ActiveSeo
Optimize ActiveRecord models with support for SEO, Twitter and Open Graph meta.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'active_seo'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install active_seo
Then run the generator that will create a migration for the SeoMetum model and an initializer:
$ rails g active_seo:install
And finally run the migrations:
$ rails db:migrate
Usage
To add SEO meta support to an ActiveRecord model include the ActiveSeo::Meta Concern or use the has_seo class method:
class Page < ApplicationRecord
# Using concern
include ActiveSeo::Meta
# Or using `has_seo` class method
has_seo
end
SeoMetum's attributes will be automatically delegated by your model with the seo prefix and you can use them in forms:
<%= form_for @page do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :seo_title %>
<%= f.text_area :seo_description %>
<%= f.text_area :seo_keywords %>
<%= f.check_box :seo_noindex %>
<%= f.check_box :seo_nofollow %>
<% end %>
To get a SEO attribute:
@page.seo_title
To get all SEO attributes:
@page.
Configuration
The install generator will create an initializer:
ActiveSeo.setup do |config|
# config.title_limit = 70
# config.description_limit = 160
# config.keywords_limit = 255
# config.keywords_separator = ', '
# config.title_fallback = true
# config.description_fallback = true
# config.generate_keywords = true
# config.opengraph_setup do |og|
# og.type = 'website'
# og.site_name = 'Site Name'
# end
# config.twitter_setup do |tw|
# tw.card = 'summary'
# tw.site = '@site'
# tw.creator = '@author'
# end
end
You can set global defaults for attribute validations, automatic meta generation, OpenGraph and Twitter meta.
Settings title_fallback and description_fallback can be a Symbol or an Array of symbols that reference a model attribute/method which will be used to autogenerate the title and description attributes. When using an Array the first attribute that returns a value will be used.
This behavior can also be configured on a model level:
class Page < ApplicationRecord
# Using concern
include ActiveSeo::Meta
# With `seo_setup` method
seo_setup title_fallback: :name, description_fallback: [:content, :excerpt]
# Or using `has_seo` class method
has_seo title_fallback: :name, description_fallback: [:content, :excerpt]
end
OpenGraph and Twitter
If you want to define non-global OpenGraph and Twitter configurations you can create a custom meta contextualizer. ActiveSeo will look for a class defined in the model:
class Page < ApplicationRecord
# Using concern
include ActiveSeo::Meta
# With `seo_contextualizer` method
seo_contextualizer 'CustomContextualizer'
# Or using `has_seo` class method
has_seo contextualizer: 'CustomContextualizer'
end
Or for a class located in app/contextualizers with a name like ModelContextualizer.
class PageContextualizer < ActiveSeo::Contextualizer
# Using a proc
:image, -> obj { { _: obj.image, width: obj.image_width } }
# Using a method defined in the contextualizer
:video, :video_url
# Using an attribute from the record
:description, :seo_description
# Using a string
:card, 'app'
# Use `record` to get record attributes
def video_url
record.video_url
end
end
Inside the contextualizer you can define values using a Proc which gives you access to the record, a Symbol which will look for an attibute or method first inside the contextualizer and then in the model, or a String for a static value.
Printing SEO meta
This gem does not provide helpers to output the meta, but was designed to provide a hash containing all the attributes the way the Meta Tags gem requires them.
So, if you're using Meta Tags you can do the following:
<%= display_meta_tags(@page.seo_meta) %>
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test 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.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/hardpixel/active-seo.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.