Add Opal-Sprockets and Roda-Sprockets to your Gemfile (or install using gem
):
# Gemfile
gem "opal-sprockets"
gem "roda-sprockets"
gem "puma"
Roda-Sprockets uses sprockets
as its default build system, so the asset-pipeline
from rails can be mimicked here to map all ruby assets in the /assets
path to be compiled using opal.
# config.ru
require 'roda'
class App < Roda
plugin :sprockets, precompile: %w(application.js),
prefix: %w(app/),
root: __dir__,
public_path: 'public/',
opal: true,
debug: ENV['RACK_ENV'] != 'production'
plugin :public
route do |r|
r.public
r.sprockets
r.root do
<<~END
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
#{ javascript_tag 'application' }
#{ opal_require 'application' }
</head>
</html>
END
end
end
end
run App.app
This creates a sprockets instance under the /assets
path, serving Opal assets
from app/
with all the custom opal paths added automatically.
This env
object includes all the opal corelib and stdlib paths. To add
any custom application directories, you must add them to the load path using
Opal.append_path
or adding them to the prefix
parameter. You can now add
an app/application.rb
file into this added path with some basic content:
# app/application.rb
require 'opal'
puts "wow, running ruby!"
It is necessary to require the opal corelib (seen in the require
call) above.
This just makes the Opal runtime and corelib available. Then it is possible to
use all the corelib methods and classes, e.g. Kernel#puts
as seen above.
As this is just a simple Roda application, you can run it:
$ bundle exec rackup
And point your browser towards http://localhost:9292/
and view the browser
debug console. You should see this message printed.
It's possible to extend this integration, for that please look into the roda-sprockets documentation