In Rails 4, there is no way to by default compile both digest and non-digest assets. This is a pain in the arse for almost everyone developing a Rails 4 app. This gem solves the problem with the minimum possible effort.
Just put it in your Gemfile
gem "non-stupid-digest-assets"
If you want to whitelist non-digest assets for only certain files, you can configure a whitelist like this:
# config/initializers/non_digest_assets.rb
NonStupidDigestAssets.whitelist = [/tinymce\/.*/, "image.png"]
Be sure to give either a regex that will match the right assets or the logical path of the asset in question.
Note that the logical path is what you would provide to asset_url
, so for an image at RAILS_ROOT/assets/images/foo.png
the logical path is foo.png
Yes. But there are some obvious cases where you can't do this:
- Third party libraries in
vendor/assets
that need to include e.g. css / images - In a static error page, e.g. a 404 page or a 500 page
- Referencing the assets from outside your rails application
sprockets-redirect uses a rack middleware to 302 redirect to the digest asset. This is terrible for performance because it requires 2 HTTP requests, and it also hits your ruby stack. An asset request should be handled by your webserver (e.g. nginx) because that's what it's good at.
This rake task will solve this problem, but requires an extra rake task. It won't work by default with things like capistrano / heroku. And it requires you to manage the code in your app.
Digests are used for cache busting. Remember that if you use the non-digest assets and serve them with far-future expires headers, you will cause problems with cached assets if the contents ever need to change. You must bear this in mind when using non-digest assets.
Good question. I think it should be. Complain here