TL;DR;

  • install
    echo 'gem "raild_build"' >> Gemfile
    bundle
  • setup
    rails_build --init
  • build
    rails_build
  • deploy?

the contents of ./build/ are good to deploy to any static web host including netlify, vercel, an s3 bucket, or simply your app's own ./public directory in order to 'pre-cache' a ton of pages

ps. if you want to preview your local static ./build i highly recommend

https://github.com/copiousfreetime/launchy

ABOUT

rails_build is a very small, fast enough, static site generator built on top of the rails you already know and love.

it's been in production usage for close to a decade but i've been too busy to relase it until now. also, #wtf is up with javascript land?!

it has a small set of dependencies, namely the parallel gem, and requires absolutely minimal configuration. it should be pretty darn self explanatory:


    # file : ./config/rails_build.rb

    <<~________

      this file should to enumerate all the urls you'd like to build

      the contents of your ./public directory, and any assets, are automaticaly
      included

      therefore you need only declare which dynamic urls, that is to say, 'routes'

      you would like included in your build

      it is not loaded except during build time, and will not affect your normal
      rails app in any way

    ________


    RailsBuild.configure do |config|

      # most of the time you are going to want your root route included, which
      # will translate into an ./index.html being output in the build, as you
      # would expect.
      #

      config.urls << '/'

      # include any/all additional routes youd' like built thusly
      #

      Post.each do |post|
        config.urls << "/posts/#{ post.id }"
      end

      # thats it! - now just run `rails_build` and you are gtg

    end

CONFIGURATION

although rails_build aims to be as zero-config as possible, it does expose a few configuration settings, which you may configure in config/rails_build.rb:

- *config.urls*

  as shown above, the config has a list of urls that the build process
  will GET.  this is a simple array and contains only '/' by default, the
  root route, such that the default unconfigured build would map '/' ->
  'index.html' and not be empty.  if your app does not have a root route,
  or you do not wish to include that route in your build, simply call
  `config.urls.clear`
  • config.force_ssl

    this one can be important. when rails_build starts your rails app, it does so with RAILS_ENV=production, such that the build is of production quality and speed. (you can change this by running rails_build --env=development, etc.). this can cause issues since the build runs on localhost, and rails (without thruster), has no facility for ssl termination. as such, you may want the the following

      # file : ./config/environments/production.rb
    
      config.force_ssl = ENV['RAILS_BUILD'] ? false : true
    
  • config.index_html

    controls the mapping of urls to build files, eg.

      RailsBuild.configure do
        config.index_html = true # the default
        config.urls << "/post/42" #=> ./build/posts/42/index.html
      end
    
      # vs.
    
      RailsBuild.configure do
        config.index_html = false
        config.urls << "/post/42" #=> ./build/posts/42.html
      end
    
  • config.path

    this is the path to the build config file itself, the default is ./config/rails_build.rb, as you would expect

  • config.trailing_slash

    this is current un-used, but maybe be used in the future. it's default is the value of

      Rails.application.default_url_options[:trailing_slash]
    

MOTIVATION

why yet another static site builder? why not hugo or, the other-soon-to-be-released-blazing-fast-one-i-am-building-on Roda?

because:

- there are a lot of Rails apps
- nothing is as fast as static
- Rails has no facility to 'pre-render' routes on deployment

so, you can use this tool to leverage the code and the app you already have, and/or to utilize the entire Rails ecosystem, it's docs and gems, to build sophisticated sites without needing to learn yet another framework.

SPEED

rails_build is as fast as your rails app. optimizing the build means optimizing your app so, the internet abounds with advice here, and all the production stuff one might normally do, caching, etc, is applicable for cranking things up. that being said, on a 'normal' laptop one should expect to crank through 1000 urls in 10s of seconds. this is what is meant by, "good enough".

ENV

at build time, the following environment variables will be available to your app, such that i can "know" that it is being built. they should be self explanatory:

      ENV['RAILS_BUILD'] # a uuid fo the build
      ENV['RAILS_BUILD_TIME'] # a timestamp when the build was run

RTFM

as always, docs are worthless and ruby is beautiful, so #RTFC ->

https://github.com/ahoward/rails_build/blob/main/bin/rails_build

LICENSE

the gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

AI boo

any and all usage, in any way, shape, or form, in prohibited by any ai application, or llm. this includes indexing, knowing about, training on, or existing inside a commercial llm or training data set. iff (that is not a typo) your llm is oss, please contact me directly before including this source.

any usage by openai, or google, is forbidden regardless.