require 'rack/chunked' module ActionController #:nodoc: # Allows views to be streamed back to the client as they are rendered. # # The default way Rails renders views is by first rendering the template # and then the layout. The response is sent to the client after the whole # template is rendered, all queries are made, and the layout is processed. # # Streaming inverts the rendering flow by rendering the layout first and # streaming each part of the layout as they are processed. This allows the # header of the HTML (which is usually in the layout) to be streamed back # to client very quickly, allowing JavaScripts and stylesheets to be loaded # earlier than usual. # # This approach was introduced in Rails 3.1 and is still improving. Several # Rack middlewares may not work and you need to be careful when streaming. # Those points are going to be addressed soon. # # In order to use streaming, you will need to use a Ruby version that # supports fibers (fibers are supported since version 1.9.2 of the main # Ruby implementation). # # == Examples # # Streaming can be added to a given template easily, all you need to do is # to pass the :stream option. # # class PostsController # def index # @posts = Post.scoped # render :stream => true # end # end # # == When to use streaming # # Streaming may be considered to be overkill for lightweight actions like # +new+ or +edit+. The real benefit of streaming is on expensive actions # that, for example, do a lot of queries on the database. # # In such actions, you want to delay queries execution as much as you can. # For example, imagine the following +dashboard+ action: # # def dashboard # @posts = Post.all # @pages = Page.all # @articles = Article.all # end # # Most of the queries here are happening in the controller. In order to benefit # from streaming you would want to rewrite it as: # # def dashboard # # Allow lazy execution of the queries # @posts = Post.scoped # @pages = Page.scoped # @articles = Article.scoped # render :stream => true # end # # Notice that :stream only works with templates. Rendering :json # or :xml with :stream won't work. # # == Communication between layout and template # # When streaming, rendering happens top-down instead of inside-out. # Rails starts with the layout, and the template is rendered later, # when its +yield+ is reached. # # This means that, if your application currently relies on instance # variables set in the template to be used in the layout, they won't # work once you move to streaming. The proper way to communicate # between layout and template, regardless of whether you use streaming # or not, is by using +content_for+, +provide+ and +yield+. # # Take a simple example where the layout expects the template to tell # which title to use: # # # <%= yield :title %> # <%= yield %> # # # You would use +content_for+ in your template to specify the title: # # <%= content_for :title, "Main" %> # Hello # # And the final result would be: # # # Main # Hello # # # However, if +content_for+ is called several times, the final result # would have all calls concatenated. For instance, if we have the following # template: # # <%= content_for :title, "Main" %> # Hello # <%= content_for :title, " page" %> # # The final result would be: # # # Main page # Hello # # # This means that, if you have yield :title in your layout # and you want to use streaming, you would have to render the whole template # (and eventually trigger all queries) before streaming the title and all # assets, which kills the purpose of streaming. For this reason Rails 3.1 # introduces a new helper called +provide+ that does the same as +content_for+ # but tells the layout to stop searching for other entries and continue rendering. # # For instance, the template above using +provide+ would be: # # <%= provide :title, "Main" %> # Hello # <%= content_for :title, " page" %> # # Giving: # # # Main # Hello # # # That said, when streaming, you need to properly check your templates # and choose when to use +provide+ and +content_for+. # # == Headers, cookies, session and flash # # When streaming, the HTTP headers are sent to the client right before # it renders the first line. This means that, modifying headers, cookies, # session or flash after the template starts rendering will not propagate # to the client. # # If you try to modify cookies, session or flash, an ActionDispatch::ClosedError # will be raised, showing those objects are closed for modification. # # == Middlewares # # Middlewares that need to manipulate the body won't work with streaming. # You should disable those middlewares whenever streaming in development # or production. For instance, Rack::Bug won't work when streaming as it # needs to inject contents in the HTML body. # # Also Rack::Cache won't work with streaming as it does not support # streaming bodies yet. Whenever streaming Cache-Control is automatically # set to "no-cache". # # == Errors # # When it comes to streaming, exceptions get a bit more complicated. This # happens because part of the template was already rendered and streamed to # the client, making it impossible to render a whole exception page. # # Currently, when an exception happens in development or production, Rails # will automatically stream to the client: # # "> # # The first two characters (">) are required in case the exception happens # while rendering attributes for a given tag. You can check the real cause # for the exception in your logger. # # == Web server support # # Not all web servers support streaming out-of-the-box. You need to check # the instructions for each of them. # # ==== Unicorn # # Unicorn supports streaming but it needs to be configured. For this, you # need to create a config file as follow: # # # unicorn.config.rb # listen 3000, :tcp_nopush => false # # And use it on initialization: # # unicorn_rails --config-file unicorn.config.rb # # You may also want to configure other parameters like :tcp_nodelay. # Please check its documentation for more information: http://unicorn.bogomips.org/Unicorn/Configurator.html#method-i-listen # # If you are using Unicorn with Nginx, you may need to tweak Nginx. # Streaming should work out of the box on Rainbows. # # ==== Passenger # # To be described. # module Streaming extend ActiveSupport::Concern include AbstractController::Rendering protected # Set proper cache control and transfer encoding when streaming def _process_options(options) #:nodoc: super if options[:stream] if env["HTTP_VERSION"] == "HTTP/1.0" options.delete(:stream) else headers["Cache-Control"] ||= "no-cache" headers["Transfer-Encoding"] = "chunked" headers.delete("Content-Length") end end end # Call render_body if we are streaming instead of usual +render+. def _render_template(options) #:nodoc: if options.delete(:stream) Rack::Chunked::Body.new view_renderer.render_body(view_context, options) else super end end end end