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Showing posts from May, 2012

Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory

HTML to PDF conversion is very easy in rails and pdfkit will be useful in this case, wkhtmltopdf tool will be supporting tool so you can easily convert an html to pdf.  In my experience I used the following steps: gem install pdfkit -v 0.5.0 gem install wkhtmltopdf -v 0.1.2 gem install wkhtmltopdf-binary Some times this sequence will not work, so I use the following as per the instruction from  https://github.com/pdfkit/pdfkit/wiki/Installing-WKHTMLTOPDF Be careful to download the appropriate wkhtmltopdf tar ball, it depends on your os architecture, like i386 or 64 wget http://wkhtmltopdf.googlecode.com/files/wkhtmltopdf-0.9.9-static-amd64.tar.bz2 tar xvjf wkhtmltopdf-0.9.9-static-amd64.tar.bz2 mv wkhtmltopdf-amd64 /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf chmod +x /usr/local/bin/wkhtmltopdf Try to convert html to pdf after restarting your web servers.  If you get any error like: Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory then I have a straightforward method and

Invalid json result

In rails some times we are getting invalid json outputs say for example, as per the json standard, both the attributes and its values should be enclosed with double quotes (") but in some of the ruby patches has issues with that. If you are facing such issues then this post will be useful: Changes what we have to make in the file 'core.rb' which is located at: LIB_PATH/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/activesupport-1.4.0/lib/active_support/json/encoders in your rails server, the LIB PATH is /usr/local/lib required function is "encoder"  line# 52 New Code ======== define_encoder Hash do |hash|         returning result = '{' do           result << hash.map do |key, value|             key = ActiveSupport::JSON::Variable.new(key.to_s) if               ActiveSupport::JSON.can_unquote_identifier?(key)             "\"#{key.to_json}\": #{value.to_json}"                                            #=> This is line w

openssl load error

If you found any payment issue due to openssl (like require 'openssl' fails) then you have to be very careful. Exact error might be: LoadError: no such file to load -- openssl This error occurred because you have installed your ruby without openssl support. So first install openssl then install ruby with openssl support.  If you still getting the error then you can follow the steps: 1. Check whether the openssl package is installed, if not please use 'yum install openssl' 2. Still the issue not solved then install openssl-dev, also make sure  the library 'libruby' is installed  3. Still the issue not solved then check the ruby lib has the directory called  'openssl'  Note: In my server, the ruby lib is located at: /usr/local/lib/ruby/1.8/, better you can search the exact ruby's lib through 'whereis ruby' command 4. If openssl directory is not in your ruby lib then possibly you might get the openssl load error, then

Going to convert your existing Rails 1.2.1 apps to 3.2.3 ? then this post may help you!!!

Rails 1.2.1 => Rails 3.2.3 Actually, we started a product on 2007 with rails 1.2.1, at that time we were busy in the core development and we sincerely forgot to look about the rails updates!! in-between 3-4 years rails jumped to 3.x.x then only we realized that we are doing some funny things so started to review about 3.x.x  Almost we are out-dated, but still it is not too far .. We realized that this is right time to convert our existing 1.2.1 apps to 3.2.3 so first we have started to find the practical difficulties and possibilities and learned the followings. The following is the major things for us, you guys may meet some more, but any way it will be helpful for someone.  Lets checkout one by one. 1. RVM will helps us to manage different ruby and gems version in a same system 2. All required gems should be maintained through Gemfile, it will be useful when the time of deployment 3. You have to understand, learn and change the file route.rb 4. .rhtml is no longer in use, t