This module provides methods for generating HTML that links views to assets such as images, javascripts, stylesheets, and feeds. These methods do not verify the assets exist before linking to them:
image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="/images/rails.png?1230601161" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Using asset hosts
By default, Rails links to these assets on
the current host in the public folder, but you can direct Rails to link to assets from a dedicated asset
server by setting ActionController::Base.asset_host in the application
configuration, typically in config/environments/production.rb
.
For example, you’d define assets.example.com
to be your asset
host this way:
ActionController::Base.asset_host = "assets.example.com"
Helpers take that into account:
image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="http://assets.example.com/images/rails.png?1230601161" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="http://assets.example.com/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Browsers typically open at most two simultaneous connections to a single
host, which means your assets often have to wait for other assets to finish
downloading. You can alleviate this by using a %d
wildcard in
the asset_host
. For example, “assets%d.example.com”. If that
wildcard is present Rails distributes asset
requests among the corresponding four hosts “assets0.example.com”, …,
“assets3.example.com”. With this trick browsers will open eight
simultaneous connections rather than two.
image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="http://assets0.example.com/images/rails.png?1230601161" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="http://assets2.example.com/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
To do this, you can either setup four actual hosts, or you can use wildcard DNS to CNAME the wildcard to a single asset host. You can read more about setting up your DNS CNAME records from your ISP.
Note: This is purely a browser performance optimization and is not meant for server load balancing. See www.die.net/musings/page_load_time/ for background.
Alternatively, you can exert more control over the asset host by setting
asset_host
to a proc like this:
ActionController::Base.asset_host = Proc.new { |source| "http://assets#{Digest::MD5.hexdigest(source).to_i(16) % 2 + 1}.example.com" } image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="http://assets1.example.com/images/rails.png?1230601161" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="http://assets2.example.com/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
The example above generates “assets1.example.com” and “assets2.example.com”. This option is useful for example if you need fewer/more than four hosts, custom host names, etc.
As you see the proc takes a source
parameter. That’s a string
with the absolute path of the asset with any extensions and timestamps in
place, for example “/images/rails.png?1230601161”.
ActionController::Base.asset_host = Proc.new { |source| if source.starts_with?('/images') "http://images.example.com" else "http://assets.example.com" end } image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="http://images.example.com/images/rails.png?1230601161" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="http://assets.example.com/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Alternatively you may ask for a second parameter request
. That
one is particularly useful for serving assets from an SSL-protected page.
The example proc below disables asset hosting for HTTPS connections, while
still sending assets for plain HTTP requests from asset hosts. If you don’t
have SSL certificates for each of the asset hosts this technique allows you
to avoid warnings in the client about mixed media.
ActionController::Base.asset_host = Proc.new { |source, request| if request.ssl? "#{request.protocol}#{request.host_with_port}" else "#{request.protocol}assets.example.com" end }
You can also implement a custom asset host object that responds to
call
and takes either one or two parameters just like the
proc.
config.action_controller.asset_host = AssetHostingWithMinimumSsl.new( "http://asset%d.example.com", "https://asset1.example.com" )
Customizing the asset path
By default, Rails appends asset’s timestamps to all asset paths. This allows you to set a cache-expiration date for the asset far into the future, but still be able to instantly invalidate it by simply updating the file (and hence updating the timestamp, which then updates the URL as the timestamp is part of that, which in turn busts the cache).
It’s the responsibility of the web server you use to set the far-future expiration date on cache assets that you need to take advantage of this feature. Here’s an example for Apache:
# Asset Expiration ExpiresActive On <FilesMatch "\.(ico|gif|jpe?g|png|js|css)$"> ExpiresDefault "access plus 1 year" </FilesMatch>
Also note that in order for this to work, all your application servers must return the same timestamps. This means that they must have their clocks synchronized. If one of them drifts out of sync, you’ll see different timestamps at random and the cache won’t work. In that case the browser will request the same assets over and over again even thought they didn’t change. You can use something like Live HTTP Headers for Firefox to verify that the cache is indeed working.
This strategy works well enough for most server setups and requires the least configuration, but if you deploy several application servers at different times - say to handle a temporary spike in load - then the asset time stamps will be out of sync. In a setup like this you may want to set the way that asset paths are generated yourself.
Altering the asset paths that Rails
generates can be done in two ways. The easiest is to define the
RAILS_ASSET_ID environment variable. The contents of this variable will
always be used in preference to calculated timestamps. A more complex but
flexible way is to set
ActionController::Base.config.asset_path
to a proc that takes
the unmodified asset path and returns the path needed for your asset
caching to work. Typically you’d do something like this in
config/environments/production.rb
:
# Normally you'd calculate RELEASE_NUMBER at startup. RELEASE_NUMBER = 12345 config.action_controller.asset_path = proc { |asset_path| "/release-#{RELEASE_NUMBER}#{asset_path}" }
This example would cause the following behavior on all servers no matter when they were deployed:
image_tag("rails.png") # => <img alt="Rails" src="/release-12345/images/rails.png" /> stylesheet_link_tag("application") # => <link href="/release-12345/stylesheets/application.css?1232285206" media="screen" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Changing the asset_path does require that your web servers have knowledge of the asset template paths that you rewrite to so it’s not suitable for out-of-the-box use. To use the example given above you could use something like this in your Apache VirtualHost configuration:
<LocationMatch "^/release-\d+/(images|javascripts|stylesheets)/.*$"> # Some browsers still send conditional-GET requests if there's a # Last-Modified header or an ETag header even if they haven't # reached the expiry date sent in the Expires header. Header unset Last-Modified Header unset ETag FileETag None # Assets requested using a cache-busting filename should be served # only once and then cached for a really long time. The HTTP/1.1 # spec frowns on hugely-long expiration times though and suggests # that assets which never expire be served with an expiration date # 1 year from access. ExpiresActive On ExpiresDefault "access plus 1 year" </LocationMatch> # We use cached-busting location names with the far-future expires # headers to ensure that if a file does change it can force a new # request. The actual asset filenames are still the same though so we # need to rewrite the location from the cache-busting location to the # real asset location so that we can serve it. RewriteEngine On RewriteRule ^/release-\d+/(images|javascripts|stylesheets)/(.*)$ /$1/$2 [L]
- MODULE ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::JavascriptTagHelpers
- MODULE ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::StylesheetTagHelpers
- CLASS ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::AssetIncludeTag
- CLASS ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::JavascriptIncludeTag
- CLASS ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::StylesheetIncludeTag
- A
- F
- I
- P
- V
- ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper
- ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::JavascriptTagHelpers
- ActionView::Helpers::AssetTagHelper::StylesheetTagHelpers
Computes the path to an audio asset in the public audios directory. Full
paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by
audio_tag
to build the audio path.
Examples
audio_path("horse") # => /audios/horse audio_path("horse.wav") # => /audios/horse.wav audio_path("sounds/horse.wav") # => /audios/sounds/horse.wav audio_path("/sounds/horse.wav") # => /sounds/horse.wav audio_path("http://www.example.com/sounds/horse.wav") # => http://www.example.com/sounds/horse.wav
Returns an html audio tag for the source
. The
source
can be full path or file that exists in your public
audios directory.
Examples
audio_tag("sound") # => <audio src="/audios/sound" /> audio_tag("sound.wav") # => <audio src="/audios/sound.wav" /> audio_tag("sound.wav", :autoplay => true, :controls => true) # => <audio autoplay="autoplay" controls="controls" src="/audios/sound.wav" />
Returns a link tag that browsers and news readers can use to auto-detect an
RSS or ATOM feed. The type
can either be :rss
(default) or :atom
. Control the link options in url_for format
using the url_options
. You can modify the LINK tag itself in
tag_options
.
Options
-
:rel
- Specify the relation of this link, defaults to "alternate" -
:type
- Override the auto-generated mime type -
:title
- Specify the title of the link, defaults to thetype
Examples
auto_discovery_link_tag # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="http://www.currenthost.com/controller/action" /> auto_discovery_link_tag(:atom) # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" title="ATOM" href="http://www.currenthost.com/controller/action" /> auto_discovery_link_tag(:rss, {:action => "feed"}) # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="http://www.currenthost.com/controller/feed" /> auto_discovery_link_tag(:rss, {:action => "feed"}, {:title => "My RSS"}) # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="My RSS" href="http://www.currenthost.com/controller/feed" /> auto_discovery_link_tag(:rss, {:controller => "news", :action => "feed"}) # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="http://www.currenthost.com/news/feed" /> auto_discovery_link_tag(:rss, "http://www.example.com/feed.rss", {:title => "Example RSS"}) # => <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="Example RSS" href="http://www.example.com/feed" />
# File actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/asset_tag_helper.rb, line 221 def auto_discovery_link_tag(type = :rss, url_options = {}, tag_options = {}) tag( "link", "rel" => tag_options[:rel] || "alternate", "type" => tag_options[:type] || Mime::Type.lookup_by_extension(type.to_s).to_s, "title" => tag_options[:title] || type.to_s.upcase, "href" => url_options.is_a?(Hash) ? url_for(url_options.merge(:only_path => false)) : url_options ) end
<%= favicon_link_tag %>
generates
<link href="/favicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" type="image/vnd.microsoft.icon" />
You may specify a different file in the first argument:
<%= favicon_link_tag '/myicon.ico' %>
That’s passed to path_to_image
as is, so it gives
<link href="/myicon.ico" rel="shortcut icon" type="image/vnd.microsoft.icon" />
The helper accepts an additional options hash where you can override “rel” and “type”.
For example, Mobile Safari looks for a different LINK tag, pointing to an image that will be used if you add the page to the home screen of an iPod Touch, iPhone, or iPad. The following call would generate such a tag:
<%= favicon_link_tag 'mb-icon.png', :rel => 'apple-touch-icon', :type => 'image/png' %>
Computes the path to a font asset in the public fonts directory. Full paths from the document root will be passed through.
Examples
font_path("font") # => /fonts/font font_path("font.ttf") # => /fonts/font.ttf font_path("dir/font.ttf") # => /fonts/dir/font.ttf font_path("/dir/font.ttf") # => /dir/font.ttf font_path("http://www.example.com/dir/font.ttf") # => http://www.example.com/dir/font.ttf
Computes the path to an image asset in the public images directory. Full
paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by
image_tag
to build the image path:
image_path("edit") # => "/images/edit" image_path("edit.png") # => "/images/edit.png" image_path("icons/edit.png") # => "/images/icons/edit.png" image_path("/icons/edit.png") # => "/icons/edit.png" image_path("http://www.example.com/img/edit.png") # => "http://www.example.com/img/edit.png"
If you have images as application resources this method may conflict with
their named routes. The alias path_to_image
is provided to
avoid that. Rails uses the alias internally,
and plugin authors are encouraged to do so.
Returns an html image tag for the source
. The
source
can be a full path or a file that exists in your public
images directory.
Options
You can add HTML attributes using the
options
. The options
supports three additional
keys for convenience and conformance:
-
:alt
- If no alt text is given, the file name part of thesource
is used (capitalized and without the extension) -
:size
- Supplied as "{Width}x{Height}", so "30x45" becomes width="30" and height="45".:size
will be ignored if the value is not in the correct format. -
:mouseover
- Set an alternate image to be used when the onmouseover event is fired, and sets the original image to be replaced onmouseout. This can be used to implement an easy image toggle that fires on onmouseover.
Examples
image_tag("icon") # => <img src="/images/icon" alt="Icon" /> image_tag("icon.png") # => <img src="/images/icon.png" alt="Icon" /> image_tag("icon.png", :size => "16x10", :alt => "Edit Entry") # => <img src="/images/icon.png" width="16" height="10" alt="Edit Entry" /> image_tag("/icons/icon.gif", :size => "16x16") # => <img src="/icons/icon.gif" width="16" height="16" alt="Icon" /> image_tag("/icons/icon.gif", :height => '32', :width => '32') # => <img alt="Icon" height="32" src="/icons/icon.gif" width="32" /> image_tag("/icons/icon.gif", :class => "menu_icon") # => <img alt="Icon" class="menu_icon" src="/icons/icon.gif" /> image_tag("mouse.png", :mouseover => "/images/mouse_over.png") # => <img src="/images/mouse.png" onmouseover="this.src='/images/mouse_over.png'" onmouseout="this.src='/images/mouse.png'" alt="Mouse" /> image_tag("mouse.png", :mouseover => image_path("mouse_over.png")) # => <img src="/images/mouse.png" onmouseover="this.src='/images/mouse_over.png'" onmouseout="this.src='/images/mouse.png'" alt="Mouse" />
# File actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/asset_tag_helper.rb, line 356 def image_tag(source, options = {}) options.symbolize_keys! src = options[:src] = path_to_image(source) unless src =~ %r^(?:cid|data):/ || src.blank? options[:alt] = options.fetch(:alt){ image_alt(src) } end if size = options.delete(:size) options[:width], options[:height] = size.split("x") if size =~ %r{^\d+x\d+$} end if mouseover = options.delete(:mouseover) ActiveSupport::Deprecation.warn ":mouseover option is deprecated and will be removed from Rails 4.0" options[:onmouseover] = "this.src='#{path_to_image(mouseover)}'" options[:onmouseout] = "this.src='#{src}'" end tag("img", options) end
Computes the path to a video asset in the public videos directory. Full
paths from the document root will be passed through. Used internally by
video_tag
to build the video path.
Examples
video_path("hd") # => /videos/hd video_path("hd.avi") # => /videos/hd.avi video_path("trailers/hd.avi") # => /videos/trailers/hd.avi video_path("/trailers/hd.avi") # => /trailers/hd.avi video_path("http://www.example.com/vid/hd.avi") # => http://www.example.com/vid/hd.avi
Returns an html video tag for the sources
. If
sources
is a string, a single video tag will be returned. If
sources
is an array, a video tag with nested source tags for
each source will be returned. The sources
can be full paths or
files that exists in your public videos directory.
Options
You can add HTML attributes using the
options
. The options
supports two additional keys
for convenience and conformance:
-
:poster
- Set an image (like a screenshot) to be shown before the video loads. The path is calculated like thesrc
ofimage_tag
. -
:size
- Supplied as "{Width}x{Height}", so "30x45" becomes width="30" and height="45".:size
will be ignored if the value is not in the correct format.
Examples
video_tag("trailer") # => <video src="/videos/trailer" /> video_tag("trailer.ogg") # => <video src="/videos/trailer.ogg" /> video_tag("trailer.ogg", :controls => true, :autobuffer => true) # => <video autobuffer="autobuffer" controls="controls" src="/videos/trailer.ogg" /> video_tag("trailer.m4v", :size => "16x10", :poster => "screenshot.png") # => <video src="/videos/trailer.m4v" width="16" height="10" poster="/images/screenshot.png" /> video_tag("/trailers/hd.avi", :size => "16x16") # => <video src="/trailers/hd.avi" width="16" height="16" /> video_tag("/trailers/hd.avi", :height => '32', :width => '32') # => <video height="32" src="/trailers/hd.avi" width="32" /> video_tag(["trailer.ogg", "trailer.flv"]) # => <video><source src="trailer.ogg" /><source src="trailer.ogg" /><source src="trailer.flv" /><%rvideo> video_tag(["trailer.ogg", "trailer.flv"] :size => "160x120") # => <video height="120" width="160"><source src="trailer.ogg" /><source src="trailer.flv" /><%rvideo>
# File actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/asset_tag_helper.rb, line 416 def video_tag(sources, options = {}) options.symbolize_keys! options[:poster] = path_to_image(options[:poster]) if options[:poster] if size = options.delete(:size) options[:width], options[:height] = size.split("x") if size =~ %r{^\d+x\d+$} end if sources.is_a?(Array) content_tag("video", options) do sources.map { |source| tag("source", :src => source) }.join.html_safe end else options[:src] = path_to_video(sources) tag("video", options) end end