n. a microframework for web development.
Meet us on IRC: #cuba.rb on freenode.net
Cuba is a microframework for web development originally inspired by Rum, a tiny but powerful mapper for Rack applications.
It integrates many templates via Tilt, and testing via Cutest and Capybara.
Here's a simple application:
# cat hello_world.rb
require "cuba"
Cuba.use Rack::Session::Cookie
Cuba.define do
on get do
on "hello" do
res.write "Hello world!"
end
on root do
res.redirect "/hello"
end
end
end
# cat hello_world_test.rb
require "cuba/test"
scope do
test "Homepage" do
visit "/"
assert has_content?("Hello world!")
end
end
To run it, you can create a config.ru
file:
# cat config.ru
require "./hello_world"
run Cuba
You can now run rackup
and enjoy what you have just created.
Here's an example showcasing how different matchers work:
require "cuba"
Cuba.use Rack::Session::Cookie
Cuba.define do
# only GET requests
on get do
# /
on root do
res.write "Home"
end
# /about
on "about" do
res.write "About"
end
# /styles/basic.css
on "styles", extension("css") do |file|
res.write "Filename: #{file}" #=> "Filename: basic"
end
# /post/2011/02/16/hello
on "post/:y/:m/:d/:slug" do |y, m, d, slug|
res.write "#{y}-#{m}-#{d} #{slug}" #=> "2011-02-16 hello"
end
# /username/foobar
on "username/:username" do |username|
user = User.find_by_username(username) # username == "foobar"
# /username/foobar/posts
on "posts" do
# You can access `user` here, because the `on` blocks
# are closures.
res.write "Total Posts: #{user.posts.size}" #=> "Total Posts: 6"
end
# /username/foobar/following
on "following" do
res.write user.following.size #=> "1301"
end
end
# /search?q=barbaz
on "search", param("q") do |query|
res.write "Searched for #{query}" #=> "Searched for barbaz"
end
end
# only POST requests
on post do
on "login"
# POST /login, user: foo, pass: baz
on param("user"), param("pass") do |user, pass|
res.write "#{user}:#{pass}" #=> "foo:baz"
end
# If the params `user` and `pass` are not provided, this block will
# get executed.
on true do
res.write "You need to provide user and pass!"
end
end
end
end
There are four matchers defined for HTTP Verbs: get
, post
, put
and
delete
. But the world doesn't end there, does it? As you have the whole
request available via the req
object, you can query it with helper methods
like req.options?
or req.head?
, or you can even go to a lower level
and inspect the environment via the env
object, and check for example if
env["REQUEST_METHOD"]
equals the obscure verb PATCH
.
What follows is an example of different ways of saying the same thing:
on env["REQUEST_METHOD"] == "GET", "api" do ... end
on req.get?, "api" do ... end
on get, "api" do ... end
Actually, get
is syntax sugar for req.get?
, which in turn is syntax sugar
for env["REQUEST_METHOD"] == "GET"
.
You may have noticed that some matchers yield a value to the block. The rules for determining if a matcher will yield a value are simple:
- Regex captures:
"posts/(\d+)-(.*)"
will yield two values, corresponding to each capture. - Placeholders:
"users/:id"
will yield the value in the position of :id. - Symbols:
:foobar
will yield if a segment is available. - File extensions:
extension("css")
will yield the basename of the matched file. - Parameters:
param("user")
will yield the value of the parameter user, if present.
The first case is important because it shows the underlying effect of regex captures.
In the second case, the substring :id
gets replaced by ([^\\/]+)
and the
string becomes "users/([^\\/]+)"
before performing the match, thus it reverts
to the first form we saw.
In the third case, the symbol ––no matter what it says––gets replaced
by "([^\\/]+)"
, and again we are in presence of case 1.
The fourth case, again, reverts to the basic matcher: it generates the string
"([^\\/]+?)\.#{ext}\\z"
before performing the match.
The fifth case is different: it checks if the the parameter supplied is present in the request (via POST or QUERY_STRING) and it pushes the value as a capture.
You can mount a Cuba app, along with middlewares, inside another Cuba app:
class API < Cuba; end
API.use SomeMiddleware
API.define do
on param("url") do |url|
...
end
end
Cuba.define do
on "api" do
run API
end
end
Given that Cuba is essentially Rack, it is very easy to test with Webrat
or
Capybara
. Cuba's own tests are written with a combination of Cutest
and Capybara, and if you want to use the same for your tests it is
as easy as requiring cuba/test
:
require "cuba/test"
require "your/app"
scope do
test "Homepage" do
visit "/"
assert has_content?("Hello world!")
end
end
To read more about testing, check the documentation for Cutest and Capybara.
Each Cuba app can store settings in the Cuba.settings
hash. The settings are
inherited if you happen to subclass Cuba
Cuba.settings[:layout] = "guest"
class Users < Cuba; end
class Admin < Cuba; end
Admin.settings[:layout] = "admin"
assert_equal "guest", Users.settings[:layout]
assert_equal "admin", Admin.settings[:layout]
Feel free to store whatever you find convenient.
Cuba ships with a plugin that provides helpers for rendering templates. It uses Tilt, a gem that interfaces with many template engines.
require "cuba/render"
Cuba.plugin Cuba::Render
Cuba.define do
on default do
# Within the partial, you will have access to the local variable `content`,
# that will hold the value "hello, world".
res.write render("home.haml", content: "hello, world")
end
end
Note that in order to use this plugin you need to have Tilt installed, along with the templating engines you want to use.
Cuba provides a way to extend its functionality with plugins.
Authoring your own plugins is pretty straightforward.
module MyOwnHelper
def markdown(str)
BlueCloth.new(str).to_html
end
end
Cuba.plugin MyOwnHelper
That's the simplest kind of plugin you'll write. In fact, that's exactly how
the markdown
helper is written in Cuba::TextHelpers
.
A more complicated plugin can make use of Cuba.settings
to provide default
values. In the following example, note that if the module has a setup
method it will
be called as soon as it is included:
module Render
def self.setup(app)
app.settings[:template_engine] = "erb"
end
def partial(template, locals = {})
render("#{template}.#{settings[:template_engine]}", locals)
end
end
Cuba.plugin Render
This sample plugin actually resembles how Cuba::Render
works.
Finally, if a module called ClassMethods
is present, Cuba
will be extended
with it.
module GetSetter
module ClassMethods
def set(key, value)
settings[key] = value
end
def get(key)
settings[key]
end
end
end
Cuba.plugin GetSetter
Cuba.set(:foo, "bar")
assert_equal "bar", Cuba.get(:foo)
assert_equal "bar", Cuba.settings[:foo]
$ gem install cuba