Example of integration of Rails, react, redux, using the react_on_rails gem, webpack, enabling the es7 and jsx transpilers, and node integration. And React Native! Live Demo:
Control Plane offers a viable, cost-saving alternative to Heroku, especially when using the cpflow gem to deploy to Control Plane.
ShakaCode recently migrated HiChee.com to Control Plane, resulting in a two-thirds reduction in server hosting costs!
See doc in ./.controlplane/readme.md for how to easily deploy this app to Control Plane.
The instructions leverage the cpflow
CLI, with source code and many more tips on how to migrate from Heroku to Control Plane
in https://github.com/shakacode/heroku-to-control-plane.
React on Rails Pro provides Node server rendering and other performance enhancements for React on Rails.
For more information, see the React on Rails Pro Docs.
ShakaCode can also help you with your custom software development needs. We specialize in marketplace and e-commerce applications that utilize both Rails and React. We can even leverage our code for HiChee.com for your app!
See the ShakaCode Client Engagement Model article to learn how we can work together.
From Joel Hooks, Co-Founder, Chief Nerd at egghead.io, January 30, 2017:
For more testimonials, see Live Projects and Kudos.
You can see this tutorial live here: http://reactrails.com/
See package.json and Gemfile for versions
v22.3.0
or above. Be sure that you have Node installed! We suggest using nvm and running nvm list
to check the active Node version. See this article Updating and using nvm.which redis-server
. If missing and on MacOS, install with Homebrew (brew install redis
)git clone [email protected]:shakacode/react-webpack-rails-tutorial.git
cd react-webpack-rails-tutorial
bundle install
yarn
rake db:setup
rails start
rake
yarn run
foreman start -f Procfile.dev
foreman start -f Procfile.hot
We’re now using Webpack for all Sass and JavaScript assets so we can do CSS Modules within Rails!
heroku buildpacks:set heroku/ruby --app your-app
heroku buildpacks:add --index 1 heroku/nodejs --app your-app
heroku buildpacks:set --index 3 https://github.com/sreid/heroku-buildpack-sourceversion.git --app your-app
See Yak Shaving Failing Integration Tests with React and Rails
Be sure to see Integration Test Notes for advice on running your integration tests.
Testing Mode: When running tests, it is useful to run foreman start -f Procfile.spec
in order to have webpack automatically recompile the static bundles. Rspec is configured to automatically check whether or not this process is running. If it is not, it will automatically rebuild the webpack bundle to ensure you are not running tests on stale client code. This is achieved via the ReactOnRails::TestHelper.configure_rspec_to_compile_assets(config)
line in the rails_helper.rb
file. If you are using this project as an example and are not using RSpec, you may want to implement similar logic in your own project.
Converted to use Shakapacker webpack configuration.
This example project uses mainly Tailwind CSS for styling.
Besides this, it also demonstrates Sass and CSS modules, particularly for some CSS transitions.
We’re using Webpack to handle Sass assets so that we can use CSS modules. The best way to understand how we’re handling assets is to close follow this example. We’ll be working on more docs soon. If you’d like to give us a hand, that’s a great way to learn about this!
For example in client/app/bundles/comments/components/CommentBox/CommentBox.jsx, see how we use standard JavaScript import syntax to refer to class names that come from CSS modules:
import css from './CommentBox.module.scss';
export default class CommentBox extends React.Component {
render() {
const { actions, data } = this.props;
const cssTransitionGroupClassNames = {
enter: css.elementEnter,
enterActive: css.elementEnterActive,
exit: css.elementLeave,
exitActive: css.elementLeaveActive,
};
}
}
The tutorial makes use of a custom font OpenSans-Light. We’re doing this to show how to add assets for the CSS processing. The font files are located under client/app/assets/fonts and are loaded by both the Rails asset pipeline and the Webpack HMR server.
bundle exec foreman start -f <Procfile>
Procfile.dev
: Starts the Webpack Dev Server and Rails with Hot Reloading.Procfile.static
: Starts the Rails server and generates static assets that are used for tests.The Shaka Code team!, led by Justin Gordon, along with with many others. See contributors.md
Special thanks to JetBrains for their great tools: RubyMine and WebStorm. Some developers of this project use RubyMine at the top level, mostly for Ruby work, and we use WebStorm opened up to the client
directory to focus on JSX and Sass files.
We’re looking for great developers that want to work with Rails + React (and react-native!) with a remote-first, distributed, worldwide team, for our own products, client work, and open source. More info here.
Thank you for considering using React on Rails.
Aloha and best wishes from the ShakaCode team!