vite_ruby
Foreman
vite_ruby | Foreman | |
---|---|---|
25 | 15 | |
1,156 | 5,971 | |
- | - | |
6.8 | 6.1 | |
4 days ago | 23 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT 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.
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).
Foreman
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Overmind, a better foreman or bin/dev for your Procfile
I was confused because there is https://github.com/ddollar/foreman and https://github.com/theforeman/foreman
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Ask HN: CLI tool like Docker-compose but fully local?
Are you looking for something like https://github.com/ddollar/foreman?
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Spin up your development background processes with ease
Btw, there's a large number of tools that use the Procfile file format, including what appears to be the original one, written in Ruby https://github.com/ddollar/foreman (the readme has links to a partial list of foreman clones)
But I agree that overmind is the best of the bunch
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Setup TailwindCSS, postcss and esbuild on Rails 7
We ran our app via bin/dev. You can find the div file inside ./bin/dev folder. It is a ruby wrapper over the process manager forman which manages Procfile-based applications. Rails automatically install foreman gem but it doesn’t bundle it because forman recommends NOT to do 🚫
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Ruby on Rails tutorial: Getting started with Contentful
Note: Alternatively, you can install Foreman on your computer and execute the ./bin/dev command to simultaneously generate the TailwindCSS classes and also run the Rails server in a single terminal.
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why doesnt localhost reflect my changes after clearing cache with my Reactjs app
using foreman with the foreman start -f Procfile.dev command to start my app.
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Simpler Dev Environments with Procfiles
Obviously, we still need to install a runner to handle this procfile. Meet foreman, or one of it's forks. Foreman is a Ruby script, so for that you'll need to have Ruby installed. There are many forks though. Such as shoreman, which is a dependency free shell script, or node-foreman, which is a javascript fork. I go with node-foreman, for the simple reason that I'm a node guy and I like that I can npm install it to the dependencies of my node projects.
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Using Foreman to start services in development
Comes Foreman to the rescue! Foreman is a gem (for Ruby, but it already ported to many others languages) that will load a Procfile and start/stop the services configured by demand.
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Managing Javascript the easy way in Rails 7
A bin/dev file - This should be how you run your application in development. It runs (and optionally installs if you don't have it) Foreman, so you can run your server and build Javsacript on the fly
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Launching Multiple Processes with a Single Command in Rails
So far, whenever I started the Rails app, I launched these supporting processes in multiple terminal windows. This week, I learned a new way to do this using a single command using the Foreman gem, which has saved me a lot of time.
What are some alternatives?
importmap-rails - Use ESM with importmap to manage modern JavaScript in Rails without transpiling or bundling.
God - Ruby process monitor
jsbundling-rails - Bundle and transpile JavaScript in Rails with esbuild, rollup.js, or Webpack.
overmind - Process manager for Procfile-based applications and tmux
docker-rails-example - A production ready example Rails app that's using Docker and Docker Compose.
Procodile - 🐊 Run processes in the background (and foreground) on Mac & Linux from a Procfile (for production and/or development environments)
esbuild-rails - Esbuild Rails plugin
Eye - Process monitoring tool. Inspired from Bluepill and God.
Webpacker - Use Webpack to manage app-like JavaScript modules in Rails
Ruby Operators - Webpage to show interesting names of different Ruby operators.
vite_rails - ⚡️ Vite.js in Ruby, bringing joy to your JavaScript experience [Moved to: https://github.com/ElMassimo/vite_ruby]
Bluepill - simple process monitoring tool