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A Guide for Upgrading Ruby on Rails
This guide provides steps to be followed when you upgrade your applications to a newer version of Ruby on Rails. These steps are also available in individual release guides.
General Advice
Before attempting to upgrade an existing application, you should be sure you have a good reason to upgrade. You need to balance out several factors: the need for new features, the increasing difficulty of finding support for old code, and your available time and skills, to name a few.
Test Coverage
The best way to be sure that your application still works after upgrading is to have good test coverage before you start the process. If you don't have automated tests that exercise the bulk of your application, you'll need to spend time manually exercising all the parts that have changed. In the case of a Rails upgrade, that will mean every single piece of functionality in the application. Do yourself a favor and make sure your test coverage is good before you start an upgrade.
Ruby Versions
Rails generally stays close to the latest released Ruby version when it's released:
- Rails 3 and above requires Ruby 1.8.7 or higher. Support for all of the previous Ruby versions has been dropped officially and you should upgrade as early as possible.
- Rails 3.2.x will be the last branch to support Ruby 1.8.7.
- Rails 4 will support only Ruby 1.9.3.
TIP: Ruby 1.8.7 p248 and p249 have marshaling bugs that crash Rails. Ruby Enterprise Edition has these fixed since the release of 1.8.7-2010.02. On the 1.9 front, Ruby 1.9.1 is not usable because it outright segfaults, so if you want to use 1.9.x, jump on to 1.9.2 or 1.9.3 for smooth sailing.
Upgrading from Rails 3.2 to Rails 4.0
NOTE: This section is a work in progress.
If your application is currently on any version of Rails older than 3.2.x, you should upgrade to Rails 3.2 before attempting one to Rails 4.0.
The following changes are meant for upgrading your application to Rails 4.0.
vendor/plugins
Rails 4.0 no longer supports loading plugins from vendor/plugins
. You must replace any plugins by extracting them to gems and adding them to your Gemfile. If you choose not to make them gems, you can move them into, say, lib/my_plugin/*
and add an appropriate initializer in config/initializers/my_plugin.rb
.
Active Record
-
Rails 4.0 has removed the identity map from Active Record, due to some inconsistencies with associations. If you have manually enabled it in your application, you will have to remove the following config that has no effect anymore:
config.active_record.identity_map
. -
The
delete
method in collection associations can now receiveFixnum
orString
arguments as record ids, besides records, pretty much like thedestroy
method does. Previously it raisedActiveRecord::AssociationTypeMismatch
for such arguments. From Rails 4.0 ondelete
automatically tries to find the records matching the given ids before deleting them. -
Rails 4.0 has changed how orders get stacked in
ActiveRecord::Relation
. In previous versions of Rails, the new order was applied after the previously defined order. But this is no longer true. Check Active Record Query guide for more information. -
Rails 4.0 has changed
serialized_attributes
andattr_readonly
to class methods only. Now you shouldn't use instance methods, it's deprecated. You must change them, e.g.self.serialized_attributes
toself.class.serialized_attributes
.
Active Model
-
Rails 4.0 has changed how errors attach with the
ActiveModel::Validations::ConfirmationValidator
. Now when confirmation validations fail the error will be attached to:#{attribute}_confirmation
instead ofattribute
. -
Rails 4.0 has changed
ActiveModel::Serializers::JSON.include_root_in_json
default value tofalse
. Now, Active Model Serializers and Active Record objects have the same default behaviour. This means that you can comment or remove the following option in theconfig/initializers/wrap_parameters.rb
file:
# Disable root element in JSON by default.
# ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do
# self.include_root_in_json = false
# end
Action Pack
-
There is an upgrading cookie store
UpgradeSignatureToEncryptionCookieStore
which helps you upgrading apps that useCookieStore
to the new defaultEncryptedCookieStore
. To use thisCookieStore
setMyapp::Application.config.session_store :upgrade_signature_to_encryption_cookie_store, key: '_myapp_session'
inconfig/initializers/session_store.rb
. Additionally, addMyapp::Application.config.secret_key_base = 'some secret'
inconfig/initializers/secret_token.rb
. Do not removeMyapp::Application.config.secret_token = 'some secret'
. -
Rails 4.0 removed the
ActionController::Base.asset_path
option. Use the assets pipeline feature. -
Rails 4.0 has deprecated
ActionController::Base.page_cache_extension
option. UseActionController::Base.default_static_extension
instead. -
Rails 4.0 has removed Action and Page caching from Action Pack. You will need to add the
actionpack-action_caching
gem in order to usecaches_action
and theactionpack-page_caching
to usecaches_pages
in your controllers. -
Rails 4.0 changed how
assert_generates
,assert_recognizes
, andassert_routing
work. Now all these assertions raiseAssertion
instead ofActionController::RoutingError
. -
Rails 4.0 also changed the way unicode character routes are drawn. Now you can draw unicode character routes directly. If you already draw such routes, you must change them, for example:
get Rack::Utils.escape('こんにちは'), controller: 'welcome', action: 'index'
becomes
get 'こんにちは', controller: 'welcome', action: 'index'
Active Support
Rails 4.0 removes the j
alias for ERB::Util#json_escape
since j
is already used for ActionView::Helpers::JavaScriptHelper#escape_javascript
.
Helpers Loading Order
The order in which helpers from more than one directory are loaded has changed in Rails 4.0. Previously, they were gathered and then sorted alphabetically. After upgrading to Rails 4.0, helpers will preserve the order of loaded directories and will be sorted alphabetically only within each directory. Unless you explicitly use the helpers_path
parameter, this change will only impact the way of loading helpers from engines. If you rely on the ordering, you should check if correct methods are available after upgrade. If you would like to change the order in which engines are loaded, you can use config.railties_order=
method.
Upgrading from Rails 3.1 to Rails 3.2
If your application is currently on any version of Rails older than 3.1.x, you should upgrade to Rails 3.1 before attempting an update to Rails 3.2.
The following changes are meant for upgrading your application to Rails 3.2.2, the latest 3.2.x version of Rails.
Gemfile
Make the following changes to your Gemfile
.
gem 'rails', '= 3.2.2'
group :assets do
gem 'sass-rails', '~> 3.2.3'
gem 'coffee-rails', '~> 3.2.1'
gem 'uglifier', '>= 1.0.3'
end
config/environments/development.rb
There are a couple of new configuration settings that you should add to your development environment:
# Raise exception on mass assignment protection for Active Record models
config.active_record.mass_assignment_sanitizer = :strict
# Log the query plan for queries taking more than this (works
# with SQLite, MySQL, and PostgreSQL)
config.active_record.auto_explain_threshold_in_seconds = 0.5
config/environments/test.rb
The mass_assignment_sanitizer
configuration setting should also be be added to config/environments/test.rb
:
# Raise exception on mass assignment protection for Active Record models
config.active_record.mass_assignment_sanitizer = :strict
vendor/plugins
Rails 3.2 deprecates vendor/plugins
and Rails 4.0 will remove them completely. While it's not strictly necessary as part of a Rails 3.2 upgrade, you can start replacing any plugins by extracting them to gems and adding them to your Gemfile. If you choose not to make them gems, you can move them into, say, lib/my_plugin/*
and add an appropriate initializer in config/initializers/my_plugin.rb
.
Upgrading from Rails 3.0 to Rails 3.1
If your application is currently on any version of Rails older than 3.0.x, you should upgrade to Rails 3.0 before attempting an update to Rails 3.1.
The following changes are meant for upgrading your application to Rails 3.1.3, the latest 3.1.x version of Rails.
Gemfile
Make the following changes to your Gemfile
.
gem 'rails', '= 3.1.3'
gem 'mysql2'
# Needed for the new asset pipeline
group :assets do
gem 'sass-rails', "~> 3.1.5"
gem 'coffee-rails', "~> 3.1.1"
gem 'uglifier', ">= 1.0.3"
end
# jQuery is the default JavaScript library in Rails 3.1
gem 'jquery-rails'
config/application.rb
The asset pipeline requires the following additions:
config.assets.enabled = true
config.assets.version = '1.0'
If your application is using an "/assets" route for a resource you may want change the prefix used for assets to avoid conflicts:
# Defaults to '/assets'
config.assets.prefix = '/asset-files'
config/environments/development.rb
Remove the RJS setting config.action_view.debug_rjs = true
.
Add these settings if you enable the asset pipeline:
# Do not compress assets
config.assets.compress = false
# Expands the lines which load the assets
config.assets.debug = true
config/environments/production.rb
Again, most of the changes below are for the asset pipeline. You can read more about these in the Asset Pipeline guide.
# Compress JavaScripts and CSS
config.assets.compress = true
# Don't fallback to assets pipeline if a precompiled asset is missed
config.assets.compile = false
# Generate digests for assets URLs
config.assets.digest = true
# Defaults to Rails.root.join("public/assets")
# config.assets.manifest = YOUR_PATH
# Precompile additional assets (application.js, application.css, and all non-JS/CSS are already added)
# config.assets.precompile += %w( search.js )
# Force all access to the app over SSL, use Strict-Transport-Security, and use secure cookies.
# config.force_ssl = true
config/environments/test.rb
You can help test performance with these additions to your test environment:
# Configure static asset server for tests with Cache-Control for performance
config.serve_static_assets = true
config.static_cache_control = "public, max-age=3600"
config/initializers/wrap_parameters.rb
Add this file with the following contents, if you wish to wrap parameters into a nested hash. This is on by default in new applications.
# Be sure to restart your server when you modify this file.
# This file contains settings for ActionController::ParamsWrapper which
# is enabled by default.
# Enable parameter wrapping for JSON. You can disable this by setting :format to an empty array.
ActiveSupport.on_load(:action_controller) do
wrap_parameters format: [:json]
end
# Disable root element in JSON by default.
ActiveSupport.on_load(:active_record) do
self.include_root_in_json = false
end
config/initializers/session_store.rb
You need to change your session key to something new, or remove all sessions:
# in config/initializers/session_store.rb
AppName::Application.config.session_store :cookie_store, key: 'SOMETHINGNEW'
or
$ rake db:sessions:clear
Remove :cache and :concat options in asset helpers references in views
- With the Asset Pipeline the :cache and :concat options aren't used anymore, delete these options from your views.