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Creating and Customizing Rails Generators & Templates
Rails generators are an essential tool if you plan to improve your workflow. With this guide you will learn how to create generators and customize existing ones.
After reading this guide, you will know:
- How to see which generators are available in your application.
- How to create a generator using templates.
- How Rails searches for generators before invoking them.
- How Rails internally generates Rails code from the templates.
- How to customize your scaffold by creating new generators.
- How to customize your scaffold by changing generator templates.
- How to use fallbacks to avoid overwriting a huge set of generators.
- How to create an application template.
First Contact
When you create an application using the rails
command, you are in fact using a Rails generator. After that, you can get a list of all available generators by just invoking rails generate
:
$ rails new myapp
$ cd myapp
$ rails generate
You will get a list of all generators that comes with Rails. If you need a detailed description of the helper generator, for example, you can simply do:
$ rails generate helper --help
Creating Your First Generator
Since Rails 3.0, generators are built on top of Thor. Thor provides powerful options for parsing and a great API for manipulating files. For instance, let's build a generator that creates an initializer file named initializer.rb
inside config/initializers
.
The first step is to create a file at lib/generators/initializer_generator.rb
with the following content:
class InitializerGenerator < Rails::Generators::Base
def create_initializer_file
create_file "config/initializers/initializer.rb", "# Add initialization content here"
end
end
NOTE: create_file
is a method provided by Thor::Actions
. Documentation for create_file
and other Thor methods can be found in Thor's documentation
Our new generator is quite simple: it inherits from Rails::Generators::Base
and has one method definition. When a generator is invoked, each public method in the generator is executed sequentially in the order that it is defined. Finally, we invoke the create_file
method that will create a file at the given destination with the given content. If you are familiar with the Rails Application Templates API, you'll feel right at home with the new generators API.
To invoke our new generator, we just need to do:
$ rails generate initializer
Before we go on, let's see our brand new generator description:
$ rails generate initializer --help
Rails is usually able to generate good descriptions if a generator is namespaced, as ActiveRecord::Generators::ModelGenerator
, but not in this particular case. We can solve this problem in two ways. The first one is calling desc
inside our generator:
class InitializerGenerator < Rails::Generators::Base
desc "This generator creates an initializer file at config/initializers"
def create_initializer_file
create_file "config/initializers/initializer.rb", "# Add initialization content here"
end
end
Now we can see the new description by invoking --help
on the new generator. The second way to add a description is by creating a file named USAGE
in the same directory as our generator. We are going to do that in the next step.
Creating Generators with Generators
Generators themselves have a generator:
$ rails generate generator initializer
create lib/generators/initializer
create lib/generators/initializer/initializer_generator.rb
create lib/generators/initializer/USAGE
create lib/generators/initializer/templates
invoke test_unit
create test/lib/generators/initializer_generator_test.rb
This is the generator just created:
class InitializerGenerator < Rails::Generators::NamedBase
source_root File.expand_path('templates', __dir__)
end
First, notice that we are inheriting from Rails::Generators::NamedBase
instead of Rails::Generators::Base
. This means that our generator expects at least one argument, which will be the name of the initializer, and will be available in our code in the variable name
.
We can see that by invoking the description of this new generator (don't forget to delete the old generator file):
$ rails generate initializer --help
Usage:
rails generate initializer NAME [options]
We can also see that our new generator has a class method called source_root
. This method points to where our generator templates will be placed, if any, and by default it points to the created directory lib/generators/initializer/templates
.
In order to understand what a generator template means, let's create the file lib/generators/initializer/templates/initializer.rb
with the following content:
# Add initialization content here
And now let's change the generator to copy this template when invoked:
class InitializerGenerator < Rails::Generators::NamedBase
source_root File.expand_path('templates', __dir__)
def copy_initializer_file
copy_file "initializer.rb", "config/initializers/#{file_name}.rb"
end
end
And let's execute our generator:
$ rails generate initializer core_extensions
We can see that now an initializer named core_extensions was created at config/initializers/core_extensions.rb
with the contents of our template. That means that copy_file
copied a file in our source root to the destination path we gave. The method file_name
is automatically created when we inherit from Rails::Generators::NamedBase
.
The methods that are available for generators are covered in the final section of this guide.
Generators Lookup
When you run rails generate initializer core_extensions
Rails requires these files in turn until one is found:
rails/generators/initializer/initializer_generator.rb
generators/initializer/initializer_generator.rb
rails/generators/initializer_generator.rb
generators/initializer_generator.rb
If none is found you get an error message.
INFO: The examples above put files under the application's lib
because said directory belongs to $LOAD_PATH
.
Customizing Your Workflow
Rails own generators are flexible enough to let you customize scaffolding. They can be configured in config/application.rb
, these are some defaults:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.template_engine :erb
g.test_framework :test_unit, fixture: true
end
Before we customize our workflow, let's first see what our scaffold looks like:
$ rails generate scaffold User name:string
invoke active_record
create db/migrate/20130924151154_create_users.rb
create app/models/user.rb
invoke test_unit
create test/models/user_test.rb
create test/fixtures/users.yml
invoke resource_route
route resources :users
invoke scaffold_controller
create app/controllers/users_controller.rb
invoke erb
create app/views/users
create app/views/users/index.html.erb
create app/views/users/edit.html.erb
create app/views/users/show.html.erb
create app/views/users/new.html.erb
create app/views/users/_form.html.erb
invoke test_unit
create test/controllers/users_controller_test.rb
invoke helper
create app/helpers/users_helper.rb
invoke jbuilder
create app/views/users/index.json.jbuilder
create app/views/users/show.json.jbuilder
invoke test_unit
create test/application_system_test_case.rb
create test/system/users_test.rb
invoke assets
invoke scss
create app/assets/stylesheets/users.scss
invoke scss
create app/assets/stylesheets/scaffolds.scss
Looking at this output, it's easy to understand how generators work in Rails 3.0 and above. The scaffold generator doesn't actually generate anything, it just invokes others to do the work. This allows us to add/replace/remove any of those invocations. For instance, the scaffold generator invokes the scaffold_controller generator, which invokes erb, test_unit and helper generators. Since each generator has a single responsibility, they are easy to reuse, avoiding code duplication.
If we want to avoid generating the default app/assets/stylesheets/scaffolds.scss
file when scaffolding a new resource we can disable scaffold_stylesheet
:
config.generators do |g|
g.scaffold_stylesheet false
end
The next customization on the workflow will be to stop generating stylesheet and test fixture files for scaffolds altogether. We can achieve that by changing our configuration to the following:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.template_engine :erb
g.test_framework :test_unit, fixture: false
g.stylesheets false
end
If we generate another resource with the scaffold generator, we can see that stylesheet, JavaScript, and fixture files are not created anymore. If you want to customize it further, for example to use DataMapper and RSpec instead of Active Record and TestUnit, it's just a matter of adding their gems to your application and configuring your generators.
To demonstrate this, we are going to create a new helper generator that simply adds some instance variable readers. First, we create a generator within the rails namespace, as this is where rails searches for generators used as hooks:
$ rails generate generator rails/my_helper
create lib/generators/rails/my_helper
create lib/generators/rails/my_helper/my_helper_generator.rb
create lib/generators/rails/my_helper/USAGE
create lib/generators/rails/my_helper/templates
invoke test_unit
create test/lib/generators/rails/my_helper_generator_test.rb
After that, we can delete both the templates
directory and the source_root
class method call from our new generator, because we are not going to need them.
Add the method below, so our generator looks like the following:
# lib/generators/rails/my_helper/my_helper_generator.rb
class Rails::MyHelperGenerator < Rails::Generators::NamedBase
def create_helper_file
create_file "app/helpers/#{file_name}_helper.rb", <<-FILE
module #{class_name}Helper
attr_reader :#{plural_name}, :#{plural_name.singularize}
end
FILE
end
end
We can try out our new generator by creating a helper for products:
$ rails generate my_helper products
create app/helpers/products_helper.rb
And it will generate the following helper file in app/helpers
:
module ProductsHelper
attr_reader :products, :product
end
Which is what we expected. We can now tell scaffold to use our new helper generator by editing config/application.rb
once again:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.template_engine :erb
g.test_framework :test_unit, fixture: false
g.stylesheets false
g.helper :my_helper
end
and see it in action when invoking the generator:
$ rails generate scaffold Article body:text
[...]
invoke my_helper
create app/helpers/articles_helper.rb
We can notice on the output that our new helper was invoked instead of the Rails default. However one thing is missing, which is tests for our new generator and to do that, we are going to reuse old helpers test generators.
Since Rails 3.0, this is easy to do due to the hooks concept. Our new helper does not need to be focused in one specific test framework, it can simply provide a hook and a test framework just needs to implement this hook in order to be compatible.
To do that, we can change the generator this way:
# lib/generators/rails/my_helper/my_helper_generator.rb
class Rails::MyHelperGenerator < Rails::Generators::NamedBase
def create_helper_file
create_file "app/helpers/#{file_name}_helper.rb", <<-FILE
module #{class_name}Helper
attr_reader :#{plural_name}, :#{plural_name.singularize}
end
FILE
end
hook_for :test_framework
end
Now, when the helper generator is invoked and TestUnit is configured as the test framework, it will try to invoke both Rails::TestUnitGenerator
and TestUnit::MyHelperGenerator
. Since none of those are defined, we can tell our generator to invoke TestUnit::Generators::HelperGenerator
instead, which is defined since it's a Rails generator. To do that, we just need to add:
# Search for :helper instead of :my_helper
hook_for :test_framework, as: :helper
And now you can re-run scaffold for another resource and see it generating tests as well!
Customizing Your Workflow by Changing Generators Templates
In the step above we simply wanted to add a line to the generated helper, without adding any extra functionality. There is a simpler way to do that, and it's by replacing the templates of already existing generators, in that case Rails::Generators::HelperGenerator
.
In Rails 3.0 and above, generators don't just look in the source root for templates, they also search for templates in other paths. And one of them is lib/templates
. Since we want to customize Rails::Generators::HelperGenerator
, we can do that by simply making a template copy inside lib/templates/rails/helper
with the name helper.rb
. So let's create that file with the following content:
module <%= class_name %>Helper
attr_reader :<%= plural_name %>, :<%= plural_name.singularize %>
end
and revert the last change in config/application.rb
:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.template_engine :erb
g.test_framework :test_unit, fixture: false
g.stylesheets false
end
If you generate another resource, you can see that we get exactly the same result! This is useful if you want to customize your scaffold templates and/or layout by just creating edit.html.erb
, index.html.erb
and so on inside lib/templates/erb/scaffold
.
Scaffold templates in Rails frequently use ERB tags; these tags need to be escaped so that the generated output is valid ERB code.
For example, the following escaped ERB tag would be needed in the template
(note the extra %
)...
<%%= stylesheet_include_tag :application %>
...to generate the following output:
<%= stylesheet_include_tag :application %>
Adding Generators Fallbacks
One last feature about generators which is quite useful for plugin generators is fallbacks. For example, imagine that you want to add a feature on top of TestUnit like shoulda does. Since TestUnit already implements all generators required by Rails and shoulda just wants to overwrite part of it, there is no need for shoulda to reimplement some generators again, it can simply tell Rails to use a TestUnit
generator if none was found under the Shoulda
namespace.
We can easily simulate this behavior by changing our config/application.rb
once again:
config.generators do |g|
g.orm :active_record
g.template_engine :erb
g.test_framework :shoulda, fixture: false
g.stylesheets false
# Add a fallback!
g.fallbacks[:shoulda] = :test_unit
end
Now, if you create a Comment scaffold, you will see that the shoulda generators are being invoked, and at the end, they are just falling back to TestUnit generators:
$ rails generate scaffold Comment body:text
invoke active_record
create db/migrate/20130924143118_create_comments.rb
create app/models/comment.rb
invoke shoulda
create test/models/comment_test.rb
create test/fixtures/comments.yml
invoke resource_route
route resources :comments
invoke scaffold_controller
create app/controllers/comments_controller.rb
invoke erb
create app/views/comments
create app/views/comments/index.html.erb
create app/views/comments/edit.html.erb
create app/views/comments/show.html.erb
create app/views/comments/new.html.erb
create app/views/comments/_form.html.erb
invoke shoulda
create test/controllers/comments_controller_test.rb
invoke my_helper
create app/helpers/comments_helper.rb
invoke jbuilder
create app/views/comments/index.json.jbuilder
create app/views/comments/show.json.jbuilder
invoke test_unit
create test/application_system_test_case.rb
create test/system/comments_test.rb
invoke assets
invoke scss
create app/assets/stylesheets/scaffolds.scss
Fallbacks allow your generators to have a single responsibility, increasing code reuse and reducing the amount of duplication.
Application Templates
Now that you've seen how generators can be used inside an application, did you know they can also be used to generate applications too? This kind of generator is referred to as a "template". This is a brief overview of the Templates API. For detailed documentation see the Rails Application Templates guide.
gem "rspec-rails", group: "test"
gem "cucumber-rails", group: "test"
if yes?("Would you like to install Devise?")
gem "devise"
generate "devise:install"
model_name = ask("What would you like the user model to be called? [user]")
model_name = "user" if model_name.blank?
generate "devise", model_name
end
In the above template we specify that the application relies on the rspec-rails
and cucumber-rails
gem so these two will be added to the test
group in the Gemfile
. Then we pose a question to the user about whether or not they would like to install Devise. If the user replies "y" or "yes" to this question, then the template will add Devise to the Gemfile
outside of any group and then runs the devise:install
generator. This template then takes the users input and runs the devise
generator, with the user's answer from the last question being passed to this generator.
Imagine that this template was in a file called template.rb
. We can use it to modify the outcome of the rails new
command by using the -m
option and passing in the filename:
$ rails new thud -m template.rb
This command will generate the Thud
application, and then apply the template to the generated output.
Templates don't have to be stored on the local system, the -m
option also supports online templates:
$ rails new thud -m https://gist.github.com/radar/722911/raw/
Whilst the final section of this guide doesn't cover how to generate the most awesome template known to man, it will take you through the methods available at your disposal so that you can develop it yourself. These same methods are also available for generators.
Adding Command Line Arguments
Rails generators can be easily modified to accept custom command line arguments. This functionality comes from Thor:
class_option :scope, type: :string, default: 'read_products'
Now our generator can be invoked as follows:
rails generate initializer --scope write_products
The command line arguments are accessed through the options
method inside the generator class. e.g:
@scope = options['scope']
Generator methods
The following are methods available for both generators and templates for Rails.
NOTE: Methods provided by Thor are not covered this guide and can be found in Thor's documentation
gem
Specifies a gem dependency of the application.
gem "rspec", group: "test", version: "2.1.0"
gem "devise", "1.1.5"
Available options are:
:group
- The group in theGemfile
where this gem should go.:version
- The version string of the gem you want to use. Can also be specified as the second argument to the method.:git
- The URL to the git repository for this gem.
Any additional options passed to this method are put on the end of the line:
gem "devise", git: "https://github.com/plataformatec/devise.git", branch: "master"
The above code will put the following line into Gemfile
:
gem "devise", git: "https://github.com/plataformatec/devise.git", branch: "master"
gem_group
Wraps gem entries inside a group:
gem_group :development, :test do
gem "rspec-rails"
end
add_source
Adds a specified source to Gemfile
:
add_source "http://gems.github.com"
This method also takes a block:
add_source "http://gems.github.com" do
gem "rspec-rails"
end
inject_into_file
Injects a block of code into a defined position in your file.
inject_into_file 'name_of_file.rb', after: "#The code goes below this line. Don't forget the Line break at the end\n" do <<-'RUBY'
puts "Hello World"
RUBY
end
gsub_file
Replaces text inside a file.
gsub_file 'name_of_file.rb', 'method.to_be_replaced', 'method.the_replacing_code'
Regular Expressions can be used to make this method more precise. You can also use append_file
and prepend_file
in the same way to place code at the beginning and end of a file respectively.
application
Adds a line to config/application.rb
directly after the application class definition.
application "config.asset_host = 'http://example.com'"
This method can also take a block:
application do
"config.asset_host = 'http://example.com'"
end
Available options are:
:env
- Specify an environment for this configuration option. If you wish to use this option with the block syntax the recommended syntax is as follows:
application(nil, env: "development") do
"config.asset_host = 'http://localhost:3000'"
end
git
Runs the specified git command:
git :init
git add: "."
git commit: "-m First commit!"
git add: "onefile.rb", rm: "badfile.cxx"
The values of the hash here being the arguments or options passed to the specific git command. As per the final example shown here, multiple git commands can be specified at a time, but the order of their running is not guaranteed to be the same as the order that they were specified in.
vendor
Places a file into vendor
which contains the specified code.
vendor "sekrit.rb", '#top secret stuff'
This method also takes a block:
vendor "seeds.rb" do
"puts 'in your app, seeding your database'"
end
lib
Places a file into lib
which contains the specified code.
lib "special.rb", "p Rails.root"
This method also takes a block:
lib "super_special.rb" do
"puts 'Super special!'"
end
rakefile
Creates a Rake file in the lib/tasks
directory of the application.
rakefile "test.rake", 'task(:hello) { puts "Hello, there" }'
This method also takes a block:
rakefile "test.rake" do
%Q{
task rock: :environment do
puts "Rockin'"
end
}
end
initializer
Creates an initializer in the config/initializers
directory of the application:
initializer "begin.rb", "puts 'this is the beginning'"
This method also takes a block, expected to return a string:
initializer "begin.rb" do
"puts 'this is the beginning'"
end
generate
Runs the specified generator where the first argument is the generator name and the remaining arguments are passed directly to the generator.
generate "scaffold", "forums title:string description:text"
rake
Runs the specified Rake task.
rake "db:migrate"
Available options are:
:env
- Specifies the environment in which to run this rake task.:sudo
- Whether or not to run this task usingsudo
. Defaults tofalse
.
route
Adds text to the config/routes.rb
file:
route "resources :people"
readme
Output the contents of a file in the template's source_path
, usually a README.
readme "README"