rails-reverse-proxy

Gives you the ability to reverse proxy within Rails.

Installation

You know the drill. In your Gemfile, have the line

gem 'rails-reverse-proxy'

Then (you guessed it!)

$ bundle

Usage

An example usage of this gem is hosting a WordPress site on a path within your Rails application, such as /blog. To do this, you'll need something like

class WordpressController < ApplicationController
  include ReverseProxy::Controller

  def index
    # Assuming the WordPress server is being hosted on port 8080
    reverse_proxy "http://localhost:8080" do |config|
      # We got a 404!
      config.on_missing do |code, response|
        redirect_to root_url and return
      end

      # There's also other callbacks:
      # - on_set_cookies
      # - on_connect
      # - on_response
      # - on_set_cookies
      # - on_success
      # - on_redirect
      # - on_missing
      # - on_error
      # - on_complete
    end
  end
end

Then in your routes.rb file, you should have something like

match 'blog/*path' => 'wordpress#index', via: [:get, :post, :put, :patch, :delete]

You can also pass options into reverse_proxy

reverse_proxy "http://localhost:8000", path: "custom-path", headers: { 'X-Foo' => "Bar" }

If you'd like to bypass SSL verification

reverse_proxy "http://localhost:8000", verify_ssl: false

If you'd like to customize the options passed into the HTTP session

reverse_proxy "http://localhost:8000", http: { read_timeout: 20, open_timeout: 100 }

Use this method to determine what version you're running

ReverseProxy.version

Feel free to open an issue!

Contributing

All pull requests will become first class citizens.

Thanks

Special thanks to our contributors!

Copyright (c) 2016-2017 James Hu. See LICENSE for further details.