Tuesday, September 11, 2007

How to set up Ruby on Rails on BLUEHOST


This is intended to be a brief introduction to developing ruby on rails applications on a bluehost account. At the bottom of this article you will find a number of resources to help you learn more about ruby on rails and related information, as well as links to some rails tutorials that will go into more depth than this document.

Before you start digging your feet into Ruby on Rails, you should understand exactly what it is. Ruby on Rails is an advanced object-oriented Model-View-Controller application framework. If you didn't fully understand the meaning of the previous sentence, you're going to need to put in some study time before you can jump into rails programming. Ruby On Rails is aimed at advanced programmers; jumping into it before you're ready is likely to be very very hard. This tutorial should be easy enough for anyone to follow, but there's a lot more to rails than you'll be learning here. This tutorial serves as a first step into ruby on rails development on bluehost.

The Model-View-Controller (abbreviated to MVC) design pattern is fairly straight-forward, it simply means that your program is split into three separate components: The Model, View, and Controller. The "Model" is your data, no matter how it's stored. If you're writing a blog, this is where all of your posts and comments would go. The "View" is your interface. In the case of ruby on rails, we're talking about the part that displays your HTML. The controller handles the business logic, and ties the model to the view. MVC programming is beneficial for many reasons.

From this point on it is assumed that you have an understanding of both object-oriented design and MVC, and now you can get into how to develop rails applications on bluehost. A few additional notes before you start:

First of all, you need to have SSH access enabled. You'll need to contact customer support for this, either by emailing support@bluehost.com or by calling support at 1-888-401-4678.

Secondly, you'll see a lot of tutorials referring to a program called "script/server" or "webrick". This is NOT NECESSARY on a bluehost account, and you should never have to use it. This is designed for people who are developing their rails application on their own computer where there is no apache install which is pre-configured to use ruby on rails. However, you do have access to such a server on bluehost, so you do not need to worry about script/server. Do not run it, as it will not even work.

This tutorial is loosely based on the excellent official ruby on rails tutorial which is located at http://wiki.rubyonrails.com/rails/pages/Tutorial, although this document has been adapted to fit some bluehost-specific things.

To begin, log into the server using SSH. You'll need a work area for your rails application. Assuming ahead of time that you may eventually want multiple applications, you should make a work directory and then cd into it. You can name it whatever you would like, but this document assumes that it is called "rails".

% mkdir ~/rails
% cd ~/rails

Now you may create your application. As we are just making a simple Hello World application, we'll assume that the application is named "first".

% rails first
% cd first

Next, we're going to set up a subdomain for this application to run on. Log into your cPanel, click on 'subdomains', then type 'first' into the first text box and click 'Add'. You've now created a new subdomain, first.yourdomain.com, which will be the new home of your ruby on rails application. Now, we're going to make your application's "public" directory be the rootdir of that subdomain with the following commands:

% cd ~/public_html/
% rm -r first
% ln -s /home/YOUR_USERNAME/rails/first/public first

You should now be able to go to http://first.yourdomain.com/, where you will see the Ruby on Rails welcome message. As the welcome page suggests, it is now time to set up your databases.

In cPanel, click on 'MySQL Databases'. The first thing you'll want to do here is add an SQL user for rails to use. You can name this whatever you'd like. We will assume you used 'rails'. cPanel prepends your username to the user name, so you should take note of the actual name created (it should be username_rails).

Next, we're adding a database. Name this database 'first', to match your application name. You will again notice that username_ has been prepended. Finally, we're going to link this username to the database. Select username_rails and username_first from the dropdowns and make sure the 'All' checkbox below them is checked, then click the 'Add User To DB' button.

Now you should repeat this step, with 'firstdev' as the database name, and linking username_rails to it.

Now we're going to edit the database.yml file. Open ~/rails/first/config/database.yml in your favorite editor, and modify the 'development' and 'production' sections to contain the username, password, and database that you just created.

production:
adapter: mysql
database: username_first
host: localhost
username: username_rails
password: password

development:
adapter: mysql
database: username_firstdev
host: localhost
username: username_rails
password: password

Next you should create the actual database data. From the mySQL page in cPanel, you should find a 'phpmyadmin' link. Within phpmyadmin, select the "_first" database from the dropdown on the left, then click on the "SQL" tab along the top. Paste the following into your box and click 'Go':

CREATE TABLE `people` (
`id` int(10) unsigned NOT NULL auto_increment,
`name` varchar(50) NOT NULL default '',
`street1` varchar(70) NOT NULL default '',
`street2` varchar(70) NOT NULL default '',
`city` varchar(70) NOT NULL default '',
`state` char(2) NOT NULL default '',
`zip` varchar(10) NOT NULL default '',
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
KEY `name` (`name`)
) TYPE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=2 ;

Now, click on the SQL tab one more time, and run this query:

INSERT INTO `people` VALUES (1, 'Superman', '123 Somewhere', '', 'Smallville', 'KS', '123456');

Now repeat these two sql queries for your _firstdev database.

The next step is to create a controller.

% ./script/generate controller First list view new edit

After that has been created, you will create your model.

% ./script/generate model Person

Now we're going to modify two files. First, open app/views/first/view.rhtml and make it look like this:



Friends#view


This page will display one friend



<%= @person.name %>

<%= @person.street1 %>

<%= @person.street2 %>

<%= @person.city %>

<%= @person.state %>

<%= @person.zip %>





Next, open app/controllers/first_controller.rb and modify the 'view' method to look like this:

def view
@person = Person.find(1)
end

Congratulations, You now have a working ruby on rails application which reads information from a database. Go to http://first.yourdomain.com/first/view and you should see Superman's information.

You should now go on to read other ruby on rails tutorials. You can find a lot of helpful information at http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/, as well as at http://rubyonrails.org/docs. You should also watch the Ruby On Rails Screencasts, which show you, among other things, how an experienced ruby on rails developer can create a fully functional application in a matter of minutes using ruby on Rails.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND TUTORIALS:
More information on MVC: http://wiki.rubyonrails.com/rails/pages/UnderstandingMVC
Official Ruby On Rails Screencasts. You should watch these: http://media.rubyonrails.org/screencasts
Ruby on Rails wiki. The tutorials listed here are quite helpful: http://wiki.rubyonrails.org/
Why's poignant guide to ruby: You will either enjoy this or hate it, but it's a nice intro to the ruby language: http://poignantguide.net/ruby/

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey really good,
but you have not given anything on creating a database and records in bluehost.

The given database info will not work when you run the script.


if possible find out.

how to create a database using ssh
putty.

Anonymous said...

Keep up the good work.