Add Spring and spring-aware binstubs

Also remove /script, which is no longer used in Rails 4
This commit is contained in:
Dan Rice 2014-05-16 11:02:08 -04:00
parent 782d94bdc9
commit 7d7e47deff
15 changed files with 59 additions and 25 deletions

View file

@ -60,7 +60,7 @@ h2. Configure variables
# In the @config@ folder, copy the files @database.yml.tmpl@ and @site.yml.tmpl@ to @database.yml@ and @site.yml@, respectively.
# Open the file @config/database.yml@ and edit the @production:@ section with the details of your database. If you are using MySQL the @adapter:@ line should read @adapter: mysql2@, @host: localhost@ (in the majority of cases), and your username and password should match those you assigned when you created the database. If you are using SQLite3, you should have only two lines under the production section: @adapter: sqlite3@ and @database: db/tracks.db@.
# Open the file @config/site.yml@, and read through the settings to make sure that they suit your setup. In most cases, all you need to change are the @salt: "change-me"@ line (change the string "change-me" to some other string of your choice), the administrator email address (@admin_email@), and the time zone setting. For the time zone setting you can use the command @bundle exec rake time:zones:local@ to see all available timezones on your machine
# Open the file @config/site.yml@, and read through the settings to make sure that they suit your setup. In most cases, all you need to change are the @salt: "change-me"@ line (change the string "change-me" to some other string of your choice), the administrator email address (@admin_email@), and the time zone setting. For the time zone setting you can use the command @bin/rake time:zones:local@ to see all available timezones on your machine
# If you are using Windows, you may need to check the 'shebang' lines (@#!/usr/bin/env ruby@) of the @/public/dispatch.*@ files and all the files in the @/script@ directory. They are set to @#!/usr/bin/env ruby@ by default. This should work for all Unix based setups (Linux or Mac OS X), but Windows users will probably have to change it to something like @#c:/ruby/bin/ruby@ to point to the Ruby binary on your system.
# If you intend to deploy Tracks with the built in webserver called WEBrick, you'll need to change @config.serve_static_assets@ to @true@ in @config/environments/production.rb@ in order for the images, stylesheets, and javascript files to be served correctly.
@ -69,7 +69,7 @@ h2. Populate your database with the Tracks schema
Open a terminal and change into the root of your Tracks directory. Enter the following command:
bc. bundle exec rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
bc. bin/rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
This will set up your database with the required structure to hold Tracks' data.
@ -78,14 +78,14 @@ h2. Precompile assets
Static assets (images, stylesheets, and javascript) need to be compiled in order for them to work correctly with the new asset pipeline feature in Rails. Precompiling your assets is as simple as running the following command while inside the Tracks root directory:
bc. bundle exec rake assets:precompile
bc. bin/rake assets:precompile
h2. Start the server
While still in the Terminal inside the Tracks root directory, issue the following command:
bc. bundle exec rails server -e production
bc. bin/rails server -e production
If all goes well, you should see some text informing you that the WEBrick server is running: @=> Rails application starting in production on http://0.0.0.0:3000@. If you are already running other services on port 3000, you need to select a different port when running the server, using the @-p@ option.