Disclaimer: I am by no means a Ruby or Rails expert.
As someone who's been in the industry for nigh on 15 years I see several warning signs that make me nervous about Ruby on Rails specifically. I'm going to ignore the language here because a language is a language. Ruby is a modern language with closures, exceptions, OO, etc. Some criticize it with regards to performance. These issues are largely irrelevant in that they don't impact real world performance (if it takes 300ms to download and display a Web page, who cares that the serverside codes takes 10, 20 or even 30ms to run?) and transitory in that they are fixed in later versions (as seems to be the case with Ruby 1.9).
Ruby on Rails is a closed, heavyweight stack. I mean this as an observation not an accusation. It is tightly integrated (including with Prototype) much like JBoss Seam in the Java world (being integrated tightly with JBoss/Hibernate and yes I know recent releases and articles have tackled the issue of using it with, say, Glassfish and another JPA provider)
This can be both a good thing and a bad thing. J2EE, for example, being a fairly open stack was the cause for much innovation in the software industry in the last decade as almost every piece of it (notably EJB) was replaced by different projects that could be slotted together. And of course it was, if not the birthplace for Spring, it was certainly the incubator.
On the other hand you have more closed stacks like .Net where their closed nature allows for rapid innovation, a model Microsoft has (generally) excelled at. In a few short years DirextX went from being a joke to completely trouncing OpenGL as a games development platform because any closed system can evolve that much faster than an open standards system. That's just how it works.
The other relevant point I'll mention is that in recent years there has been a move towards ORMs ("object-relational mapping") in Java, .Net and elsewhere and this is part of the impetus behind Rails. I've commented on this previously, for example "Using an ORM or plain SQL?" and I won't reiterate those points in their entirety.
As most of you would know there is a mismatch between the object and relational worlds that ORMs have sought to bridge. In the last year or two I've dealt with this mainly through Java (JPA specifically).
Now when you bridge between two things that don't match you end up with "leaky abstractions" (as Joel put it):
All non-trivial abstractions, to some
degree, are leaky.
Now what I'll add is this: there is an inverse relationship between the complexity of the abstraction and how leaky the abstraction is. Case in point: ibatis. Ibatis is an extremely lightweight yet powerful persistence framework for Java and one I'm a huge fan of. It wraps SQL in external files and on top of that puts many modern ORM behaviour, such as:
- Lazy-loading of relationships;
- Result mapping;
- Grouping of results to multiple levels (something JPA can't do); and
- Discriminated types (ie the type is determined the data).
I would estimate that ibatis has 90-95% of the functionality of Hibernate with the only complexity overhead being runtime bytecode enhancement for the lazy loading via cglib (JPA does it the same way) with the only downside that you have to write your own queries (and I don't consider that a serious downside but opnions will vary).
Compare that to a JPA provider that relies on instrumentation, load-time weaving and non-standard class loaders to implemennt that extra 5-10% fu