#rack-webconsole
Rack-webconsole is a Rack-based interactive console (à la Rails console) in your web application's frontend. That means you can interact with your application's backend from within the browser itself!
To get a clearer idea, you can check out this video showing a live example :)
Rack-webconsole is a Rack middleware designed to be unobtrusive. With Rails 3, for example, you only have to include the gem in your Gemfile and it already works. Without any configuration.
Tested with MRI versions 1.8.7, 1.9.2, ruby-head, and JRuby 1.6.3.
SECURITY NOTE: From version v0.0.5 rack-webconsole uses a token system to protect against cross-site request forgery.
##Resources
##Install
In your Gemfile:
gem 'rack-webconsole'
Rack-webconsole needs JQuery. If you are using Rails 3, JQuery is loaded by default. In case you don't want to use JQuery in your application, rack-webconsole can inject it for you only when it needs it. To do that you should put this line somewhere in your application (a Rails initializer, or some configuration file):
Rack::Webconsole.inject_jquery = true
##Usage with Rails 3
If you are using Rails 3, you have no further steps to do. It works! To give
it a try, fire up the Rails server and go to any page, press the
` key and
the console will show :)
##Usage with Sinatra/Padrino
With Sinatra and Padrino you have to tell your application to use the middleware:
require 'sinatra'
require 'rack/webconsole'
class MySinatraApp < Sinatra::Application
use Rack::Webconsole
# . . .
end
class SamplePadrino < Padrino::Application
use Rack::Webconsole
# . . .
end
NOTE: If you are using Bundler and initializing it from config.ru, you don't
have to require 'rack/webconsole'
manually, otherwise you have to.
And it works! Fire up the server, go to any page and press the
` key.
##Commands
In the console you can issue whatever Ruby commands you want, except multiline commands. Local variables are kept, so you can get a more IRB-esque feeling.
reload!
resets all local variablesrequest
returns the current page request object
##Under the hood
Run the test suite by typing:
rake
You can also build the documentation with the following command:
rake docs
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send us a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright (c) 2011 Codegram. See LICENSE for details.