Moonshine is Rails deployment and configuration management done right.
By leveraging capistrano and puppet, moonshine allows you have a working application server in 15 minutes, and be able to sanely manage it's configuration from the comfort of your version control of choice.
To get started, check out our tutorial. It covers configuring and deploying your application for the first time with Moonshine.
Once you're a bit more comfortable with Moonshine, you'll find our documentation on the wiki to be helpful!
- A server running Ubuntu 12.04 or 14.04 LTS (Want to see your favorite platform supported? Fork Moonshine on GitHub!)
- A Rails 2.3 or Rails 3 app. Rails 4 is supported with the plugger gem.
- A user on this server that can:
- Execute commands via sudo
- Access your application's source code repository
It's also pretty simple!
$ script/plugin install git://github.com/railsmachine/moonshine.git
$ script/generate moonshine
$ script/rails plugin install git://github.com/railsmachine/moonshine.git
$ script/rails generate moonshine
Add gem 'plugger'
to your Gemfile and bundle install, then:
$ plugger install git://github.com/railsmachine/moonshine.git
$ script/rails generate moonshine
If you get errors about not being able to find shadow_puppet during deploys, you'll also need to add the following to your Gemfile:
gem 'shadow_puppet', :require => false
It's easy enough:
$ gem install shadow_puppet isolate-scenarios
$ rake spec
isolate-scenarios is used to test against multiple versions of Rails. To run all scenarios at once:
$ isolate-scenarios rake spec
You can find more examples in the documentation and on the Wiki.
For help or general discussion, visit the Moonshine newsgroup.
We've added support for Passenger Enterprise Edition! In order to install it, you need to make a few changes to moonshine.yml. Phusion now provides a gem server for Passenger Enterprise. You will need to put your license file in app/manifests/templates and call it passenger-enterprise-license
so we can put it in the right place during install.
This is what a passenger enterprise block in moonshine.yml should look like (in addition to your usual Passenger settings):
:passenger:
:version: 4.0.10
:enterprise: true
:download_token: YOUR-PASSENGER-ENTERPRISE-DOWNLOAD-TOKEN
:rolling_restarts: true
Compiling ruby from source is time and CPU consuming. In an attempt to speed up ruby upgrades and make it easier to roll back to the previous version, we've added support for Brightbox's Ruby packages. Setting it up is easy, just set the ruby line in config/moonshine.yml to brightbox193
or brightbox21
.
- Ubuntu 10.04: Brightbox doesn't provide packages for Ruby 2.1.x. If you want it, you'll need to upgrade to at least 12.04.
We've been torturing ourselves trying to turn Moonshine into a gem ever since it was announced that Rails 4 was dropping support for plugins. Moonshine is... different... and we think it actually makes sense as a plugin. So, instead of turning Moonshine, and the dozens of Moonshine plugins we've written, into a gem, we decided to add plugin support back to Rails 4! That's where plugger comes in. Just add it to your Gemfile and bundle install
and voila, plugins are back!
By default, everything within the app directory is eager-loaded by the app at startup in production mode (and staging). That's not good. So, to keep that from happening, add this to config/application.rb inside the Application class:
path_rejector = lambda { |s| s.include?("app/manifests") }
config.eager_load_paths = config.eager_load_paths.reject(&path_rejector)
ActiveSupport::Dependencies.autoload_paths.reject!(&path_rejector)
That'll keep the manifests from loading when the app starts up!
With Rails 4, it doesn't want you to use the --binstubs
argument for bundler, so it's now optional. If you're using Moonshine and Rails 4, add this to config/moonshine.yml, and you'll be all set:
:bundler:
:disable_binstubs: true
After your next deploy, you should be able to run rails console without that annoying error message.
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