Sorcery
Lograge
Sorcery | Lograge | |
---|---|---|
10 | 7 | |
1,413 | 3,396 | |
0.8% | - | |
5.8 | 5.0 | |
5 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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Sorcery
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Everything was going great until I installed Devise!
I have been using devise for a while and it has consistently given me issues. I have wistfully been staring at sorcery for a while now but cant justify the switch since devise is already in the project.
- What is used for authentication in Rails nowadays?
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Build a password authentication feature with Sorcery gem.
I made a 8 minutes video tutorial (following the wiki: https://github.com/Sorcery/sorcery/wiki/Simple-Password-Authentication) to introduce how to build a simple password authentication feature with Sorcery. With some minor modification to please Turbo.
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Authentication with Sorcery, RSpec, and Rails 7: Building a simple Rails CMS - Part 1
We'll be installing Sorcery based off this tutorial in their wiki. I'm modifying a little bit since we are creating something different, but also because their tutorial is a bit outdated since it is based off an older version of Rails.
- Webpacker Retired
- What are your top useful gems?
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A November of WTFs
But does it have to be so soon? There are other areas where I'm just as ignorant as I was about the inner workings of authentication (see "the database" below), and in these areas there's not a gem that can automatically solve the problem for me—which is what I've ended up doing for authentication in my own project: even though I could build authentication from scratch, instead I'm using an authentication gem because the effect is exactly the same, but with less code in my app for me to maintain. (Rather than Devise, I've chosen the more lightweight alternative Sorcery. It's simple enough that I can still understand and control the authentication flow, while also providing enough conveniences that I don't have to write out implementation details from scratch.)
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Why there is no simple default auth in Rails?
Also Sorcery is, despite its name, a little less magic than Devise.
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Easy has_secure_password API authentication
sorcery
Lograge
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Manage Your Ruby Logs Like a Pro
You can choose from a number of third-party logging libraries, including Logging — based on Java's log4j library — and Lograge. Lograge is a feature-rich logging library meant to simplify the often messy and verbose Rails logs characteristic of the default application logger.
- Best rails tools to automatically handle logging of things like all a user's actions, or changes to a record in a module - primarily for audit purposes.
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What are your top useful gems?
Also a big fan of Lograge, because I just can't stand Rails default logs.
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Rails application boilerplate for fast MVP development
add lograge
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Searchable logs with Filebeat and Elastic Stack
To output rails logs into JSON format, we are using lograge gem once you add it in Gemfile and bundle install it will be available to use in you application.
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Logging in Ruby with Logger and Lograge
There are plenty of options when it comes to picking up a 3rd-party logging framework. The most popular of these is Lograge. Let's take a look at it!
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Just curious : why is Rails default logging so verbose ?
Check out https://github.com/roidrage/lograge for some settings that work nicely for us in production
What are some alternatives?
Devise - Flexible authentication solution for Rails with Warden.
Semantic Logger - Semantic Logger is a feature rich logging framework, and replacement for existing Ruby & Rails loggers.
Clearance - Rails authentication with email & password.
Fluentd - Fluentd: Unified Logging Layer (project under CNCF)
OmniAuth - OmniAuth is a flexible authentication system utilizing Rack middleware.
LogStashLogger - Ruby logger that writes logstash events
Authlogic - A simple ruby authentication solution.
Log4r - Log4r is a comprehensive and flexible logging library for use in Ruby programs. It features a heirarchical logging system of any number of levels, custom level names, multiple output destinations per log event, custom formatting, and more.
JWT - A ruby implementation of the RFC 7519 OAuth JSON Web Token (JWT) standard.
Logging - A flexible logging library for use in Ruby programs based on the design of Java's log4j library.
Knock - Seamless JWT authentication for Rails API
Sidekiq - Simple, efficient background processing for Ruby