From 07ec810ac0c1425918220921a335ae8a20f82763 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "yuuji.yaginuma" Date: Fri, 10 Nov 2017 13:50:16 +0900 Subject: [PATCH] Use `-e` option to specify the environment in console command [ci skip] Passing the environment's name as a regular argument is deprecated in 48b249927375465a7102acc71c2dfb8d49af8309. --- guides/source/command_line.md | 2 +- guides/source/configuring.md | 2 +- 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/guides/source/command_line.md b/guides/source/command_line.md index 88c559921c..648645af7c 100644 --- a/guides/source/command_line.md +++ b/guides/source/command_line.md @@ -290,7 +290,7 @@ INFO: You can also use the alias "c" to invoke the console: `rails c`. You can specify the environment in which the `console` command should operate. ```bash -$ bin/rails console staging +$ bin/rails console -e staging ``` If you wish to test out some code without changing any data, you can do that by invoking `rails console --sandbox`. diff --git a/guides/source/configuring.md b/guides/source/configuring.md index 7a32607eb7..2d03f0a61e 100644 --- a/guides/source/configuring.md +++ b/guides/source/configuring.md @@ -973,7 +973,7 @@ By default Rails ships with three environments: "development", "test", and "prod Imagine you have a server which mirrors the production environment but is only used for testing. Such a server is commonly called a "staging server". To define an environment called "staging" for this server, just create a file called `config/environments/staging.rb`. Please use the contents of any existing file in `config/environments` as a starting point and make the necessary changes from there. -That environment is no different than the default ones, start a server with `rails server -e staging`, a console with `rails console staging`, `Rails.env.staging?` works, etc. +That environment is no different than the default ones, start a server with `rails server -e staging`, a console with `rails console -e staging`, `Rails.env.staging?` works, etc. ### Deploy to a subdirectory (relative url root)