MarcoPolo shows your app name and environment in your console prompt so you don't accidentally break production
Officially supporting IRB (standard rails console) and pry (via pry-rails gem).
In your Gemfile: gem "marco-polo"
$ bundle install
Note: if you're using pry, make sure to list marco-polo AFTER pry-rails in your gemfile!
There's nothing to do! Just install the gem and bask in your newfound console security.
Before marco-polo:
~/Sites/myapp$ rails c
>
~/Sites/myapp$ heroku run console -a myapp
>
After marco-polo:
~/Sites/myapp$ rails c
myapp(dev)>
~/Sites/myapp$ heroku run console -a myapp
myapp(prod)>
You can customize app name by MARCO_POLO_APP_NAME
environment variable. In order to customize app name, define this environment variable then run your application.
$ MARCO_POLO_APP_NAME=app_name rails c
If your application is running on Heroku, set this environment variable by heroku config:set
command.
$ heroku config:set MARCO_POLO_APP_NAME=app_name
The central mechanism of marco-polo is adding a require
flag to the rails command that's starting IRB,
using it to require a file that changes the prompt. It will also let you load your own irbrc, to set up
any console tools you like! And since this file is required after your app is required, you can use all
your app objects inside it.
For example, one of my projects uses the sentient_user gem to help assign actors to all our papertrail events. Papertrail works great in my app code, but I always forget to set User.current when I'm in the console. Solution? Prompt myself to "log in" when my console loads.
print "Who are you? "
email = gets.chomp.downcase
user = User.find_by_email(email)
user.make_current
PaperTrail.whodunnit = user
This code lives in a file called .irbrc.rb
in my project root and is automatically loaded into my console
by marco-polo.
If you like MarcoPolo, help spread the word! Tell your friends, or at the very least star the repo on github.
For more console goodness, check out http://github.com/arches/table_print