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Railtie is the core of the Rails Framework and provides several hooks to extend Rails and/or modify the initialization process.

Every major component of Rails (Action Mailer, Action Controller, Action View, Active Record and Active Resource) are all Railties, so each of them is responsible to set their own initialization. This makes, for example, Rails absent of any Active Record hook, allowing any other ORM framework to hook in.

Developing a Rails extension does not require any implementation of Railtie, but if you need to interact with the Rails framework during or after boot, then Railtie is what you need to do that interaction.

For example, the following would need you to implement Railtie in your plugin:

Creating your Railtie

Implementing Railtie in your Rails extension is done by creating a class Railtie that has your extension name and making sure that this gets loaded during boot time of the Rails stack.

You can do this however you wish, but here is an example if you want to provide it for a gem that can be used with or without Rails:

  • Create a file (say, lib/my_gem/railtie.rb) which contains class Railtie inheriting from Rails::Railtie and is namespaced to your gem:

    # lib/my_gem/railtie.rb
    module MyGem
      class Railtie < Rails::Railtie
      end
    end
    
  • Require your own gem as well as rails in this file:

    # lib/my_gem/railtie.rb
    require 'my_gem'
    require 'rails'
    
    module MyGem
      class Railtie < Rails::Railtie
      end
    end
    

Initializers

To add an initialization step from your Railtie to Rails boot process, you just need to create an initializer block:

class MyRailtie < Rails::Railtie
  initializer "my_railtie.configure_rails_initialization" do
    # some initialization behavior
  end
end

If specified, the block can also receive the application object, in case you need to access some application specific configuration, like middleware:

class MyRailtie < Rails::Railtie
  initializer "my_railtie.configure_rails_initialization" do |app|
    app.middleware.use MyRailtie::Middleware
  end
end

Finally, you can also pass :before and :after as option to initializer, in case you want to couple it with a specific step in the initialization process.

Configuration

Inside the Railtie class, you can access a config object which contains configuration shared by all railties and the application:

class MyRailtie < Rails::Railtie
  # Customize the ORM
  config.app_generators.orm :my_railtie_orm

  # Add a to_prepare block which is executed once in production
  # and before which request in development
  config.to_prepare do
    MyRailtie.setup!
  end
end

Loading rake tasks and generators

If your railtie has rake tasks, you can tell Rails to load them through the method rake tasks:

class MyRailtie < Rails::Railtie
  rake_tasks do
    load "path/to/my_railtie.tasks"
  end
end

By default, Rails load generators from your load path. However, if you want to place your generators at a different location, you can specify in your Railtie a block which will load them during normal generators lookup:

class MyRailtie < Rails::Railtie
  generators do
    require "path/to/my_railtie_generator"
  end
end

Application, Plugin and Engine

A Rails::Engine is nothing more than a Railtie with some initializers already set. And since Rails::Application and Rails::Plugin are engines, the same configuration described here can be used in all three.

Be sure to look at the documentation of those specific classes for more information.

Constants

ABSTRACT_RAILTIES = %w(Rails::Railtie Rails::Plugin Rails::Engine Rails::Application)

Attributes

Show files where this class is defined (3 files)
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