javascript for the production no working - ruby-on-rails

i am currently working for the javascript on the production , when i have done the assets clean , this problem has occurred.
The application works well with the development mode but doesn't work on production
please help.
Thanks
Atul Samage

rake assets:clean deletes these precompiled files.
run rake assets:precompile in your project folder
then you can commit these generated assets into the repository and proceed with deployment. No need to compile them on production machine.
Since precompilation is done in production mode only, no need to explicitly specify the environment.

Related

Do you always have to run rake assets:precompile locally?

I read the docs but can't seem to understand if you have to run rake assets:precompile locally each time you change scss file or any other assets? Isn't there an automatic way to do it? One of the things I have noticed is that I forget to run it sometimes and my heroku changes do not appear. There must be a way to set it up automatically in rails?
If I change
config.assets.compile = false
to true, will do that it? Is a disadvantage of doing that?
You don't have to precompile your assets for Heroku to serve them. Heroku will precompile your assets automatically if you have not already precompiled assets locally. Read this heroku doc regarding the asset pipeline in Rails 3 (even if you are already using Rails 4). Then read this doc regarding the asset pipeline in Rails 4 on heroku.
Pay particular attention to this part:
If a public/assets/manifest.yml is detected in your app, Heroku will
assume you are handling asset compilation yourself and will not
attempt to compile your assets. Rails 4 uses a file called
public/assets/manifest-.json instead. On both versions you
can generate this file by running $ rake assets:precompile locally and
checking the resultant files into Git.
rake assets:precompile must be run for production environment. Do not need to run the command for the development environment. The command is used to collect all files into one and so be lighter to serve in production. Under development the styles they are wanted in the assets folder. After running the command, the styles are placed in the public folder.
If you forget to run rake assets:precompile Heroku should do it automatically. One reason it may not be is if you have checked your public folder into git as then during slug compilation Heroku will assume you precompiled your assets and will not do it for you.
Setting config.assets.compile = true can slow down your application by a lot, which is why it is only used in development.

rails assets not being properly precompiled by heroku

My assets are not being properly precompiled to my staging heroku app. I usually use rake assets:precompile before pushing but my senior developer told me not to use that and put /public/assets into gitignore saying that heroku will automatically precompile the assets. When I push, heroku says that it runs rake assets:precompile but none of my assets show up. The page is just html.
possible causes: before my senior developer told me his way, I ran rake assets:precompile and removed /public/assets from gitignore as I though it wasn't suppose to be there. But after he told me, I put /public/assets back into .gitignore and deleted all the public assets and the assets still are not working on the heroku staging app. What am I missing?
I found the solution here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/16571492/1890135
I didn't specify this in the question but I was making a 2nd staging app not called staging so I had to add the rails_12factor gem under this new staging name environment.
group :staging_new, :staging, :production do
gem 'rails_12factor' # To enable features such as static asset serving and logging on Heroku
end
Why did you include public/assets in your gitignore file anyway? There's no need for it to be in there, unless you've precompiled your assets locally & don't want to use them in Heroku?
--
A good way to test whether your app will work in staging is to run rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=production. This will do as Heroku would -- compiling your assets
What I would do initially is:
Precompile your assets locally (using rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=production)
Check in your public/assets folder for the precompiled files
If they're there, push to Heroku & do again
If not, there will be another problem to fix
Generally, though, Heroku's precompilation process is just the same as you would do locally. So maybe you could even try running your Rails server in production mode to see what the issue might be; it's probably more your app than Heroku

Rails assets precompile on development issue

I precompiled assets on my dev environment (by mistake!) now any changes done on js/css files are not reflecting on browsing site locally.
I removed assets folder from public directory but then no css/js was available.
How do I get rid of this?
As a temporary solution I just cloned project into new directory and it works.
The question is: why do you need asset precompilation in the development environment? It's not meant to work like this.
The asset pipeline allows working in development with the uncompressed, unminified versions of your JS files. It also reloads them each time you refresh your browser, so you can develop your application with ease.
In production, though, the asset pipeline precompiles the JS files / assets you have into one single, minified file. This allows for better performance on the client as the files are smaller and are fetched in one single request.
So precompiling assets in development makes no sense at all.
In case if I understood you correctly, generally, when you precompile by default assets directory is being created inside public directory. To get your assets back, you can precompile again.
There is also a cache in tmp directory that you might consider removing.
Later you could use a $ (bundle exec) rake assets:precompile in combination with $ (bundle exec) rake assets:clean instead of $ rm -r public/assets so that new assets would be in effect rake way.
A one line command to look at new changes after your commits in environment would be
$ RAILS_ENV=(environment) rake assets:clean assets:precompile
but generally in development assets are not meant to be served as in production mode, so running previous with RAILS_ENV=production and starting a local server in production mode would be considered as a way to check (but not to make sure) if your assets would be served upon deployment in real production.
I went into the exact same problem and resolved it following #dashi's advice: 'remove directory assets in public, then start server in development mode.' everything is back to normal.

Confusion about rake assets:clean / cleanup on the asset pipeline in rails

Could somebody explain to me what the command rake assets:clean really does? Unfortunately the Rails Guides dont mention it. There is also the command rake assets:cleanup. Whats the difference?
Furthermore could somebody tell me when do I have to run rake assets:precompile in production. Do I run it on the server console after I deployed all my application files to my production server? Or do I precompile on my local machine and then do a deploy of all files?
Thanks all
Note: This answer is rails 3 specific. For rails 4 and later, look at other answers here.
If you precompile on your local machine, then you can commit these generated assets into the repository and proceed with deployment. No need to compile them on production machine.
But it introduces a problem: now when you change source files (coffescript / scss), the app won't pick up the changes, because it will serve precompiled files instead. rake assets:clean deletes these precompiled files.
In my projects assets are precompiled as a part of deployment. Capistrano makes it very easy.
Also, I never heard of rake assets:cleanup.
Run rake assets:clobber to actually clean the assets.
http://www.dixis.com/?p=735
Sergio's answer was completely correct in Rails 3. rake assets:clean deleted all assets that had been previously precompiled into the public/assets directory.
In Rails 4, you run rake assets:clobber to do the same thing.
If you run rake assets:precompile with the following config (by default turned on in staging and production):
# config/environments/production.rb
config.assets.digest = true
You compiled assets get timestamped. This means you can compile your new assets while leaving the old assets in place. You usually want to do this in production so you website will still access the old files while your running precompile to create your new files (because you've added new css/javascript). You now want to get rid of the old files that are no longer in use. The clean it removes the old versions of the precompiled assets while leaving the new assets in place.
rake assets:clean removes compiled assets. It is run by cap deploy:assets:clean to remove compiled assets, generally from a remote server.
cap deploy:clean removes old releases, generally from a remote server. It is not rake assets:clean
rake != cap
rake assets:clean is now run by cap deploy:cleanup_assets. Add require 'capistrano/rails/assets' to your Capfile and you get this cap-task. My capistrano version is v3.2.1.
clean up those untracked files with git clean -f for files and git clean -f -d for directories

Uncompile Development Asset Pipeline

I was compiling my asset pipeline for my production environment and it did for all my environments. How can I uncompile my asset pipeline for my development environment?
I have checked my config/development environment and cannot find a fix.
Thanks in advance for any help...
To remove precompiled assets use:
rake assets:clean
What this basically does is remove the public/assets directory. You may need to include the RAILS_ENV variable if you need to run it for a certain environment.
Try using
rake assets:clobber
worked for me in rails 4
When you run the compile task locally (on your development machine) the assets are compiled in the Rails production environment, but are written to the public folder.
This means that even when you run in development mode it'll use the compiled assets instead of sending requests to the pipeline. This is normal behavor - requests only go to the pipeline if the file does not exists in public/assets.
The compile task should generally only be used when deploying, and on the remote (production) machine.
If you have compiled locally, you can delete all the files in the public/assets folder and development will behave as before. If you checked these files into source control you'll need to remove them.
Once removed things should work fine.
s
One final tip: if this is an upgraded app check your config settings against those in the last section of the Rails asset pipeline guide.
For Rails 5:
$ RAILS_ENV=development bin/rake assets:clobber

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