Add the inertia_rails
gem to your Gemfile.
gem 'inertia_rails'
Follow the complete Server-side setup in the official documentation.
Follow the Client-side setup guide for detailed configuration steps.
Reference these sample implementations:
Render Inertia responses is simple, just use the inertia renderer in your controller methods. The renderer accepts two arguments, the first is the name of the component you want to render from within your pages directory (without extension). The second argument is an options hash where you can provide props
to your components. This options hash also allows you to pass view_data
to your layout, but this is much less common.
def index
render inertia: 'Event/Index', props: {
events: Event.all,
}
end
Starting in version 3.0, Inertia Rails allows you to provide your component name and props via common rails conventions.
class EventsController < ApplicationController
use_inertia_instance_props
def index
@events = Event.all
end
end
is the same as
class EventsController < ApplicationController
def index
render inertia: 'events/index', props: {
events: Event.all
}
end
end
In order to use instance props, you must call use_inertia_instance_props
on the controller (or a base controller it inherits from). If any props are provided manually, instance props
are automatically disabled for that response. Instance props are only included if they are defined after the before filter is set from use_inertia_instance_props
.
Automatic component name is also opt in, you must set the default_render
config value to true
. Otherwise, you can simply render inertia: true
for the same behavior explicitly.
If the default component path doesn't match your convention, you can define a method to resolve it however you like via the component_path_resolver
config value. The value of this should be callable and will receive the path and action and should return a string component path.
inertia_config(
component_path_resolver: ->(path:, action:) do
"Storefront/#{path.camelize}/#{action.camelize}"
end
)
Inertia layouts use the rails layout convention and can be set or changed in the same way.
class EventsController < ApplicationController
layout 'inertia_application'
end
If you have data that you want to be provided as a prop to every component (a common use-case is information about the authenticated user) you can use the inertia_share
controller method.
class EventsController < ApplicationController
# share synchronously
inertia_share app_name: env['app.name']
# share lazily, evaluated at render time
inertia_share do
if logged_in?
{
user: logged_in_user,
}
end
end
# share lazily alternate syntax
inertia_share user_count: lambda { User.count }
end
By default, Inertia will shallow merge data defined in an action with the shared data. You might want a deep merge. Imagine using shared data to represent defaults you'll override sometimes.
class ApplicationController
inertia_share do
{ basketball_data: { points: 50, rebounds: 100 } }
end
end
Let's say we want a particular action to change only part of that data structure. The renderer accepts a deep_merge
option:
class CrazyScorersController < ApplicationController
def index
render inertia: 'CrazyScorersComponent',
props: { basketball_data: { points: 100 } },
deep_merge: true
end
end
# The renderer will send this to the frontend:
{
basketball_data: {
points: 100,
rebounds: 100,
}
}
Deep merging can be configured using the deep_merge_shared_data
configuration option.
If deep merging is enabled, you can still opt-out within the action:
class CrazyScorersController < ApplicationController
inertia_config(deep_merge_shared_data: true)
inertia_share do
{
basketball_data: {
points: 50,
rebounds: 10,
}
}
end
def index
render inertia: 'CrazyScorersComponent',
props: { basketball_data: { points: 100 } },
deep_merge: false
end
end
# `deep_merge: false` overrides the default:
{
basketball_data: {
points: 100,
}
}
On the front end, Inertia supports the concept of "partial reloads" where only the props requested are returned by the server. Sometimes, you may want to use this flow to avoid processing a particularly slow prop on the intial load. In this case, you can use Lazy props. Lazy props aren't evaluated unless they're specifically requested by name in a partial reload.
inertia_share some_data: InertiaRails.lazy(lambda { some_very_slow_method })
# Using a Ruby block syntax
inertia_share some_data: InertiaRails.lazy { some_very_slow_method }
If you don't need a controller to handle a static component, you can route directly to a component with the inertia route helper
inertia 'about' => 'AboutComponent'
Enable SSR via the configuration options for ssr_enabled
and ssr_url
.
When using SSR, don't forget to add <%= inertia_ssr_head %>
to the <head>
of your layout (i.e. application.html.erb
).
Inertia Rails can be configured globally or in a specific controller (and subclasses).
If using global configuration, we recommend you place the code inside an initializer:
# config/initializers/inertia.rb
InertiaRails.configure do |config|
# Example: force a full-reload if the deployed assets change.
config.version = ViteRuby.digest
end
The default configuration can be found here.
Use inertia_config
in your controllers to override global settings:
class EventsController < ApplicationController
inertia_config(
version: "events-#{InertiaRails.configuration.version}",
ssr_enabled: -> { action_name == "index" },
)
end
This allows Inertia to detect if the app running in the client is oudated, forcing a full page visit instead of an XHR visit on the next request.
See assets versioning.
Default: nil
When enabled, props will be deep merged with shared data, combining hashes with the same keys instead of replacing them.
Default: false
Overrides Rails default rendering behavior to render using Inertia by default.
Default: false
Whether to use a JavaScript server to pre-render your JavaScript pages, allowing your visitors to receive fully rendered HTML when they first visit your application.
Requires a JS server to be available at ssr_url
. Example
Default: false
The URL of the JS server that will pre-render the app using the specified component and props.
Default: "http://localhost:13714"
If you're using Rspec, Inertia Rails comes with some nice test helpers to make things simple.
To use these helpers, just add the following require statement to your spec/rails_helper.rb
require 'inertia_rails/rspec'
And in any test you want to use the inertia helpers, add the inertia flag to the describe block
RSpec.describe EventController, type: :request do
describe '#index', inertia: true do
# ...
end
end
RSpec.describe EventController, type: :request do
describe '#index', inertia: true do
# check the component
expect_inertia.to render_component 'Event/Index'
# access the component name
expect(inertia.component).to eq 'TestComponent'
# props (including shared props)
expect_inertia.to have_exact_props({name: 'Brandon', sport: 'hockey'})
expect_inertia.to include_props({sport: 'hockey'})
# access props
expect(inertia.props[:name]).to eq 'Brandon'
# view data
expect_inertia.to have_exact_view_data({name: 'Brian', sport: 'basketball'})
expect_inertia.to include_view_data({sport: 'basketball'})
# access view data
expect(inertia.view_data[:name]).to eq 'Brian'
end
end
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