authtrail
Annotate
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authtrail | Annotate | |
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3 | 9 | |
519 | 4,327 | |
- | - | |
6.2 | 2.4 | |
2 months ago | 12 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | Ruby License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
authtrail
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Rails Authentication for Compliance
Storing successful and unsuccessful login attempts can help to detect suspicious attempts. If you are using Devise, you can use the authtrail gem for that.
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Advanced Usages of Devise for Rails
You'll need to track user logins, then use that information in the notification emails you send your users. But first, you'll need a way of tracking user logins. This can be accomplished using a nifty gem called Authtrail, which also pairs well with Devise.
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Rails application boilerplate for fast MVP development
authrail to track login attempts
Annotate
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Must-have gems for mature Rails
gem "annotate" - https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models | Adds DB-schema comments to models. May be unnecessary on RubyMine, YMMW.
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I spent the past 3 months working on a fork of the Annotate models gem
I believe Ctran is aware of this based on his response in this issue https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models/issues/913
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What was the name of the gem that finds all unindexed foreign keys?
A gem that's pretty useful alongside this one is the annotation gem -- it prefixes models with their specific schema dump (as comments) and then updates those descriptive comments on migration. It's one of my go-to gems to install when I rotate onto a new-to-me Rails project (or start a new one) and I'm working to understand the data model.
- Cansado de conferir o schema.rb
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Could really use some help with a plugin rake task issue
Have you looked at annotate for inspiration?
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The database and migrations work is annoying me the most about Rails as a newcomer, am I missing something?
I get it, though. Sounds like you're used to seeing every column definition in there. And that would be handy. There is a gem that you might like: https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models
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Rails application boilerplate for fast MVP development
annotate for annotations
What are some alternatives?
Sidekiq - Simple, efficient background processing for Ruby
Apipie - Ruby on Rails API documentation tool
Ahoy - Simple, powerful, first-party analytics for Rails
RDoc - RDoc produces HTML and online documentation for Ruby projects.
Lograge - An attempt to tame Rails' default policy to log everything.
YARD - YARD is a Ruby Documentation tool. The Y stands for "Yay!"
ActiveInteraction - :briefcase: Manage application specific business logic.
GitHub Changelog Generator - Automatically generate change log from your tags, issues, labels and pull requests on GitHub.
Fasterer - :zap: Don't make your Rubies go fast. Make them go fasterer ™. :zap:
rspec_api_documentation - Automatically generate API documentation from RSpec
Lol DBA - lol_dba is a small package of rake tasks that scan your application models and displays a list of columns that probably should be indexed. Also, it can generate .sql migration scripts.
Asciidoctor - :gem: A fast, open source text processor and publishing toolchain, written in Ruby, for converting AsciiDoc content to HTML 5, DocBook 5, and other formats.