannel", room: "Best Room" },
+ received: (data) ->
+ @appendLine(data)
+
+ appendLine: (data) ->
+ html = @createLine(data)
+ $("[data-chat-room='Best Room']").append(html)
+
+ createLine: (data) ->
+ """
+ <article class="chat-line">
+ <span class="speaker">#{data["sent_by"]}</span>
+ <span class="body">#{data["body"]}</span>
+ </article>
+ """
+```
+
+```ruby
+# Somewhere in your app this is called, perhaps from a NewCommentJob
+ChatChannel.broadcast_to "chat_#{room}", sent_by: 'Paul', body: 'This is a cool chat app.'
+```
+
+
+### Rebroadcasting message
+
+A common use case is to rebroadcast a message sent by one client to any
+other connected clients.
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/chat_channel.rb
+class ChatChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ stream_from "chat_#{params[:room]}"
+ end
+
+ def receive(data)
+ ChatChannel.broadcast_to "chat_#{params[:room]}", data
+ end
+end
+```
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/chat.coffee
+App.chatChannel = App.cable.subscriptions.create { channel: "ChatChannel", room: "Best Room" },
+ received: (data) ->
+ # data => { sent_by: "Paul", body: "This is a cool chat app." }
+
+App.chatChannel.send({ sent_by: "Paul", body: "This is a cool chat app." })
+```
+
+The rebroadcast will be received by all connected clients, _including_ the
+client that sent the message. Note that params are the same as they were when
+you subscribed to the channel.
+
+## Full-stack examples
+
+The following setup steps are common to both examples:
+
+ 1. [Setup your connection](#connection-setup)
+ 2. [Setup your parent channel](#parent-channel-setup)
+ 3. [Connect your consumer](#connect-consumer)
+
+### Example 1: User appearances
+Here's a simple example of a channel that tracks whether a user is online or not
+and what page they're on. (This is useful for creating presence features like showing
+a green dot next to a user name if they're online).
+
+#### Create the server-side Appearance Channel:
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/appearance_channel.rb
+class AppearanceChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ current_user.appear
+ end
+
+ def unsubscribed
+ current_user.disappear
+ end
+
+ def appear(data)
+ current_user.appear on: data['appearing_on']
+ end
+
+ def away
+ current_user.away
+ end
+end
+```
+
+When `#subscribed` callback is invoked by the consumer, a client-side subscription
+is initiated. In this case, we take that opportunity to say "the current user has
+indeed appeared". That appear/disappear API could be backed by Redis, a database,
+or whatever else.
+
+#### Create the client-side Appearance Channel subscription:
+
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/appearance.coffee
+App.cable.subscriptions.create "AppearanceChannel",
+ # Called when the subscription is ready for use on the server
+ connected: ->
+ @install()
+ @appear()
+
+ # Called when the WebSocket connection is closed
+ disconnected: ->
+ @uninstall()
+
+ # Called when the subscription is rejected by the server
+ rejected: ->
+ @uninstall()
+
+ appear: ->
+ # Calls `AppearanceChannel#appear(data)` on the server
+ @perform("appear", appearing_on: $("main").data("appearing-on"))
+
+ away: ->
+ # Calls `AppearanceChannel#away` on the server
+ @perform("away")
+
+
+ buttonSelector = "[data-behavior~=appear_away]"
+
+ install: ->
+ $(document).on "page:change.appearance", =>
+ @appear()
+
+ $(document).on "click.appearance", buttonSelector, =>
+ @away()
+ false
+
+ $(buttonSelector).show()
+
+ uninstall: ->
+ $(document).off(".appearance")
+ $(buttonSelector).hide()
+```
+
+##### Client-Server Interaction
+1. **Client** establishes a connection with the **Server** via `App.cable = ActionCable.createConsumer("ws://cable.example.com")`. [*` cable.coffee`*] The **Server** identified this connection instance by `current_user`.
+2. **Client** initiates a subscription to the `Appearance Channel` for their connection via `App.cable.subscriptions.create "AppearanceChannel"`. [*`appearance.coffee`*]
+3. **Server** recognizes a new subscription has been initiated for `AppearanceChannel` channel performs the `subscribed` callback, which calls the `appear` method on the `current_user`. [*`appearance_channel.rb`*]
+4. **Client** recognizes that a subscription has been established and calls `connected` [*`appearance.coffee`*] which in turn calls `@install` and `@appear`. `@appear` calls`AppearanceChannel#appear(data)` on the server, and supplies a data hash of `appearing_on: $("main").data("appearing-on")`. This is possible because the server-side channel instance will automatically expose the public methods declared on the class (minus the callbacks), so that these can be reached as remote procedure calls via a subscription's `perform` method.
+5. **Server** receives the request for the `appear` action on the `AppearanceChannel` channel for the connection identified by `current_user`. [*`appearance_channel.rb`*] The server retrieves the data with the `appearing_on` key from the data hash, and sets it as the the value for the `on:` key being passed to `current_user.appear`.
+
+### Example 2: Receiving new web notifications
+
+The appearance example was all about exposing server functionality to
+client-side invocation over the WebSocket connection. But the great thing
+about WebSockets is that it's a two-way street. So now let's show an example
+where the server invokes an action on the client.
+
+This is a web notification channel that allows you to trigger client-side
+web notifications when you broadcast to the right streams:
+
+#### Create the server-side Web Notifications Channel:
+
+```ruby
+# app/channels/web_notifications_channel.rb
+class WebNotificationsChannel < ApplicationCable::Channel
+ def subscribed
+ stream_for current_user
+ end
+end
+```
+
+#### Create the client-side Web Notifications Channel subscription:
+```coffeescript
+# app/assets/javascripts/cable/subscriptions/web_notifications.coffee
+# Client-side which assumes you've already requested the right to send web notifications
+App.cable.subscriptions.create "WebNotificationsChannel",
+ received: (data) ->
+ new Notification data["title"], body: data["body"]
+```
+
+#### Broadcast content to a Web Notification Channel instance from elsewhere in your application
+
+```ruby
+# Somewhere in your app this is called, perhaps from a NewCommentJob
+ WebNotificationsChannel.broadcast_to current_user, title: 'New things!', body: 'All the news fit to print'
+```
+
+The `WebNotificationsChannel.broadcast_to` call places a message in the current
+subscription adapter (Redis by default)'s pubsub queue under a separate
+broadcasting name for each user. For a user with an ID of 1, the broadcasting
+name would be `web_notifications_1`.
+
+The channel has been instructed to stream everything that arrives at
+`web_notifications_1` directly to the client by invoking the `#received(data)`
+callback. The data is the hash sent as the second parameter to the server-side
+broadcast call, JSON encoded for the trip across the wire, and unpacked for
+the data argument arriving to `#received`.
+
+### More complete examples
+
+See the [rails/actioncable-examples](http://github.com/rails/actioncable-examples)
+repository for a full example of how to setup Action Cable in a Rails app and adding channels.
+
+## Configuration
+
+Action Cable has two required configurations: a subscription adapter and allowed request origins.
+
+### Subscription Adapter
+
+By default, `ActionCable::Server::Base` will look for a configuration file
+in `Rails.root.join('config/cable.yml')`. The file must specify an adapter
+and a URL for each Rails environment. See the "Dependencies" section for
+additional information on adapters.
+
+```yaml
+production: &production
+ adapter: redis
+ url: redis://10.10.3.153:6381
+development: &development
+ adapter: async
+test: *development
+```
+
+This format allows you to specify one configuration per Rails environment.
+You can also change the location of the Action Cable config file in
+a Rails initializer with something like:
+
+```ruby
+Rails.application.paths.add "config/redis/cable", with: "somewhere/else/cable.yml"
+```
+
+### Allowed Request Origins
+
+Action Cable will only accept requests from specified origins, which are
+passed to the server config as an array. The origins can be instances of
+strings or regular expressions, against which a check for match will be performed.
+
+```ruby
+Rails.application.config.action_cable.allowed_request_origins = ['http://rubyonrails.com', /http:\/\/ruby.*/]
+```
+
+To disable and allow requests from any origin:
+
+```ruby
+Rails.application.config.action_cable.disable_request_forgery_protection = true
+```
+
+By default, Action Cable allows all requests from localhost:3000 when running
+in the development environment.
+
+
+### Consumer Configuration
+
+To configure the URL, add a call to `action_cable_meta_tag` in your HTML layout HEAD.
+This uses a url or path typically set via `config.action_cable.url` in the environment configuration files.
+
+### Other Configurations
+
+The other common option to configure is the log tags applied to the per-connection logger. Here's close to what we're using in Basecamp:
+
+```ruby
+Rails.application.config.action_cable.log_tags = [
+ -> request { request.env['bc.account_id'] || "no-account" },
+ :action_cable,
+ -> request { request.uuid }
+]
+```
+
+For a full list of all configuration options, see the `ActionCable::Server::Configuration` class.
+
+Also note that your server must provide at least the same number of
+database connections as you have workers. The default worker pool is
+set to 100, so that means you have to make at least that available.
+You can change that in `config/database.yml` through the `pool` attribute.
+
+## Running standalone cable servers
+
+### In App
+
+Action Cable can run alongside your Rails application. For example, to
+listen for WebSocket requests on `/websocket`, mount the server at that path:
+
+```ruby
+# config/routes.rb
+Example::Application.routes.draw do
+ mount ActionCable.server => '/cable'
+end
+```
+
+You can use `App.cable = ActionCable.createConsumer()` to connect to the
+cable server if `action_cable_meta_tag` is included in the layout. A custom
+path is specified as first argument to `createConsumer`
+(e.g. `App.cable = ActionCable.createConsumer("/websocket")`).
+
+For every instance of your server you create and for every worker
+your server spawns, you will also have a new instance of ActionCable,
+but the use of Redis keeps messages synced across connections.
+
+### Standalone
+
+The cable servers can be separated from your normal application server.
+It's still a Rack application, but it is its own Rack application.
+The recommended basic setup is as follows:
+
+```ruby
+# cable/config.ru
+require ::File.expand_path('../../config/environment', __FILE__)
+Rails.application.eager_load!
+
+run ActionCable.server
+```
+
+Then you start the server using a binstub in bin/cable ala:
+
+```
+#!/bin/bash
+bundle exec puma -p 28080 cable/config.ru
+```
+
+The above will start a cable server on port 28080.
+
+### Notes
+
+The WebSocket server doesn't have access to the session, but it has
+access to the cookies. This can be used when you need to handle
+authentication. You can see one way of doing that with Devise in this [article](http://www.rubytutorial.io/actioncable-devise-authentication).
+
+## Dependencies
+
+Action Cable provides a subscription adapter interface to process its
+pubsub internals. By default, asynchronous, inline, PostgreSQL, evented
+Redis, and non-evented Redis adapters are included. The default adapter
+in new Rails applications is the asynchronous (`async`) adapter.
+
+The Ruby side of things is built on top of [websocket-driver](https://github.com/faye/websocket-driver-ruby),
+[nio4r](https://github.com/celluloid/nio4r), and [concurrent-ruby](https://github.com/ruby-concurrency/concurrent-ruby).
+
+## Deployment
+
+Action Cable is powered by a combination of WebSockets and threads. Both the
+framework plumbing and user-specified channel work are handled internally by
+utilizing Ruby's native thread support. This means you can use all your regular
+Rails models with no problem, as long as you haven't committed any thread-safety sins.
+
+The Action Cable server implements the Rack socket hijacking API,
+thereby allowing the use of a multithreaded pattern for managing connections
+internally, irrespective of whether the application server is multi-threaded or not.
+
+Accordingly, Action Cable works with all the popular application servers -- Unicorn, Puma and Passenger.
diff --git a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
index 29e0943741..46116b1e47 100644
--- a/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
+++ b/guides/source/action_view_overview.md
@@ -173,7 +173,7 @@ would produce:
```json
{
"name": "Alex",
- "email: "alex@example.com"
+ "email": "alex@example.com"
}
```
@@ -260,7 +260,7 @@ With the `as` option we can specify a different name for the local variable. For
<%= render partial: "product", as: "item" %>
```
-The `object` option can be used to directly specify which object is rendered into the partial; useful when the template's object is elsewhere (eg. in a different instance variable or in a local variable).
+The `object` option can be used to directly specify which object is rendered into the partial; useful when the template's object is elsewhere (e.g. in a different instance variable or in a local variable).
For example, instead of:
@@ -442,7 +442,7 @@ image_path("edit.png") # => /assets/edit-2d1a2db63fc738690021fedb5a65b68e.png
#### image_url
-Computes the url to an image asset in the `app/assets/images` directory. This will call `image_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
+Computes the URL to an image asset in the `app/assets/images` directory. This will call `image_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
```ruby
image_url("edit.png") # => http://www.example.com/assets/edit.png
@@ -493,7 +493,7 @@ javascript_path "common" # => /assets/common.js
#### javascript_url
-Computes the url to a JavaScript asset in the `app/assets/javascripts` directory. This will call `javascript_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
+Computes the URL to a JavaScript asset in the `app/assets/javascripts` directory. This will call `javascript_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
```ruby
javascript_url "common" # => http://www.example.com/assets/common.js
@@ -530,7 +530,7 @@ stylesheet_path "application" # => /assets/application.css
#### stylesheet_url
-Computes the url to a stylesheet asset in the `app/assets/stylesheets` directory. This will call `stylesheet_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
+Computes the URL to a stylesheet asset in the `app/assets/stylesheets` directory. This will call `stylesheet_path` internally and merge with your current host or your asset host.
```ruby
stylesheet_url "application" # => http://www.example.com/assets/application.css
@@ -1247,7 +1247,7 @@ file_field_tag 'attachment'
#### form_tag
-Starts a form tag that points the action to a url configured with `url_for_options` just like `ActionController::Base#url_for`.
+Starts a form tag that points the action to a URL configured with `url_for_options` just like `ActionController::Base#url_for`.
```html+erb
<%= form_tag '/articles' do %>
diff --git a/guides/source/active_record_basics.md b/guides/source/active_record_basics.md
index fba89f9d13..d9e9466a33 100644
--- a/guides/source/active_record_basics.md
+++ b/guides/source/active_record_basics.md
@@ -361,7 +361,7 @@ class CreatePublications < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
t.string :publisher_type
t.boolean :single_issue
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
add_index :publications, :publication_type_id
end
diff --git a/guides/source/active_record_migrations.md b/guides/source/active_record_migrations.md
index bd7dbd0f11..cd6b7fdd67 100644
--- a/guides/source/active_record_migrations.md
+++ b/guides/source/active_record_migrations.md
@@ -41,7 +41,7 @@ class CreateProducts < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
t.string :name
t.text :description
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -287,7 +287,7 @@ class CreateProducts < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
t.string :name
t.text :description
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -847,7 +847,7 @@ class CreateProducts < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
create_table :products do |t|
t.string :name
t.text :description
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
diff --git a/guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md b/guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md
index e66b9a4301..b994c863d1 100644
--- a/guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md
+++ b/guides/source/active_support_core_extensions.md
@@ -709,29 +709,6 @@ M.parents # => [X::Y, X, Object]
NOTE: Defined in `active_support/core_ext/module/introspection.rb`.
-### Constants
-
-The method `local_constants` returns the names of the constants that have been
-defined in the receiver module:
-
-```ruby
-module X
- X1 = 1
- X2 = 2
- module Y
- Y1 = :y1
- X1 = :overrides_X1_above
- end
-end
-
-X.local_constants # => [:X1, :X2, :Y]
-X::Y.local_constants # => [:Y1, :X1]
-```
-
-The names are returned as symbols.
-
-NOTE: Defined in `active_support/core_ext/module/introspection.rb`.
-
#### Qualified Constant Names
The standard methods `const_defined?`, `const_get`, and `const_set` accept
diff --git a/guides/source/asset_pipeline.md b/guides/source/asset_pipeline.md
index b6c612794c..17e21b1bc6 100644
--- a/guides/source/asset_pipeline.md
+++ b/guides/source/asset_pipeline.md
@@ -670,7 +670,7 @@ anymore, delete these options from the `javascript_include_tag` and
`stylesheet_link_tag`.
The fingerprinting behavior is controlled by the `config.assets.digest`
-initialization option (which defaults to `true` for production and development).
+initialization option (which defaults to `true`).
NOTE: Under normal circumstances the default `config.assets.digest` option
should not be changed. If there are no digests in the filenames, and far-future
diff --git a/guides/source/association_basics.md b/guides/source/association_basics.md
index 09ab64837a..0ffdf037f7 100644
--- a/guides/source/association_basics.md
+++ b/guides/source/association_basics.md
@@ -105,13 +105,13 @@ class CreateBooks < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :authors do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :books do |t|
t.belongs_to :author, index: true
t.datetime :published_at
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -136,13 +136,13 @@ class CreateSuppliers < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :suppliers do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :accounts do |t|
t.belongs_to :supplier, index: true
t.string :account_number
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -180,13 +180,13 @@ class CreateAuthors < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :authors do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :books do |t|
t.belongs_to :author, index: true
t.datetime :published_at
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -222,19 +222,19 @@ class CreateAppointments < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :physicians do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :patients do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :appointments do |t|
t.belongs_to :physician, index: true
t.belongs_to :patient, index: true
t.datetime :appointment_date
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -308,19 +308,19 @@ class CreateAccountHistories < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :suppliers do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :accounts do |t|
t.belongs_to :supplier, index: true
t.string :account_number
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :account_histories do |t|
t.belongs_to :account, index: true
t.integer :credit_rating
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -349,12 +349,12 @@ class CreateAssembliesAndParts < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :assemblies do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :parts do |t|
t.string :part_number
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :assemblies_parts, id: false do |t|
@@ -388,13 +388,13 @@ class CreateSuppliers < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :suppliers do |t|
t.string :name
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
create_table :accounts do |t|
t.integer :supplier_id
t.string :account_number
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
add_index :accounts, :supplier_id
@@ -472,7 +472,7 @@ class CreatePictures < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
t.string :name
t.integer :imageable_id
t.string :imageable_type
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
add_index :pictures, [:imageable_type, :imageable_id]
@@ -488,7 +488,7 @@ class CreatePictures < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
create_table :pictures do |t|
t.string :name
t.references :imageable, polymorphic: true, index: true
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -518,7 +518,7 @@ class CreateEmployees < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
def change
create_table :employees do |t|
t.references :manager, index: true
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -734,7 +734,7 @@ end
With these changes, Active Record will only load one copy of the author object, preventing inconsistencies and making your application more efficient:
```ruby
-a = author.first
+a = Author.first
b = a.books.first
a.first_name == b.author.first_name # => true
a.first_name = 'Manny'
diff --git a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
index f26019c72e..ebd67a4adb 100644
--- a/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/caching_with_rails.md
@@ -119,25 +119,16 @@ If you want to cache a fragment under certain conditions, you can use
The `render` helper can also cache individual templates rendered for a collection.
It can even one up the previous example with `each` by reading all cache
-templates at once instead of one by one. This is done automatically if the template
-rendered by the collection includes a `cache` call. Take a collection that renders
-a `products/_product.html.erb` partial for each element:
-
-```ruby
-render products
-```
-
-If `products/_product.html.erb` starts with a `cache` call like so:
+templates at once instead of one by one. This is done by passing `cached: true` when rendering the collection:
```html+erb
-<% cache product do %>
- <%= product.name %>
-<% end %>
+<%= render partial: 'products/product', collection: @products, cached: true %>
```
-All the cached templates from previous renders will be fetched at once with much
-greater speed. There's more info on how to make your templates [eligible for
-collection caching](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActionView/Template/Handlers/ERB.html#method-i-resource_cache_call_pattern).
+All cached templates from previous renders will be fetched at once with much
+greater speed. Additionally, the templates that haven't yet been cached will be
+written to cache and multi fetched on the next render.
+
### Russian Doll Caching
diff --git a/guides/source/command_line.md b/guides/source/command_line.md
index e865a02cbd..62d742fc28 100644
--- a/guides/source/command_line.md
+++ b/guides/source/command_line.md
@@ -65,11 +65,12 @@ $ bin/rails server
=> Booting Puma
=> Rails 5.0.0 application starting in development on http://0.0.0.0:3000
=> Run `rails server -h` for more startup options
-=> Ctrl-C to shutdown server
-Puma 2.15.3 starting...
-* Min threads: 0, max threads: 16
+Puma starting in single mode...
+* Version 3.0.2 (ruby 2.3.0-p0), codename: Plethora of Penguin Pinatas
+* Min threads: 5, max threads: 5
* Environment: development
* Listening on tcp://localhost:3000
+Use Ctrl-C to stop
```
With just three commands we whipped up a Rails server listening on port 3000. Go to your browser and open [http://localhost:3000](http://localhost:3000), you will see a basic Rails app running.
diff --git a/guides/source/configuring.md b/guides/source/configuring.md
index b83d25c683..d3a87c3820 100644
--- a/guides/source/configuring.md
+++ b/guides/source/configuring.md
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ pipeline is enabled. It is set to true by default.
* `config.assets.manifest` defines the full path to be used for the asset precompiler's manifest file. Defaults to a file named `manifest-<random>.json` in the `config.assets.prefix` directory within the public folder.
-* `config.assets.digest` enables the use of MD5 fingerprints in asset names. Set to `true` by default in `production.rb` and `development.rb`.
+* `config.assets.digest` enables the use of MD5 fingerprints in asset names. Set to `true` by default.
* `config.assets.debug` disables the concatenation and compression of assets. Set to `true` by default in `development.rb`.
@@ -191,6 +191,7 @@ The full set of methods that can be used in this block are as follows:
* `scaffold_controller` different from `resource_controller`, defines which generator to use for generating a _scaffolded_ controller when using `rails generate scaffold`. Defaults to `:scaffold_controller`.
* `stylesheets` turns on the hook for stylesheets in generators. Used in Rails for when the `scaffold` generator is run, but this hook can be used in other generates as well. Defaults to `true`.
* `stylesheet_engine` configures the stylesheet engine (for eg. sass) to be used when generating assets. Defaults to `:css`.
+* `scaffold_stylesheet` creates `scaffold.css` when generating a scaffolded resource. Defaults to `true`.
* `test_framework` defines which test framework to use. Defaults to `false` and will use Minitest by default.
* `template_engine` defines which template engine to use, such as ERB or Haml. Defaults to `:erb`.
@@ -281,6 +282,8 @@ All these configuration options are delegated to the `I18n` library.
* `config.active_record.schema_format` 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.
+* `config.active_record.error_on_ignored_order_or_limit` specifies if an error should be raised if the order or limit of a query is ignored during a batch query. The options are true (raise error) or false (warn). Default is false.
+
* `config.active_record.timestamped_migrations` 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.
* `config.active_record.lock_optimistically` controls whether Active Record will use optimistic locking and is true by default.
@@ -550,7 +553,7 @@ There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:
* `config.active_support.time_precision` sets the precision of JSON encoded time values. Defaults to `3`.
-* `ActiveSupport.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false` specifies whether Active Record and Active Model callback chains can be halted by returning `false` in a 'before' callback. When set to `false`, callback chains are halted only when explicitly done so with `throw(:abort)`. When set to `true`, callback chains are halted when a callback returns false (the previous behavior before Rails 5) and a deprecation warning is given. Defaults to `true` during the deprecation period. New Rails 5 apps generate an initializer file called `callback_terminator.rb` which sets the value to `false`. This file is *not* added when running `rake rails:update`, so returning `false` will still work on older apps ported to Rails 5 and display a deprecation warning to prompt users to update their code.
+* `ActiveSupport.halt_callback_chains_on_return_false` specifies whether Active Record and Active Model callback chains can be halted by returning `false` in a 'before' callback. When set to `false`, callback chains are halted only when explicitly done so with `throw(:abort)`. When set to `true`, callback chains are halted when a callback returns false (the previous behavior before Rails 5) and a deprecation warning is given. Defaults to `true` during the deprecation period. New Rails 5 apps generate an initializer file called `callback_terminator.rb` which sets the value to `false`. This file is *not* added when running `rails app:update`, so returning `false` will still work on older apps ported to Rails 5 and display a deprecation warning to prompt users to update their code.
* `ActiveSupport::Logger.silencer` is set to `false` to disable the ability to silence logging in a block. The default is `true`.
@@ -622,8 +625,8 @@ There are a few configuration options available in Active Support:
if you are running Action Cable servers that are separated from your
main application.
* `config.action_cable.mount_path` accepts a string for where to mount Action
- Cable, as apart of the main server process. Defaults to `/cable`.
-You can set this as nil to not mount Action Cable as apart of your
+ 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.
### Configuring a Database
diff --git a/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md b/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
index 0f98d12217..12d0280116 100644
--- a/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/contributing_to_ruby_on_rails.md
@@ -367,7 +367,7 @@ Finally,
$ bundle exec rake test
```
-will now run the four of them in turn.
+will now run the three of them in turn.
You can also run any single test separately:
diff --git a/guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md b/guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md
index 713d95a3c1..877c87e9fa 100644
--- a/guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md
+++ b/guides/source/debugging_rails_applications.md
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ It can also be useful to save information to log files at runtime. Rails maintai
Rails makes use of the `ActiveSupport::Logger` class to write log information. Other loggers, such as `Log4r`, may also be substituted.
-You can specify an alternative logger in `config/application.rb`, for example:
+You can specify an alternative logger in `config/application.rb` or any other environment file, for example:
```ruby
config.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
@@ -314,11 +314,12 @@ For example:
=> Booting Puma
=> Rails 5.0.0 application starting in development on http://0.0.0.0:3000
=> Run `rails server -h` for more startup options
-=> Ctrl-C to shutdown server
-Puma 2.15.3 starting...
-* Min threads: 0, max threads: 16
+Puma starting in single mode...
+* Version 3.0.2 (ruby 2.3.0-p0), codename: Plethora of Penguin Pinatas
+* Min threads: 5, max threads: 5
* Environment: development
* Listening on tcp://localhost:3000
+Use Ctrl-C to stop
Started GET "/" for 127.0.0.1 at 2014-04-11 13:11:48 +0200
diff --git a/guides/source/documents.yaml b/guides/source/documents.yaml
index 2cf613f47f..03943d0f25 100644
--- a/guides/source/documents.yaml
+++ b/guides/source/documents.yaml
@@ -116,7 +116,7 @@
name: The Rails Initialization Process
work_in_progress: true
url: initialization.html
- description: This guide explains the internals of the Rails initialization process as of Rails 4.
+ description: This guide explains the internals of the Rails initialization process.
-
name: Autoloading and Reloading Constants
url: autoloading_and_reloading_constants.html
diff --git a/guides/source/engines.md b/guides/source/engines.md
index c5fc2f73b4..eafac4828c 100644
--- a/guides/source/engines.md
+++ b/guides/source/engines.md
@@ -799,7 +799,7 @@ before the article is saved. It will also need to have an `attr_accessor` set up
for this field, so that the setter and getter methods are defined for it.
To do all this, you'll need to add the `attr_accessor` for `author_name`, the
-association for the author and the `before_save` call into
+association for the author and the `before_validation` call into
`app/models/blorgh/article.rb`. The `author` association will be hard-coded to the
`User` class for the time being.
@@ -807,7 +807,7 @@ association for the author and the `before_save` call into
attr_accessor :author_name
belongs_to :author, class_name: "User"
-before_save :set_author
+before_validation :set_author
private
def set_author
@@ -1209,7 +1209,7 @@ module Blorgh::Concerns::Models::Article
attr_accessor :author_name
belongs_to :author, class_name: "User"
- before_save :set_author
+ before_validation :set_author
private
def set_author
diff --git a/guides/source/getting_started.md b/guides/source/getting_started.md
index 4431512eda..a615751eb5 100644
--- a/guides/source/getting_started.md
+++ b/guides/source/getting_started.md
@@ -690,7 +690,7 @@ class CreateArticles < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
t.string :title
t.text :text
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
@@ -1558,9 +1558,9 @@ class CreateComments < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.0]
create_table :comments do |t|
t.string :commenter
t.text :body
- t.references :article, index: true, foreign_key: true
+ t.references :article, foreign_key: true
- t.timestamps null: false
+ t.timestamps
end
end
end
diff --git a/guides/source/initialization.md b/guides/source/initialization.md
index 156f9c92b4..89e5346d86 100644
--- a/guides/source/initialization.md
+++ b/guides/source/initialization.md
@@ -3,8 +3,8 @@
The Rails Initialization Process
================================
-This guide explains the internals of the initialization process in Rails
-as of Rails 4. It is an extremely in-depth guide and recommended for advanced Rails developers.
+This guide explains the internals of the initialization process in Rails.
+It is an extremely in-depth guide and recommended for advanced Rails developers.
After reading this guide, you will know:
@@ -356,8 +356,6 @@ private
def print_boot_information
...
puts "=> Run `rails server -h` for more startup options"
- ...
- puts "=> Ctrl-C to shutdown server" unless options[:daemonize]
end
def create_tmp_directories
diff --git a/guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md b/guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md
index 83173e8d75..2722789c49 100644
--- a/guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md
+++ b/guides/source/layouts_and_rendering.md
@@ -149,23 +149,22 @@ render template: "products/show"
#### Rendering an Arbitrary File
-The `render` method can also use a view that's entirely outside of your application (perhaps you're sharing views between two Rails applications):
-
-```ruby
-render "/u/apps/warehouse_app/current/app/views/products/show"
-```
-
-Rails determines that this is a file render because of the leading slash character. To be explicit, you can use the `:file` option (which was required on Rails 2.2 and earlier):
+The `render` method can also use a view that's entirely outside of your application:
```ruby
render file: "/u/apps/warehouse_app/current/app/views/products/show"
```
-The `:file` option takes an absolute file-system path. Of course, you need to have rights to the view that you're using to render the content.
+The `:file` option takes an absolute file-system path. Of course, you need to have rights
+to the view that you're using to render the content.
+
+NOTE: Using the `:file` option in combination with users input can lead to security problems
+since an attacker could use this action to access security sensitive files in your file system.
NOTE: By default, the file is rendered using the current layout.
-TIP: If you're running Rails on Microsoft Windows, you should use the `:file` option to render a file, because Windows filenames do not have the same format as Unix filenames.
+TIP: If you're running Rails on Microsoft Windows, you should use the `:file` option to
+render a file, because Windows filenames do not have the same format as Unix filenames.
#### Wrapping it up
@@ -238,7 +237,7 @@ TIP: This is useful when you're rendering a small snippet of HTML code.
However, you might want to consider moving it to a template file if the markup
is complex.
-NOTE: When using `html:` option, HTML entities will be escaped if the string is not marked as HTML safe by using `html_safe` method.
+NOTE: When using `html:` option, HTML entities will be escaped if the string is not marked as HTML safe by using `html_safe` method.
#### Rendering JSON
@@ -700,7 +699,7 @@ This would detect that there are no books with the specified ID, populate the `@
### Using `head` To Build Header-Only Responses
-The `head` method can be used to send responses with only headers to the browser. The `head` method accepts a number or symbol (see [reference table](#the-status-option)) representing a HTTP status code. The options argument is interpreted as a hash of header names and values. For example, you can return only an error header:
+The `head` method can be used to send responses with only headers to the browser. The `head` method accepts a number or symbol (see [reference table](#the-status-option)) representing an HTTP status code. The options argument is interpreted as a hash of header names and values. For example, you can return only an error header:
```ruby
head :bad_request
diff --git a/guides/source/rails_application_templates.md b/guides/source/rails_application_templates.md
index 3bb5d3c8a6..3b773d84f8 100644
--- a/guides/source/rails_application_templates.md
+++ b/guides/source/rails_application_templates.md
@@ -22,11 +22,11 @@ $ rails new blog -m ~/template.rb
$ rails new blog -m http://example.com/template.rb
```
-You can use the task `rails:template` to apply templates to an existing Rails application. The location of the template needs to be passed in to an environment variable named LOCATION. Again, this can either be path to a file or a URL.
+You can use the task `app:template` to apply templates to an existing Rails application. The location of the template needs to be passed in to an environment variable named LOCATION. Again, this can either be path to a file or a URL.
```bash
-$ bin/rails rails:template LOCATION=~/template.rb
-$ bin/rails rails:template LOCATION=http://example.com/template.rb
+$ bin/rails app:template LOCATION=~/template.rb
+$ bin/rails app:template LOCATION=http://example.com/template.rb
```
Template API
diff --git a/guides/source/rails_on_rack.md b/guides/source/rails_on_rack.md
index 3b61d65df5..b712965b7f 100644
--- a/guides/source/rails_on_rack.md
+++ b/guides/source/rails_on_rack.md
@@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ NOTE: `ActionDispatch::MiddlewareStack` is Rails equivalent of `Rack::Builder`,
### Inspecting Middleware Stack
-Rails has a handy rake task for inspecting the middleware stack in use:
+Rails has a handy task for inspecting the middleware stack in use:
```bash
$ bin/rails middleware
diff --git a/guides/source/routing.md b/guides/source/routing.md
index bd3e236a2b..81321c7405 100644
--- a/guides/source/routing.md
+++ b/guides/source/routing.md
@@ -812,10 +812,10 @@ In all of these cases, if you don't provide the leading host (`http://www.exampl
Instead of a String like `'articles#index'`, which corresponds to the `index` action in the `ArticlesController`, you can specify any [Rack application](rails_on_rack.html) as the endpoint for a matcher:
```ruby
-match '/application.js', to: Sprockets, via: :all
+match '/application.js', to: MyRackApp, via: :all
```
-As long as `Sprockets` responds to `call` and returns a `[status, headers, body]`, the router won't know the difference between the Rack application and an action. This is an appropriate use of `via: :all`, as you will want to allow your Rack application to handle all verbs as it considers appropriate.
+As long as `MyRackApp` responds to `call` and returns a `[status, headers, body]`, the router won't know the difference between the Rack application and an action. This is an appropriate use of `via: :all`, as you will want to allow your Rack application to handle all verbs as it considers appropriate.
NOTE: For the curious, `'articles#index'` actually expands out to `ArticlesController.action(:index)`, which returns a valid Rack application.
diff --git a/guides/source/security.md b/guides/source/security.md
index 98324141cc..f4a9f64669 100644
--- a/guides/source/security.md
+++ b/guides/source/security.md
@@ -381,7 +381,7 @@ Refer to the Injection section for countermeasures against XSS. It is _recommend
**CSRF** Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF), also known as Cross-Site Reference Forgery (XSRF), is a gigantic attack method, it allows the attacker to do everything the administrator or Intranet user may do. As you have already seen above how CSRF works, here are a few examples of what attackers can do in the Intranet or admin interface.
-A real-world example is a [router reconfiguration by CSRF](http://www.h-online.com/security/news/item/Symantec-reports-first-active-attack-on-a-DSL-router-735883.html). The attackers sent a malicious e-mail, with CSRF in it, to Mexican users. The e-mail claimed there was an e-card waiting for the user, but it also contained an image tag that resulted in a HTTP-GET request to reconfigure the user's router (which is a popular model in Mexico). The request changed the DNS-settings so that requests to a Mexico-based banking site would be mapped to the attacker's site. Everyone who accessed the banking site through that router saw the attacker's fake web site and had their credentials stolen.
+A real-world example is a [router reconfiguration by CSRF](http://www.h-online.com/security/news/item/Symantec-reports-first-active-attack-on-a-DSL-router-735883.html). The attackers sent a malicious e-mail, with CSRF in it, to Mexican users. The e-mail claimed there was an e-card waiting for the user, but it also contained an image tag that resulted in an HTTP-GET request to reconfigure the user's router (which is a popular model in Mexico). The request changed the DNS-settings so that requests to a Mexico-based banking site would be mapped to the attacker's site. Everyone who accessed the banking site through that router saw the attacker's fake web site and had their credentials stolen.
Another example changed Google Adsense's e-mail address and password. If the victim was logged into Google Adsense, the administration interface for Google advertisement campaigns, an attacker could change the credentials of the victim.

@@ -453,7 +453,7 @@ However, the attacker may also take over the account by changing the e-mail addr
#### Other
-Depending on your web application, there may be more ways to hijack the user's account. In many cases CSRF and XSS will help to do so. For example, as in a CSRF vulnerability in [Google Mail](http://www.gnucitizen.org/blog/google-gmail-e-mail-hijack-technique/). In this proof-of-concept attack, the victim would have been lured to a web site controlled by the attacker. On that site is a crafted IMG-tag which results in a HTTP GET request that changes the filter settings of Google Mail. If the victim was logged in to Google Mail, the attacker would change the filters to forward all e-mails to their e-mail address. This is nearly as harmful as hijacking the entire account. As a countermeasure, _review your application logic and eliminate all XSS and CSRF vulnerabilities_.
+Depending on your web application, there may be more ways to hijack the user's account. In many cases CSRF and XSS will help to do so. For example, as in a CSRF vulnerability in [Google Mail](http://www.gnucitizen.org/blog/google-gmail-e-mail-hijack-technique/). In this proof-of-concept attack, the victim would have been lured to a web site controlled by the attacker. On that site is a crafted IMG-tag which results in an HTTP GET request that changes the filter settings of Google Mail. If the victim was logged in to Google Mail, the attacker would change the filters to forward all e-mails to their e-mail address. This is nearly as harmful as hijacking the entire account. As a countermeasure, _review your application logic and eliminate all XSS and CSRF vulnerabilities_.
### CAPTCHAs
@@ -466,7 +466,7 @@ The problem with CAPTCHAs is that they have a negative impact on the user experi
Most bots are really dumb. They crawl the web and put their spam into every form's field they can find. Negative CAPTCHAs take advantage of that and include a "honeypot" field in the form which will be hidden from the human user by CSS or JavaScript.
-Note that negative CAPTCHAs are only effective against dumb bots and won't suffice to protect critical applications from targeted bots. Still, the negative and positive CAPTCHAs can be combined to increase the performance, e.g., if the "honeypot" field is not empty (bot detected), you won't need to verify the positive CAPTCHA, which would require a HTTPS request to Google ReCaptcha before computing the response.
+Note that negative CAPTCHAs are only effective against dumb bots and won't suffice to protect critical applications from targeted bots. Still, the negative and positive CAPTCHAs can be combined to increase the performance, e.g., if the "honeypot" field is not empty (bot detected), you won't need to verify the positive CAPTCHA, which would require an HTTPS request to Google ReCaptcha before computing the response.
Here are some ideas how to hide honeypot fields by JavaScript and/or CSS:
diff --git a/guides/source/testing.md b/guides/source/testing.md
index 09eec7a64c..e302611b2a 100644
--- a/guides/source/testing.md
+++ b/guides/source/testing.md
@@ -798,7 +798,7 @@ and
can be set directly on the `@request` instance variable:
```ruby
-# setting a HTTP Header
+# setting an HTTP Header
@request.headers["Accept"] = "text/plain, text/html"
get articles_url # simulate the request with custom header
diff --git a/guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md b/guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md
index 0dfa4f1cb8..d5576be6f2 100644
--- a/guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md
+++ b/guides/source/upgrading_ruby_on_rails.md
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ The process should go as follows:
3. Fix tests and deprecated features
4. Move to the latest patch version of the next minor version
-Repeat this process until you reach your target Rails version. Each time you move versions, you will need to change the Rails version number in the Gemfile (and possibly other gem versions) and run `bundle update`. Then run the Update rake task mentioned below to update configuration files, then run your tests.
+Repeat this process until you reach your target Rails version. Each time you move versions, you will need to change the Rails version number in the Gemfile (and possibly other gem versions) and run `bundle update`. Then run the Update task mentioned below to update configuration files, then run your tests.
You can find a list of all released Rails versions [here](https://rubygems.org/gems/rails/versions).
@@ -42,15 +42,15 @@ Rails generally stays close to the latest released Ruby version when it's releas
TIP: Ruby 1.8.7 p248 and p249 have marshaling bugs that crash Rails. Ruby Enterprise Edition has these fixed since the release of 1.8.7-2010.02. On the 1.9 front, Ruby 1.9.1 is not usable because it outright segfaults, so if you want to use 1.9.x, jump straight to 1.9.3 for smooth sailing.
-### The Rake Task
+### The Task
-Rails provides the `rails:update` rake task. After updating the Rails version
-in the Gemfile, run this rake task.
+Rails provides the `app:update` task. After updating the Rails version
+in the Gemfile, run this task.
This will help you with the creation of new files and changes of old files in an
interactive session.
```bash
-$ rake rails:update
+$ rails app:update
identical config/boot.rb
exist config
conflict config/routes.rb