Welcome! Renderful is a rendering engine for headless CMSs. It allows you to map your content types to Ruby objects that take care of rendering your content.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'renderful'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install renderful
Once you have installed the gem, you can configure it like this:
RenderfulClient = Renderful::Client.new(
provider: Renderful::Provider::DummyCms.new(api_key: 'secretApiKey'), # see "Providers"
components: {
'jumbotron' => JumbotronComponent,
},
)
Suppose you have the jumbotron
content type in your Contentful space. This content type has the
title
and content
fields, both strings.
Let's create the app/components/jumbotron_component.rb
file:
class JumbotronComponent < Renderful::Component
def render
<<~HTML
<div class="jumbotron">
<h1 class="display-4">#{ entry.title }</h1>
<p class="lead">#{ entry.content }</p>
</div>
HTML
end
end
You can now render the component like this:
RenderfulClient.render('my_entry_id')
You can easily cache the output of your components. A Redis cache implementation is included out of the box. Here's an example:
RenderfulClient = Renderful.new(
cache: Renderful::Cache::Redis.new(Redis.new(url: 'redis://localhost:6379')),
# ...
)
If you are using Rails and want to use the Rails cache store for Renderful, you can simply pass
Rails.cache
, which responds to the expected interface:
RenderfulClient = Renderful.new(ful,
cache: Rails.cache,
# ...
)
The best way to invalidate the cache is through webhooks.
Renderful ships with a framework-agnostic webhook processor you can use to automatically invalidate the cache for all updated content:
RenderfulClient.invalidate_cache_from_webhook(json_body)
This is how you could use it in a Rails controller:
class WebhooksController < ApplicationController
skip_before_action :verify_authenticity_token
def create
RenderfulClient.invalidate_cache_from_webhook(request.raw_post)
head :no_content
end
end
The cache invalidator will not only invalidate the cache for the entry that has been updated, but
also for any entries linking to it, so that they are re-rendered. This is very useful, for instance,
if you have a Page
entry type that contains references to many UI components - when one of the
components is updated, you want the page to be re-rendered.
Renderful integrates nicely with ViewComponent for rendering your components:
RenderfulClient = Renderful::Client.new(
components: {
'jumbotron' => JumbotronComponent, # JumbotronComponent inherits from ViewComponent::Base
},
)
However, keep in mind you will now have to pass a view context when rendering them:
RenderfulClient.render('my_entry_id', view_context: view_context)
In order to integrate with Contentful, you will first need to add the contentful
gem to your
Gemfile:
gem 'contentful'
Now make sure to install it:
$ bundle install
Finally, initialize Renderful with the Contentful provider:
RenderfulClient = Renderful::Client.new(
provider: Renderful::Provider::Contentful.new(
contentful: Contentful::Client.new(
space: 'cfexampleapi',
access_token: 'b4c0n73n7fu1',
)
)
)
You can now render your Contentful entries via Renderful:
RenderfulClient.render('your_entry_id')
In order to integrate with Prismic, you will first need to add the prismic.io
gem to your Gemfile:
gem 'prismic.io', require: 'prismic'
Now make sure to install it:
$ bundle install
Finally, initialize Renderful with the Prismic provider:
RenderfulClient = Renderful::Client.new(
provider: Renderful::Provider::Prismic.new(
prismic: Prismic.api('https://yourendpoint.prismic.io/api', 'your_access_token')
)
)
You can now render your Prismic documents via Renderful:
RenderfulClient.render('your_entry_id')
NOTE: Due to limitations in Prismic's API, cache invalidation for Prismic will invalidate all your components. Depending on how often you update your content, you may want to disable caching entirely if you are using Prismic.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run
the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to
experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new
version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which
will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to
rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/nebulab/renderful.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Renderful was originally developed by Nebulab and sponsored by Bolt Threads. It is currently maintained by Nebulab.