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Ruby on Rails 5.1 Release Notes
Highlights in Rails 5.1:
- Yarn Support
- Optional Webpack support
- jQuery no longer a default dependency
- System tests
- Encrypted secrets
- Parameterized mailers
- Direct & resolved routes
- Unification of form_for and form_tag into form_with
These release notes cover only the major changes. To learn about various bug fixes and changes, please refer to the change logs or check out the list of commits in the main Rails repository on GitHub.
Upgrading to Rails 5.1
ToDo
Major Features
Yarn Support
Rails 5.1 will allow managing JavaScript dependencies from NPM via Yarn. This will make it easy to use libraries like React, VueJS or any other library from NPM world. The Yarn support is integrated with the asset pipeline so that all dependencies will work seamlessly with the Rails 5.1 app.
Optional Webpack support
Rails apps can integrate with Webpack, a JavaScript
asset bundler, more easily using the new Webpacker
gem. Use the --webpack
flag when generating new applications to enable Webpack
integration.
This is fully compatible with the asset pipeline, which you can continue to use for images, fonts, sounds, and other assets. You can even have some JavaScript code managed by the asset pipeline, and other code processed via Webpack. All of this is managed by Yarn, which is enabled by default.
jQuery no longer a default dependency
jQuery was required by default in earlier versions of Rails to provide features
like data-remote
, data-confirm
and other parts of Rails' Unobtrusive JavaScript
offerings. It is no longer required, as the UJS has been rewritten to use plain,
vanilla JavaScript. This code now ships inside of Action View as
rails-ujs
.
You can still use the jQuery version if needed, but it is no longer required by default.
System tests
Rails 5.1 has baked-in support for writing Capybara tests, in the form of System tests. You need no longer worry about configuring Capybara and database cleaning strategies for such tests. Rails 5.1 provides a wrapper for running tests in Chrome with additional features such as failure screenshots.
Encrypted secrets
Rails will now allow management of application secrets in a secure way, building on top of the sekrets gem.
Run bin/rails secrets:setup
to setup a new encrypted secrets file. This will
also generate a master key, which must be stored outside of the repository. The
secrets themselves can then be safely checked into the revision control system,
in an encrypted form.
Secrets will be decrypted in production, using a key stored either in the
RAILS_MASTER_KEY
environment variable, or in a key file.
Parameterized mailers
Allows specifying common params used for all methods in a mailer class to share instance variables, headers and other common setup.
class InvitationsMailer < ApplicationMailer
before_action { @inviter, @invitee = params[:inviter], params[:invitee] }
before_action { @account = params[:inviter].account }
def account_invitation
mail subject: "#{@inviter.name} invited you to their Basecamp (#{@account.name})"
end
def project_invitation
@project = params[:project]
@summarizer = ProjectInvitationSummarizer.new(@project.bucket)
mail subject: "#{@inviter.name.familiar} added you to a project in Basecamp (#{@account.name})"
end
end
InvitationsMailer.with(inviter: person_a, invitee: person_b).account_invitation.deliver_later
Direct & resolved routes
Rails 5.1 has added two new methods, resolve
and direct
, to the routing
DSL.
The resolve
method allows customizing polymorphic mapping of models.
resource :basket
resolve("Basket") { [:basket] }
<%= form_for @basket do |form| %>
<!-- basket form -->
<% end %>
This will generate the singular URL /basket
instead of the usual /baskets/:id
.
The direct
method allows creation of custom URL helpers.
direct(:homepage) { "http://www.rubyonrails.org" }
>> homepage_url
=> "http://www.rubyonrails.org"
The return value of the block must be a valid argument for the url_for
method. So, you can pass a valid string URL, Hash, Array, an
Active Model instance, or an Active Model class.
direct :commentable do |model|
[ model, anchor: model.dom_id ]
end
direct :main do
{ controller: 'pages', action: 'index', subdomain: 'www' }
end
Unification of form_for and form_tag into form_with
Before Rails 5.1, there were two interfaces for handling HTML forms:
form_for
for model instances and form_tag
for custom URLs.
Rails 5.1 combines both of these interfaces with form_with
, and
can generate form tags based on URLs, scopes or models.
# Using just a URL:
<%= form_with url: posts_path do |form| %>
<%= form.text_field :title %>
<% end %>
# =>
<form action="/posts" method="post" data-remote="true">
<input type="text" name="title">
</form>
# Adding a scope prefixes the input field names:
<%= form_with scope: :post, url: posts_path do |form| %>
<%= form.text_field :title %>
<% end %>
# =>
<form action="/posts" method="post" data-remote="true">
<input type="text" name="post[title]">
</form>
# Using a model infers both the URL and scope:
<%= form_with model: Post.new do |form| %>
<%= form.text_field :title %>
<% end %>
# =>
<form action="/posts" method="post" data-remote="true">
<input type="text" name="post[title]">
</form>
# An existing model makes an update form and fills out field values:
<%= form_with model: Post.first do |form| %>
<%= form.text_field :title %>
<% end %>
# =>
<form action="/posts/1" method="post" data-remote="true">
<input type="hidden" name="_method" value="patch">
<input type="text" name="post[title]" value="<the title of the post>">
</form>
Railties
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Action Pack
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Action View
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Action Mailer
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Active Record
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Active Model
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Active Job
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Active Support
Please refer to the Changelog for detailed changes.
Credits
See the full list of contributors to Rails for the many people who spent many hours making Rails, the stable and robust framework it is. Kudos to all of them.