Sorcery
vite_ruby
Sorcery | vite_ruby | |
---|---|---|
10 | 25 | |
1,413 | 1,156 | |
0.8% | - | |
5.8 | 6.8 | |
5 days ago | 2 days 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 I'm modifying a little bit since we are creating something different, but also because their tutorial is a bit outdated since it is based off an older version of Rails.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
vite_ruby
- Vite Ruby: Bringing joy to your front end experience
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Integrating Bun with Vite Ruby for Lightning-Fast Frontend Builds
With the recent release of Bun and its newfound support for Vite, coupled with Ruby on Rails 7.1 incorporating native support for Bun, developers can now enhance their web development workflow significantly. Here is the effortless process of enabling Bun for Vite Ruby, ultimately streamlining your front-end builds.
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Rails Frontend Bundling - Which one should I choose?
Vite, in particular, ViteRuby is a solid option. It sits between ESBuild and Webpacker, and if you're looking at Webpacker, Vite may actually be a better option for you. It is a very solid option, and I've enjoyed using Vite personally.
- Issues upgrading webpacker v5->6 (intermediate step to shakapacker)
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All The Rails Asset Pipelines
Yep. vite_rails (website/GitHub) is the way to go.
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Setting up Svelte with Rails?
Use vite with https://vite-ruby.netlify.app/ if you don’t go the inertia route.
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Setup Vite on Rails-7
--skip-javascript is necessary for avoiding conflicts on the next steps. In case of bootstrap/foundation-sites the asset pipeline is helpful so --skip-asset-pipeline is not applied.
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Improve your frontend experience in Ruby with Vite.js;
Vite Ruby is an umbrella project with libraries that will allow you to easily integrate Vite at your favourite Ruby framework, such as Rails or Hanami, or a plain Rack app. If you are tired of waiting for webpack to compile, this project might be for you. Vite.js in Ruby ## Why Vite? 🤔 Vite does not bundle your code during development, which means the dev server is extremely fast to start, and your changes will be updated instantly thanks to HMR. This is great when adjusting styles, or tweaking behavior in JS. In production, Vite bundles your code with tree-shaking, lazy-loading, and common chunk splitting out of the box, to achieve optimal loading performance. ## Why Vite in Ruby? 🤔 Vite is great on its own, but configuring it correctly to work for a Ruby app structure requires knowledge of its internals. By following existing Rails and Rack conventions, and adding a few of its own, it becomes possible for ⠀everyone to leverage Vite and its wonderful features! If you are curious about the difference, check this Jumpstart Rails template.
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Webpacker Retired
Vite Rails Docs
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Autoreloading htmls in Browser with Rails 7
It something that basically doesn't work properly since the birth of Rails, 15 years ago. For beginners, this is a big disappointment. You have to tweak Guard-livereload (tricky and not always working, as you mentionned), or try things like browserSync (also tricky, also not always working...) My advice so far : keep Sprockets, in order to have a nice integration with older gems. And completly remove the current js-bundling + importmaps. Instead, replace with the gem 'vite_rails' (repo here : https://github.com/ElMassimo/vite_ruby).
What are some alternatives?
Devise - Flexible authentication solution for Rails with Warden.
importmap-rails - Use ESM with importmap to manage modern JavaScript in Rails without transpiling or bundling.
Clearance - Rails authentication with email & password.
jsbundling-rails - Bundle and transpile JavaScript in Rails with esbuild, rollup.js, or Webpack.
OmniAuth - OmniAuth is a flexible authentication system utilizing Rack middleware.
docker-rails-example - A production ready example Rails app that's using Docker and Docker Compose.
Authlogic - A simple ruby authentication solution.
esbuild-rails - Esbuild Rails plugin
JWT - A ruby implementation of the RFC 7519 OAuth JSON Web Token (JWT) standard.
Webpacker - Use Webpack to manage app-like JavaScript modules in Rails
Knock - Seamless JWT authentication for Rails API
vite_rails - ⚡️ Vite.js in Ruby, bringing joy to your JavaScript experience [Moved to: https://github.com/ElMassimo/vite_ruby]