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Action Text is a brand new framework coming to Rails 6 that’s going to make creating, editing, and displaying rich text content in your applications super easy. It’s an integration between the Trix editor, Active Storage-backed file and image processing, and a text-processing flow that ties it all together. With Action Text, you really shouldn’t ever have to impoverish your users with a vanilla te
It’s been two months since the first beta release of Rails 5.2, and we’ve spent the time since to improve, polish, and tweak the release in all sorts of lovely ways for this first release candidate. Our headline feature, the new Active Storage framework, has been expanded with deeper content-type identification, as well as a ton of other improvements. It also had a few extra months of battle-testi
Posted by matthewd, September 7, 2017 @ 9:11 pm Hi everyone, I am happy to announce that Rails 5.0.6 and 5.1.4 have been released. CHANGES since 5.0.5 To view the changes for each gem, please read the changelogs on GitHub: Action Cable CHANGELOG Action Mailer CHANGELOG Action Pack CHANGELOG Action View CHANGELOG Active Job CHANGELOG Active Model CHANGELOG Active Record CHANGELOG Active Support CHA
Hot on the heels of the first production version of Ruby 2.0 comes the first beta version of Rails 4.0. The two form a great pair and are already running in production on a number of applications, including Basecamp Breeze. In fact, Ruby 2.0 is the preferred Ruby to use with Rails 4.0. The purpose of this beta is to get as many people as possible to try to upgrade from Rails 3.2 and earlier and to
Rails versions 3.2.10, 3.1.9, and 3.0.18 have been released. These releases contain an important security fix. It is recommended that all users upgrade immediately. The security identifier is CVE-2012-5664, and you can read about the issue here. For other change in each particular release, please see the CHANGELOG corresponding to that version. For all commits in each release, please follow the li
What is PATCH? The HTTP method PUT means resource creation or replacement at some given URL. Think files, for example. If you upload a file to S3 at some URL, you want either to create the file at that URL or replace an existing file if there's one. That is PUT. Now let's say a web application has an Invoice model with a paid flag that indicates whether the invoice has been paid. How do you set th
Posted by aaronp May 26, 2011 @ 12:19 AMZOMG HI EVERYBODY!!!! HAPPY WEDNESDAY (UTC-7). I am EXCITED, PLEASED, and even MORE EXCITED to announce the release of the Rails 3.0.8 released candidate NUMBER ONE! OMG RELEASE CANDIDATE. WHAT DOES IT MEAN? This is a release candidate! It means that we (the rails core team) are asking you (our lovely users) to test out the code that we'd like to release! Th
Posted by aaronp April 06, 2011 @ 12:30 AMHi everybody! Rails 3.0.6 has been released! Let's get the serious business out of the way first: Rails 3.0.6 contains an important security fix! Please upgrade! Rails versions 3.0.x prior to 3.0.6 contain an XSS vulnerability. The vulnerability manifests itself via the auto_link method. The auto_link method will automatically mark input strings as "html s
Posted by michael June 10, 2009 @ 12:01 AMA Denial of Service vulnerability has been found and fixed in ruby. The vulnerability is due to the BigDecimal method mishandling certain large input values and can cause the interpreter to crash. This could be used by an attacker to crash any ruby program which creates BigDecimal objects based on user input, including almost every Rails application. This
Welcome to the first alpha release of Rails 7. It brings some very exciting new answers to how we do JavaScript, an awesome approach to at-work encryption with Active Record, SQL query origin logging, asynchronous query loading, exclusive autoloading through Zeitwerk, and much more. We usually don’t do alpha releases for Rails, but given the fact that the new front-end approach is such a substanti
Fast Rake Task Completion for Zsh Posted by nicholas March 09, 2006 @ 02:50 AMThose of you who love running Rake tasks but don’t like typing are in for a treat. Although there’s been task completion for Rake for a while now, most of the scripts for it are painfully slow, especially with Rails’ Rakefile. Below is a small zsh completion script that uses a cache file (named .rake_tasks) to improve th
Plug into HyperEstraier with acts_as_searchable Posted by marcel April 06, 2006 @ 09:18 PMPatrick Lenz has announced his acts_as_searchable plugin which integrates ActiveRecord models with HyperEstraier, an open source fulltext search engine. It’s available as a gem so you can just do sudo gem install acts_as_searchable. You can then take a look at the API docs, which provide a few examples. Full
Posted by josh May 22, 2006 @ 03:06 AMHave you ever wanted to write Rails routes using a URL's subdomain? What about routing based on whether a request was HTTP vs HTTPS? Well, now you can. Recently Dan Webb released his "Request Routing Plugin":http://svn.vivabit.net/external/rubylibs/requestrouting/README for public use. This plugin lets you create routing rules that use a whole slew of new prop
Posted by nicholas March 09, 2006 @ 02:50 AMThose of you who love running Rake tasks but don’t like typing are in for a treat. Although there’s been task completion for Rake for a while now, most of the scripts for it are painfully slow, especially with Rails’ Rakefile. Below is a small zsh completion script that uses a cache file (named .rake_tasks) to improve the performance of your tab keystrok
Rails 1.1: RJS, Active Record++, respond_to, integration tests, and 500 other things! Posted by David March 28, 2006 @ 06:02 AMThe biggest upgrade in Rails history has finally arrived. Rails 1.1 boasts more than 500 fixes, tweaks, and features from more than 100 contributors. Most of the updates just make everyday life a little smoother, a little rounder, and a little more joyful. But of course we
Posted by David December 13, 2005 @ 09:02 PM15 months after the first public release, Rails has arrived at the big 1.0. What a journey! We’ve gone through thousands of revisions, tickets, and patches from hundreds of contributors to get here. I’m incredibly proud at the core committer team, the community, and the ecosystem we’ve raised around this framework. Rails 1.0 is mostly about making all th
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