I'm trying to use a different/custom layout named "devise" for the sign_in action. I found this page in the devise wiki, and the second example even says you can do it per-action (in this case, sign_in action), but it shows no example of doing that. Someone on IRC told me I could try this:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
  protect_from_forgery

  layout :layout_by_resource

  def layout_by_resource
    if devise_controller? && resource_name == :user && action_name == 'sign_in'
      "devise"
    else
      "application"
    end
  end
end

But it does not seem to be working as it's still loading the default application layout. I would appreciate any help.

link|improve this question

feedback

3 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

I figured it out, but I'll keep this question here in case other people are curious.

It was a stupid mistake. The fact is sign_in is the path, not the action. Looking at the relevant source, I can see that the required action is new, i.e., creating a new Devise Session. Changing my above code's conditional to:

if devise_controller? && resource_name == :user && action_name == 'new'

Works beautifully.

Hope that helps someone out there.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Another way to apply custom layout for an action is as following.

According to How To: Create custom layouts "You can also set the layout for specific Devise controllers using a callback in config/environment.rb (rails 2) or config/application.rb (rails 3). This needs to be done in a to_prepare callback because it's executed once in production and before each request in development."

config.to_prepare do
    Devise::SessionsController.layout "devise"
    Devise::RegistrationsController.layout proc{ |controller| user_signed_in? ? "application"   : "devise" }
    Devise::ConfirmationsController.layout "devise"
    Devise::UnlocksController.layout "devise"            
    Devise::PasswordsController.layout "devise"        
end

Usually a layout distinction is made between pages behind login and pages which do not require authentication, so the above approach works most of the time. But I also experimented with using action_name helper to set a layout for a particular action and it worked like charm:

config.to_prepare do
    Devise::SessionsController.layout proc{ |controller| action_name == 'new' ? "devise"   : "application" }
end

I think this is the better and built in way to change the layout based on devise controller/action instead of creating a helper in ApplicationController.

link|improve this answer
2  
Also don't forget to restart the server every time you make a change in any file in the config folder, in this case config/application.rb for Rails3 or config/environment.rb for Rails 2, for the changes to take affect. – Zeeshan Aug 21 '11 at 17:13
Beware I tried this method in rails 3.1 and it makes the loading of assets from the assets folder significantly slower. This will not affect production servers, but when you have more than a few css/js files, you will notice it. – Gazler Feb 17 at 16:55
feedback

Just incase you didn't know, you can also use rake routes to see the routes in your rails app along with the action/controller they map to.

 new_user_registration GET    /accounts/sign_up(.:format)       {:action=>"new", :controller=>"devise/registrations"}
edit_user_registration GET    /accounts/edit(.:format)          {:action=>"edit", :controller=>"devise/registrations"}
                       PUT    /accounts(.:format)               {:action=>"update", :controller=>"devise/registrations"}
                       DELETE /accounts(.:format)               {:action=>"destroy", :controller=>"devise/registrations"}
link|improve this answer
Thanks, I actually did/do know about rake routes, I just hadn't thought for a second that 'sign_in' might not be the name of the actual action, I figured it would be, then I realized that it all revolves around sessions which is why it corresponds to the new action. – Jorge Israel Peña Feb 13 '11 at 6:16
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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