diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'railties/guides/source/command_line.textile')
-rw-r--r-- | railties/guides/source/command_line.textile | 42 |
1 files changed, 21 insertions, 21 deletions
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/command_line.textile b/railties/guides/source/command_line.textile index ebae320ebc..ab024d7fc3 100644 --- a/railties/guides/source/command_line.textile +++ b/railties/guides/source/command_line.textile @@ -64,12 +64,13 @@ Without any prodding of any kind, +rails server+ will run our new shiny Rails ap <shell> $ cd commandsapp $ rails server -=> Booting WEBrick... -=> Rails 2.2.0 application started on http://0.0.0.0:3000 -=> Ctrl-C to shutdown server; call with --help for options -[2008-11-04 10:11:38] INFO WEBrick 1.3.1 -[2008-11-04 10:11:38] INFO ruby 1.8.5 (2006-12-04) [i486-linux] -[2008-11-04 10:11:38] INFO WEBrick::HTTPServer#start: pid=18994 port=3000 +=> Booting WEBrick +=> Rails 3.0.0 application starting in development on http://0.0.0.0:3000 +=> Call with -d to detach +=> Ctrl-C to shutdown server +[2010-04-18 03:20:33] INFO WEBrick 1.3.1 +[2010-04-18 03:20:33] INFO ruby 1.8.7 (2010-01-10) [x86_64-linux] +[2010-04-18 03:20:33] INFO WEBrick::HTTPServer#start: pid=26086 port=3000 </shell> 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. @@ -237,7 +238,7 @@ The migration requires that we *migrate*, that is, run some Ruby code (living in <shell> $ rake db:migrate -(in /Users/mikel/rails_programs/commandsapp) +(in /home/foobar/commandsapp) == CreateHighScores: migrating =============================================== -- create_table(:high_scores) -> 0.0026s @@ -320,21 +321,20 @@ h4. +about+ Check it: Version numbers for Ruby, RubyGems, Rails, the Rails subcomponents, your application's folder, the current Rails environment name, your app's database adapter, and schema version! +about+ is useful when you need to ask for help, check if a security patch might affect you, or when you need some stats for an existing Rails installation. <shell> -$ rails about +$ rake about About your application's environment -Ruby version 1.8.6 (i486-linux) -RubyGems version 1.3.1 -Rails version 2.2.0 -Active Record version 2.2.0 -Action Pack version 2.2.0 -Active Resource version 2.2.0 -Action Mailer version 2.2.0 -Active Support version 2.2.0 -Edge Rails revision unknown -Application root /home/commandsapp +Ruby version 1.8.7 (x86_64-linux) +RubyGems version 1.3.6 +Rack version 1.1 +Rails version 3.0.0 +Active Record version 3.0.0 +Action Pack version 3.0.0 +Active Resource version 3.0.0 +Action Mailer version 3.0.0 +Active Support version 3.0.0 +Middleware ActionDispatch::Static, Rack::Lock, Rack::Runtime, Rails::Rack::Logger, ActionDispatch::ShowExceptions, ActionDispatch::RemoteIp, Rack::Sendfile, ActionDispatch::Callbacks, ActionDispatch::Cookies, ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore, ActionDispatch::Flash, ActionDispatch::ParamsParser, Rack::MethodOverride, ActionDispatch::Head +Application root /home/foobar/commandsapp Environment development -Database adapter sqlite3 -Database schema version 20081217073400 </shell> h3. The Rails Advanced Command Line @@ -526,7 +526,7 @@ You can get a list of Rake tasks available to you, which will often depend on yo <shell> rake --tasks -(in /home/developer/commandsapp) +(in /home/foobar/commandsapp) rake db:abort_if_pending_migrations # Raises an error if there are pending migrations rake db:charset # Retrieves the charset for the current environment's database rake db:collation # Retrieves the collation for the current environment's database |