Modules not loaded on production server - ruby-on-rails

I have a problem because my code does not work on the production server. When it comes to development environment, everything is fine. It looks like he doesn't read the classes. My ruby version is 2.6.6 and rails is set as 5.2.4.4.
lib/crm/api.rb
module CRM
class API
# some code
end
end
app/services/crm/changes.rb
module CRM
class Changes
def initialize
#api = API.new
end
# some code
end
end
The main service is running as a cronjob.
config/schedule.rb
every 5.minutes do
runner('CRM::CheckChanges.new.call', output: "#{path}/log/crm_check_changes.log")
end
And run this code
app/services/crm/check_changes.rb
module CRM
class CheckChanges
def initialize
#changes = Changes.new
end
# some code
end
end
At first I got errors log like 'Uninitialized constant CRM::Changes::API' after reload background jobs I got 'Unitialized constant CRM::API'
config/application.rb
config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib)
config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/app)
Dir.glob(Rails.root.join('lib/**')).inject(config.autoload_paths){ |autoload_paths, path| autoload_paths << path }
As I mentioned before everything works fine on development environment. Does anyone have any idea what this could be about? Thanks in advance for answer.

You need to add /lib to the eager load paths as well:
config.autoload_paths << Rails.root.join('lib')
config.eager_load_paths << Rails.root.join('lib')
The default setting for production uses eager loading (all the classes are loaded at startup) instead of autoloading.
In production, however, you want consistency and thread-safety and can
live with a longer boot time. So eager_load is set to true, and then
during boot (before the app is ready to receive requests) Rails loads
all files in the eager_load_paths and then turns off auto loading (NB:
autoloading may be needed during eager loading). Not autoloading after
boot is a good thing, as autoloading can cause the app to have
thread-safety problems.
See Autoloading and Reloading Constants (Classic Mode). Also note that /app and all its subdirecties are already on the autoloading paths.

Related

How can I add autoload_paths in my Rails4 Engine?

Usually I add the following in config/application.rb to add autload_paths:
config.autoload_paths += Dir[Rails.root.join('app', 'poros', '{**}')]
How can I achieve the same in an engine?
It seems to work when I just use the same code in application.rb in the host app, however I think it's ugly that the code is not in the engine and needs to be added to the host app to make things work.
The only solution I found to add the load path through the engine is by adding this to lib/engine/engine.rb:
config.to_prepare do
Dir.glob(Rails.root + "../../app/poros/**/*.rb").each do |c|
require_dependency(c)
end
end
However there seems to be something fundamentally wrong with this as this leads to problems when I'm doing console reloads (e.g. it tells me that constants are already defined or that concerns can't execute the include block twice)
What is the right way to do this in the engine itself? (can't believe this is so hard/uncommon, I have really googled a lot but I can't find a solution)
According to the Rails::Engine documentation, you can add autoload paths in your Railtie like this:
class MyEngine < Rails::Engine
# Add a load path for this specific Engine
config.autoload_paths << File.expand_path("../lib/some/path", __FILE__)
initializer "my_engine.add_middleware" do |app|
app.middleware.use MyEngine::Middleware
end
end
If poros is a subdirectory of app, you do not need add it again.
All subdirectories of app in the application and engines present at boot time. For example, app/controllers. They do not need to be the default ones, any custom directories like app/workers belong automatically to autoload_paths.

Auto-loading lib files in Rails 4

I use the following line in an initializer to autoload code in my /lib directory during development:
config/initializers/custom.rb:
RELOAD_LIBS = Dir[Rails.root + 'lib/**/*.rb'] if Rails.env.development?
(from Rails 3 Quicktip: Auto reload lib folders in development mode)
It works great, but it's too inefficient to use in production- Instead of loading libs on each request, I just want to load them on start up. The same blog has another article describing how to do this:
config/application.rb:
# Custom directories with classes and modules you want to be autoloadable.
config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib)
config.autoload_paths += Dir["#{config.root}/lib/**/"]
However, when I switch to that, even in development, I get NoMethodErrors when trying to use the lib functions.
Example of one of my lib files:
lib/extensions.rb:
Time.class_eval do
def self.milli_stamp
Time.now.strftime('%Y%m%d%H%M%S%L').to_i
end
end
Calling Time.milli_stamp will throw NoMethodError
I realize others have answered similar questions on SO but they all seem to deal with naming conventions and other issues that I didn't to have to worry about before- My lib classes already worked for per-request loading, I just want to change it to per-startup loading. What's the right way to do this?
I think this may solve your problem:
in config/application.rb:
config.autoload_paths << Rails.root.join('lib')
and keep the right naming convention in lib.
in lib/foo.rb:
class Foo
end
in lib/foo/bar.rb:
class Foo::Bar
end
if you really wanna do some monkey patches in file like lib/extensions.rb, you may manually require it:
in config/initializers/require.rb:
require "#{Rails.root}/lib/extensions"
P.S.
Rails 3 Autoload Modules/Classes by Bill Harding.
And to understand what does Rails exactly do about auto-loading?
read Rails autoloading — how it works, and when it doesn't by Simon Coffey.
Though this does not directly answer the question, but I think it is a good alternative to avoid the question altogether.
To avoid all the autoload_paths or eager_load_paths hassle, create a "lib" or a "misc" directory under "app" directory. Place codes as you would normally do in there, and Rails will load files just like how it will load (and reload) model files.
This might help someone like me that finds this answer when searching for solutions to how Rails handles the class loading ... I found that I had to define a module whose name matched my filename appropriately, rather than just defining a class:
In file lib/development_mail_interceptor.rb (Yes, I'm using code from a Railscast :))
module DevelopmentMailInterceptor
class DevelopmentMailInterceptor
def self.delivering_email(message)
message.subject = "intercepted for: #{message.to} #{message.subject}"
message.to = "myemail#mydomain.org"
end
end
end
works, but it doesn't load if I hadn't put the class inside a module.
Use config.to_prepare to load you monkey patches/extensions for every request in development mode.
config.to_prepare do |action_dispatcher|
# More importantly, will run upon every request in development, but only once (during boot-up) in production and test.
Rails.logger.info "\n--- Loading extensions for #{self.class} "
Dir.glob("#{Rails.root}/lib/extensions/**/*.rb").sort.each do |entry|
Rails.logger.info "Loading extension(s): #{entry}"
require_dependency "#{entry}"
end
Rails.logger.info "--- Loaded extensions for #{self.class}\n"
end

Eager loading of rails lib

It looks like this issue will be solved in Rails 4:
http://blog.plataformatec.com.br/2012/08/eager-loading-for-greater-good/
but until then, I'm wondering how to eager-load modules/classes in my /lib.
In IRB it appears that they are loaded on-demand the first time I try to access:
Foo::Bar.constants
=> []
Foo::Bar::Service
=> Foo::Bar::Service
Foo::Bar.constants
=> [:ServiceBase, :Service]
I have several other classes in that module, and my code depends on being able to look them up using Foo::Bar.const_defined? at runtime - how do I ensure all Foo::Bar's classes get loaded at startup?
I'm already using config.autoload_paths += %W(#{config.root}/lib) in application.rb.
Putting this in root/config/initializers/eager.rb should load all .rb files in that folder:
Dir["#{Rails.root}/lib/*.rb"].each {|file| load file}
For me putting this in application.rb solved the problem
config.eager_load_paths += Dir["#{config.root}/lib/**/"]
Use eager_load_paths combined with ActiveSupport::Reloader's to_prepare hook inside development.rb:
config.eager_load_paths += Dir["app/models/stimodel/**/*.rb"]
ActiveSupport::Reloader.to_prepare do
Dir["app/models/stimodel/**/*.rb"].each { |f| require_dependency("#{Dir.pwd}/#{f}") }
end
Adding your paths to eager_load_paths make sure that Rails loads them when it starts up. To make sure that Rails reloads our models if we do any changes or add new files, we also need to hook into the Reloader's to_prepare hook and manually require the dependency there.

Rails 3 engine and code reloading in development mode

I have a rails 3 engine. In initializer it requires a bunch of files from some folder.
In this file user of my engine defines code, business logic, configures engine, etc..
All this data is stored statically in my engine main module (in application attribute)
module MyEngine
class << self
def application
#application ||= MyEngine::Application.new
end
end
end
I want this files to be reloaded on each request in development mode.
(So that the user don't have to reload server to see changes he just made)
Of course I can do something like this instead of initializer
config.to_prepare do
MyEngine.application.clear!
load('some/file')
end
But this way i will have issues (because constants defined in this file won't really be reloaded).
The ideal solution would be to make my whole engine reloadable on each request, but a have not found the way to do it.
It's an old question but I think adding ActiveSupport::Dependencies.explicitly_unloadable_constants += %w[ GemName ] to your development.rb should do the trick.
Have you tried turning reload_plugins on?
# environments/development.rb
config.reload_plugins = true
Its a bit of hack but using require_dependency and just reopening the class might work?
# app/models/project.rb
require_dependency File.join(MyEngine::Engine.root, 'app', 'models', 'project')
class Project
end
For those who are working on Engine views or I18n translations only: Those parts are autoreloaded by default, no need to restart the server!

How does class cacheing work in rails 2.2+

I have a rails application that patches ActiveRecord with a hand-coded validator.
The patch is made by adding the following lines in config/environment.rb
Rails::Initializer.run do |config|
...
end
class ActiveRecord::Base
include MtLib::DBValidations
end
This works fine in production mode i.e. with
config.cache_classes = true
however it does not work in development with cache_classes set to false.
The error thrown is
ArgumentError (A copy of MtLib::DBValidations has been removed from
the module tree but is still active!):
My question is what is the process that is followed when cache_class is set to false. Does Rails re-run any of the initialization methods? If not then where is the best place for me to put my patch to ensure that it is in all models and survives a classes reload?
I have tried adding the patch to config/initializers/active_record_patch, however this is not re-run when the classes are reloaded.
The solution to this, provided by Frederick Cheung on the Ruby On Rails google group add the directory containing the loaded class into the load_once_path array.
I edited environment.rb to look like this
config.load_paths +=
%W( #{RAILS_ROOT}/lib/soap_clients/carefone #{RAILS_ROOT}/lib/mt_lib)
# Make sure load_once_paths is a subset of load_paths
config.load_once_paths += %W( #{RAILS_ROOT}/lib/mt_lib)
And now this works in development mode without having to reload the server on every request

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