7

I'm using Rails 4.2.3 and am trying to customize the 404 error page in public/404.html. How can I include images from the asset pipeline?

There's an excellent post how to build dynamic custom error pages. However, as described there, it requires a whole lot of changes to settings that I, as a beginner, am not ready to take. All I want to do is in my 404 page to include 2 images that are in the asset pipeline. Is there an easy way to do this?

5 Answers 5

6

If you want your error page to use images from the asset pipeline, then you have two options:

  1. Use dynamic error pages (I've written a tutorial here).
  2. Monkey patch the asset pipeline to allow non-fingerprinted assets.

Since you are ruling out option #1 for now, I think the monkey patch is the way to go. Install the non-stupid-digest-assets gem in your app. This will patch the asset pipeline so that it produces non-fingerprinted assets (in addition to the fingerprinted ones).

# Gemfile
gem "non-stupid-digest-assets"

And of course, don't forget:

$ bundle install

Then in your 404.html, just refer to the asset as if it were a static file, like this:

<img src="/assets/my-image.png">

This assumes the actual image is stored here in your project:

app/assets/images/my-image.png
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3

Keep in mind, that content of public folder is visible to anyone. There for, following the convention, I would create assets folder (if you don't have it already), then images and stylesheets. And create regular html page

- app
...
- public
  - 404.html
  - images
    - image1.jpg
    - image2.jpg
  - stylesheets
    - style.css

Then in your 404.html you will reference it like so:

<img src="./assets/images/image1.jpg" alt=""/>

3

Add the images to the public folder.

Use root relative path to the images on the public 404/500 html pages.

<img src="/my-logo.png"/>
1
  • This is so obvious I feel dumb for not thinking of it lol Mar 1, 2021 at 20:42
0

In a new application, routes that are not found are directed to the static html page found in public/404.html. As you have found this is a .html not .html.erb file which means you have to do fancy stuff to access your asset pipeline.

If you don't want to go through the trouble of creating a dynamic page, the easiest way is to copy* the two images from your asset pipeline into public/assets (or a sub-directory) and then include them with:

<img src="assets/image.jpg">

*You may also be able to use a symbolic link but it may cause problems depending on how your production server is set up.

4
  • True, but my question is how can I include images from the asset pipeline? Images in the asset pipeline are stored with a hash (in Rails4).
    – Marty
    Jul 17, 2015 at 20:24
  • Sorry about that, I understand the problem now. I've updated my answer to try to answer it better. Are you dead set on using the asset pipeline for these two images? You can easily have those 2 images outside the asset pipeline and without causing problems.
    – Rick Smith
    Jul 17, 2015 at 20:32
  • Yes, I would prefer to use them from the asset pipeline and wonder if there's an easier way then the one described in the post I'm referring to.
    – Marty
    Jul 17, 2015 at 20:34
  • hmmm... I personally doubt it, but maybe someone else will prove me wrong! This is the easiest way I can think of, good luck.
    – Rick Smith
    Jul 17, 2015 at 20:37
-2

in your 404.html add...

<head>
  <link data-turbolinks-track="true" href="/assets/application.css" media="all" rel="stylesheet" />
  <script data-turbolinks-track="true" src="/assets/application.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
  <img src="simple.gif">
</body>
1
  • These URLs will not resolve in production because they need fingerprints
    – djb
    Dec 2, 2016 at 17:39

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