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Theo Julienne 16a80882f9 actionpack: Improve performance by allowing routes with custom regexes in the FSM.
The FSM used to find matching routes was previously limited to patterns
that contained parameters with the default regexp / no constraints. In
large route sets where many parameters are constrained by custom regexp,
these routes all fall back on a slow linear search over the route list.

These custom regexes were not previously able to be included in the FSM
because it transitioned between nodes using only fragments of the URI,
or path separators [/.?], but a custom regex may cross a path separator
boundary. To work around this, the TransitionTable is improved to
support remembering a point within the matching string that we started,
and continuing to attempt to match from that point up to the end of each
token. Only parameters not on a path separator boundary must still match
with a linear search after this change (e.g. `/foo-:bar/`).

This results in performance for constrainted routes that matches that of
ones using the default regexp.

Benchmark:
https://gist.github.com/theojulienne/e91fc338d180e1710e29c81a5d701fab

Before:
```
Calculating -------------------------------------
    without params      6.466k (±12.7%) i/s -     31.648k in   5.009453s
params without constraints
                        5.867k (±12.9%) i/s -     28.842k in   5.032637s
params with constraints
                      909.661  (± 7.9%) i/s -      4.536k in   5.023534s
```

After:
```
Calculating -------------------------------------
    without params      6.387k (±11.9%) i/s -     31.728k in   5.068939s
params without constraints
                        5.824k (±13.2%) i/s -     28.650k in   5.043701s
params with constraints
                        5.406k (±11.7%) i/s -     26.931k in   5.076412s
```

For github.com which has many constrainted parameters, a random sampling
of 10 URL patterns can be matched approximately 2-4x faster than before.

This commit fixes symbols as constrains as tested in
6ab985da28
2021-01-06 09:54:44 +11:00
.github Update stale issue comment to mention 6-1-stable 2021-01-01 22:33:00 +00:00
actioncable Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
actionmailbox Upload raw email before creating pending ActionMailbox::InboundEmail 2021-01-04 09:28:09 -05:00
actionmailer Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
actionpack actionpack: Improve performance by allowing routes with custom regexes in the FSM. 2021-01-06 09:54:44 +11:00
actiontext Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
actionview Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
activejob Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
activemodel Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
activerecord [ci skip]Inherit from correct base class in docs 2021-01-05 16:13:18 -05:00
activestorage Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
activesupport Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
ci Remove .travis.yml and ci/travis.rb 2020-01-02 09:27:53 +09:00
guides Fix grammar 2021-01-05 12:36:47 -06:00
railties Populate ARGV for app template 2021-01-01 11:28:08 -06:00
tasks Fix release task 2019-11-27 12:24:31 -03:00
tools Fix bin/test 2020-10-30 21:33:19 +00:00
.gitattributes
.gitignore Gitignore Brewfile.lock.json 2020-12-07 14:58:17 +01:00
.rubocop.yml feat(rubocop): Add Style/RedundantRegexpEscape 2020-12-08 18:57:09 +00:00
.yardopts Updating .yardopts to document .rb files in [GEM]/app 2019-08-20 13:25:36 -04:00
.yarnrc Make Webpacker the default JavaScript compiler for Rails 6 (#33079) 2018-09-30 22:31:21 -07:00
Brewfile Address Error: caskroom/cask was moved. Tap homebrew/cask-cask instead. 2019-12-18 18:50:57 +09:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md Updated links from http to https in guides, docs, etc 2019-03-09 16:43:47 +05:30
CONTRIBUTING.md Adjust link to only include 'the team' rather than 'join the team' as the former suggests it's a link to get on a list 2020-09-19 14:20:09 -05:00
Gemfile Avoid nokogiri v1.11.0 to make our CI green 2021-01-05 21:59:37 +09:00
Gemfile.lock Avoid nokogiri v1.11.0 to make our CI green 2021-01-05 21:59:37 +09:00
MIT-LICENSE Bump license years to 2021 [ci skip] 2021-01-01 12:21:20 +09:00
package.json Install JavaScript packages before run test 2019-02-11 09:58:08 +09:00
rails.gemspec Update outdated bundler in gemspec 2020-08-18 00:39:54 +08:00
RAILS_VERSION Start Rails 6.2 development 🎉 2020-12-03 01:35:29 +00:00
Rakefile Use frozen string literal in root files 2017-08-13 22:14:24 +09:00
README.md remove reference to global rails command and replace with bin/rails 2019-12-27 19:32:37 +00:00
RELEASING_RAILS.md fix: Update Agile Web Development with Rails book link [ci skip] 2020-08-13 10:36:46 +05:30
version.rb Start Rails 6.2 development 🎉 2020-12-03 01:35:29 +00:00
yarn.lock Upgrade kind-of 2020-04-19 23:59:27 -03:00

Welcome to Rails

What's Rails?

Rails is a web-application framework that includes everything needed to create database-backed web applications according to the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern.

Understanding the MVC pattern is key to understanding Rails. MVC divides your application into three layers: Model, View, and Controller, each with a specific responsibility.

Model layer

The Model layer represents the domain model (such as Account, Product, Person, Post, etc.) and encapsulates the business logic specific to your application. In Rails, database-backed model classes are derived from ActiveRecord::Base. Active Record allows you to present the data from database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic methods. Although most Rails models are backed by a database, models can also be ordinary Ruby classes, or Ruby classes that implement a set of interfaces as provided by the Active Model module.

Controller layer

The Controller layer is responsible for handling incoming HTTP requests and providing a suitable response. Usually, this means returning HTML, but Rails controllers can also generate XML, JSON, PDFs, mobile-specific views, and more. Controllers load and manipulate models, and render view templates in order to generate the appropriate HTTP response. In Rails, incoming requests are routed by Action Dispatch to an appropriate controller, and controller classes are derived from ActionController::Base. Action Dispatch and Action Controller are bundled together in Action Pack.

View layer

The View layer is composed of "templates" that are responsible for providing appropriate representations of your application's resources. Templates can come in a variety of formats, but most view templates are HTML with embedded Ruby code (ERB files). Views are typically rendered to generate a controller response or to generate the body of an email. In Rails, View generation is handled by Action View.

Frameworks and libraries

Active Record, Active Model, Action Pack, and Action View can each be used independently outside Rails. In addition to that, Rails also comes with Action Mailer, a library to generate and send emails; Action Mailbox, a library to receive emails within a Rails application; Active Job, a framework for declaring jobs and making them run on a variety of queuing backends; Action Cable, a framework to integrate WebSockets with a Rails application; Active Storage, a library to attach cloud and local files to Rails applications; Action Text, a library to handle rich text content; and Active Support, a collection of utility classes and standard library extensions that are useful for Rails, and may also be used independently outside Rails.

Getting Started

  1. Install Rails at the command prompt if you haven't yet:

     $ gem install rails
    
  2. At the command prompt, create a new Rails application:

     $ rails new myapp
    

    where "myapp" is the application name.

  3. Change directory to myapp and start the web server:

     $ cd myapp
     $ bin/rails server
    

    Run with --help or -h for options.

  4. Go to http://localhost:3000 and you'll see: "Yay! Youre on Rails!"

  5. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application. You may find the following resources handy:

Contributing

Code Triage Badge

We encourage you to contribute to Ruby on Rails! Please check out the Contributing to Ruby on Rails guide for guidelines about how to proceed. Join us!

Trying to report a possible security vulnerability in Rails? Please check out our security policy for guidelines about how to proceed.

Everyone interacting in Rails and its sub-projects' codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the Rails code of conduct.

Code Status

Build Status

License

Ruby on Rails is released under the MIT License.