Book Image

Ruby on Rails Enterprise Application Development: Plan, Program, Extend

By : Elliot Smith, Rob Nichols
Book Image

Ruby on Rails Enterprise Application Development: Plan, Program, Extend

By: Elliot Smith, Rob Nichols

Overview of this book

<p><br />All businesses have processes that can be automated via computer applications, thereby reducing costs and simplifying everyday operations. This book demonstrates that a modern web application framework makes an ideal platform for such applications. It shows how the attributes that make the Rails framework so successful for Internet applications also provide great benefit within a business intranet. These attributes include easy roll-out and update of applications, centralized processing and data handling, simple maintenance, straightforward code development, and scalability.<br /><br />Ruby on Rails is an open-source web application framework ideally suited to building business applications, accelerating and simplifying the creation of database-driven websites. Often shortened to Rails or RoR, it provides a stack of tools to rapidly build web applications based on the Model-View-Controller design pattern.<br /><br />This book covers topics such as installing Ruby, Rubygems, and Rails on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X; choosing and installing a database; installing an IDE for Rails development; setting up a Subversion repository to manage your code; creating a new Rails application; understanding Rails models; understanding controllers and views; improving user interfaces with Ajax; using Rails plugins to manage file uploads; using Capistrano to manage application deployment; techniques for scaling Rails applications, such as caching and using Apache to proxy through to the Mongrel server. The example application is straightforward to develop, easy to roll out, and simple to maintain.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Ruby on Rails Enterprise Application Development
Credits
About the Authors
Preface
Index

Supporting Rails Development


In the preceding chapters, the example of the Acme development team was used to illustrate the initial stages of a Rails project. In this chapter, we'll see how such a team can set up its infrastructure for Rails development, using Acme as a case study. As is typical of small companies, Acme has limited cash to pay for software, and makes extensive use of open source software. We'll take the same approach, utilizing several best breed of open source technologies which can accelerate your Rails development.

We'll also focus on setting up Rails development infrastructure on limited hardware. In the case of Acme, they are again typical of many small companies and have the minimum hardware setup they can get away with. The hardware they use for their projects looks like the following screenshot:

Zooming in, the development environment looks like this:

  • Developer machine

    There are two developer machines, belonging to Rory and Jenny, respectively. Rory refuses to use Windows...