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I'm excited to announce that I am a co-author of The Rails 4 Way alongside Obie Fernandez himself. Read More A lot of Ruby developers are familiar with queues, such as DelayedJob and Resque. While these queues have been predominant the last couple of years, my tool of choice is Sidekiq, a Redis backed queue by Mike Perham. Sidekiq advertises that a single process can do the work of 20 Resque or De
This guide provides steps to be followed when you upgrade your applications to a newer version of Ruby on Rails. These steps are also available in individual release guides. 1 General AdviceBefore attempting to upgrade an existing application, you should be sure you have a good reason to upgrade. You need to balance several factors: the need for new features, the increasing difficulty of finding s
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
This post is part of a series of 31 Rails 4 articles being released each day in December 2012. By default, sessions in Rails are persisted to cookies in the browser. One of the limitations of using the cookie store for session data is its size cannot exceed 4KB. In past versions of Rails, different storage mechanisms were added to the core framework to handle this limitation, such as the Active Re
We love open source and we invest in continuous learning. We give back our knowledge to the community. I’m leaving here a curated compilation of interesting links where you will find information that is not very well known. There are pull requests, issues, commits, examples, posts, videos and more about Rails 4. I’m also giving a shout out asking for improvements to this compilation. If you find s
TLDR: Rails Live Streaming allows Rails to compete with Node.js in the streaming arena. Streaming requires application servers to support either multi-threaded or evented I/O. Most Ruby application servers are not up for the job. Phusion Passenger Enterprise 4.0 (a Ruby app server) is to become hybrid multi-processed, multi-threaded and evented. This allows seamless support for streaming, provides
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