routes_lazy_routes is an evil Rails plugin that defers loading the whole bloody routes until the server gets the first request, so the app can spin up quickly. 🤘
This voodoo gem is designed especially for you who are maintaining a huge legacy Rails app that contains hundreds of routes that forces you to wait dozens of seconds per every rails
command invocation.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'routes_lazy_routes'
If you're not brave enough, you can limit the group not to include production
environment.
Indeed, enabling this gem for the processes like batch or job may improve their runtime performance, but so far as that's not a critical problem for your production system, the following setup might be safer.
group :development, :test do
gem 'routes_lazy_routes'
end
You have nothing to do with it. It should just work beneath the skin.
The first visitor of the server should sacrifice their time for the Rails process to load the routes. First strike is deadly. If you're bundling this in the production server, it'd be a good idea to throw a jab to the server right after the deployment in order to warm up before accepting real client requests.
-
You can manually eager_load the routes by calling
RoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load!
(the "load runner"). -
Rails.application.eager_load!
automatically invokesRoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load!
since that should be what we expect forRails.application.eager_load!
. -
Loading an integration test automatically kicks
RoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load!
since AD::Integration expects the routes to be loaded. -
And, as already explained, sending a request to the Rails server automatically runs
RoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load!
on the server. -
On the other hand, you need manually calling
RoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load!
inside your worker process (e.g. Sidekiq) to resolve named routes like the following:# config/initializers/sidekiq.rb Sidekiq.configure_server do |config| if defined?(RoutesLazyRoutes) Rails.application.config.after_initialize do RoutesLazyRoutes.eager_load! end end end
Patches are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/amatsuda/routes_lazy_routes.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.