Documentation for: v2.0.0 v2.1.0 v2.1.1 v2.1.2 v2.1.3

Web Console Build Status

Web Console is a debugging tool for your Ruby on Rails applications.

Installation

Web Console is meant to work as a Rails plugin. To install it in your current application, add the following to your Gemfile.

group :development do
  gem 'web-console', '~> 2.0'
end

After you save the Gemfile changes, make sure to run bundle install and restart your server for the Web Console to kick in.

Runtime

Web Console uses John Mair's binding_of_caller to spawn a console in a specific binding. This comes at the price of limited Ruby runtime support.

CRuby

CRuby 1.9.2 and below is not supported.

JRuby

JRuby needs to run in interpreted mode. You can enable it by:

export JRUBY_OPTS=-J-Djruby.compile.mode=OFF

# If you run JRuby 1.7.12 and above, you can use:
export JRUBY_OPTS=--dev

An unstable version of binding_of_caller is needed as the latest stable one won't compile on JRuby. To install it, put the following in your application Gemfile:

group :development do
  gem 'binding_of_caller', '0.7.3.pre1'
end

Only JRuby 1.7, is supported (no JRuby 9K support at the moment).

Rubinius

Internal errors like ZeroDevisionError aren't caught.

Usage

The web console allows you to create an interactive Ruby session in your browser. Those sessions are launched automatically in case on an error, but they can also be launched manually in in any page.

For example, calling console in a view will display a console in the current page in the context of the view binding.

<% console %>

Calling console in a controller will result in a console in the context of the controller action:

class PostsController < ApplicationController
  def new
    console
    @post = Post.new
  end
end

Only one console invocation is allowed per request. If you happen to have multiple ones, a WebConsole::DoubleRenderError is raised.

Configuration

Web Console allows you to execute arbitrary code on the server, so you should be very careful, who you give access to.

config.web_console.whitelisted_ips

By default, only requests coming from IPv4 and IPv6 localhosts are allowed.

config.web_console.whitelisted_ips lets you control which IP's have access to the console.

You can whitelist single IP's or whole networks. Say you want to share your console with 192.168.0.100. You can do this:

class Application < Rails::Application
  config.web_console.whitelisted_ips = '192.168.0.100'
end

If you want to whitelist the whole private network, you can do:

Rails.application.configure do
  config.web_console.whitelisted_ips = '192.168.0.0/16'
end

Take a note that IPv4 and IPv6 localhosts are always allowed. This wasn't the case in 2.0.

config.web_console.whiny_requests

When a console cannot be shown for a given IP address or content type, a messages like the following is printed in the server logs:

Cannot render console from 192.168.1.133! Allowed networks: 127.0.0.0/127.255.255.255, ::1

If you don't wanna see this message anymore, set this option to false:

Rails.application.configure do
  config.web_console.whiny_requests = false
end

config.web_console.template_paths

If you wanna style the console yourself, you can place style.css at a directory pointed by config.web_console.template_paths:

Rails.application.configure do
  config.web_console.template_paths = 'app/views/web_console'
end

You may wanna check the templates folder at the source tree for the files you may override.

config.web_console.mount_point

Usually the middleware of Web Console is mounted at /__web_console. If you wanna change the path for some reasons, you can specify it by config.web_console.mount_point:

Rails.application.configure do
  config.web_console.mount_point = '/path/to/web_console'
end

FAQ

Where did /console go?

The remote terminal emulator was extracted in its own gem that is no longer bundled with Web Console.

If you miss this feature, check out rvt.

Why I constantly get unavailable session errors?

All of Web Console sessions are stored in memory. If you happen to run on a multi-process server (like Unicorn) you may get unavailable session errors while the server is still running. This is because a request may hit a different worker (process) that doesn't have the desired session in memory.

To avoid that, if you use such servers in development, configure them so they server requests only out of one process.

How to inspect local and instance variables?

The interactive console executes Ruby code. Invoking instance_variables and local_variables will give you what you want.

Why does console only appear on error pages but not when I call it?

This can be happening if you are using Rack::Deflater. Be sure that WebConsole::Middleware is used after Rack::Deflater. The easiest way to do this is to insert Rack::Deflater as early as possible

Rails.application.configure do
  config.middleware.insert(0, Rack::Deflater)
end

Why I'm getting an undefined method web_console?

Make sure you configuration lives in config/environments/development.rb.

Credits