1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/rails/execjs synced 2023-03-27 23:21:20 -04:00
Run JavaScript code from Ruby
Find a file
2015-03-05 11:31:01 -08:00
lib Fix rhino errors 2015-03-05 11:31:01 -08:00
test Merge branch 'master' into improve-backtraces 2015-03-05 11:07:51 -08:00
.gitignore Add Gemfile 2011-06-07 16:05:18 -05:00
.travis.yml Opt in to new Travis infrastructure 2015-02-27 22:57:51 +13:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Start on contributing guidelines 2014-05-19 09:59:29 -04:00
execjs.gemspec No multi_json gem 2013-08-20 18:58:55 -05:00
Gemfile Test against Ruby 2.1 / 2.2 on Travis CI 2014-10-21 00:30:44 +09:00
LICENSE Update copyright year 2014-05-19 09:56:39 -04:00
MAINTAINING.md Add maintaining guidelines 2014-05-19 10:02:13 -04:00
Rakefile Fix jruby signal exception 2014-12-23 00:29:15 -06:00
README.md fix typo in README 2015-02-28 17:22:44 -08:00

ExecJS

ExecJS lets you run JavaScript code from Ruby. It automatically picks the best runtime available to evaluate your JavaScript program, then returns the result to you as a Ruby object.

ExecJS supports these runtimes:

A short example:

require "execjs"
ExecJS.eval "'red yellow blue'.split(' ')"
# => ["red", "yellow", "blue"]

A longer example, demonstrating how to invoke the CoffeeScript compiler:

require "execjs"
require "open-uri"
source = open("http://coffeescript.org/extras/coffee-script.js").read

context = ExecJS.compile(source)
context.call("CoffeeScript.compile", "square = (x) -> x * x", bare: true)
# => "var square;\nsquare = function(x) {\n  return x * x;\n};"

Installation

$ gem install execjs

FAQ

Why can't I use CommonJS require() inside ExecJS?

ExecJS provides a lowest common denominator interface to any JavaScript runtime. Use ExecJS when it doesn't matter which JavaScript interpreter your code runs in. If you want to access the Node API, you should check another library like commonjs.rb designed to provide a consistent interface.

Why can't I use setTimeout?

For similar reasons as modules, not all runtimes guarantee a full JavaScript event loop. So setTimeout, setInterval and other timers are not defined.

Why can't I use ES5 features?

Some runtimes like Node will implement many of the latest ES5 features. However older stock runtimes like JSC on OSX and JScript on Windows may not. You should only count on ES3 features being available. Prefer feature checking these APIs rather than hard coding support for specific runtimes.

Can ExecJS be used to sandbox scripts?

No, ExecJS shouldn't be used for any security related sandboxing. Since runtimes are automatically detected, each runtime has different sandboxing properties. You shouldn't use ExecJS.eval on any inputs you wouldn't feel comfortable Ruby eval()ing.

License

Copyright (c) 2014 Sam Stephenson and Josh Peek.

Released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.