49

I want Rails 3.1 to pick up more of my assets for precompilation. In particular, the default matcher for compiling files doesn't add .js files from vendor/assets/javascripts. I can just add the assets to the config.assets.precompile list, but this seems annoying. I don't want to refer to them in the application.js manifest, because I don't want them included in all pages.

In summary, any way to request that all .js files found in vendor/assets/javascripts get precompiled by rake assets:precompile, but without having them included in all pages?

3 Answers 3

70

config.assets.precompile accepts regular expressions and wildcard matching - so to ensure all js files get compiled, without specifying each by name, something like this should do the trick:

config.assets.precompile << '*.js'
10
  • 20
    You probably want to overwrite what's already in precompile then: config.assets.precompile = ['*.js', '*.css'].
    – pat
    Sep 16, 2011 at 4:29
  • 1
    Although you'll probably want to add something for your images too.
    – pat
    Sep 16, 2011 at 4:30
  • 1
    @pat Actually, all images in asset/images directories are included. This is likely because they don't require any processing.
    – coreyward
    Dec 10, 2011 at 22:43
  • 7
    Though not mentioned by the documentation, if you look at the code of sprockets, you will find that config.assets.precompile also accepts Proc, which means that you can do some tricks like this: gist.github.com/1529093
    – Limbo Peng
    Dec 28, 2011 at 18:38
  • 5
    Not sure why rake assets:precompile doesn't do this by default logically it should have done this. Feb 10, 2012 at 20:55
2

I modified example given in Rails config.assets.precompile setting to process all CSS and JS files in app/assets and here is my version, which takes all assets from /app and /vendor except partials (starting from _)

config.assets.precompile << Proc.new { |path|
  if path =~ /\.(css|js)\z/
    full_path = Rails.application.assets.resolve(path).to_path
    app_assets_path = Rails.root.join('app', 'assets').to_path
    vendor_assets_path = Rails.root.join('vendor', 'assets').to_path

    if ((full_path.starts_with? app_assets_path) || (full_path.starts_with? vendor_assets_path)) && (!path.starts_with? '_')
      puts "\t" + full_path.slice(Rails.root.to_path.size..-1)
      true
    else
      false
    end
  else
    false
  end
}
0
# Precompile *all* assets, except those that start with underscore
config.assets.precompile << /(^[^_\/]|\/[^_])[^\/]*$/

Reference the 55minutes Blog for the full explanation.

This will precompile any assets, not just JavaScript (.js, .coffee, .swf, .css, .scss)

2
  • This is great. Is there any reason I wouldn't want to precompile all assets? Aug 28, 2014 at 21:38
  • @AlexChaffee if you're using something like SASS or the require comments to prepare 'bundles' of assets. Mar 12, 2015 at 17:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.