Created by Sean Cribbs, November 2007. Inspired by the original virtual_domain behavior.
Multi Site allows you to host multiple websites on a single Radiant installation.
This fork adds a flexible but robust way to scope model classes to the current site. It's just a framework - nothing is scoped by default - but very easy to apply. See under scoped resources below.
Fairly solid now and quite thoroughly tested. Should be a drop-in replacement for the standard multi_site. The interface is about to change, but the present one will still be supported.
I've just changed the site-finding logic so that Site.default is called in any circumstances. It makes life much easier in tests and console and should let me take out a lot of conditional code. It shouldn't affect normal use, but you know. Please let me know if anything goes wrong.
There are no absolute requirements but you will need to install our submenu extension since that has taken the job of showing the site-chooser above any site-scoped index page.
$ git submodule add git://github.com/spanner/radiant-multi-site-extension.git vendor/extensions/multi_site
$ rake radiant:extensions:multi_site:migrate
$ rake radiant:extensions:multi_site:update
This differs from the original in that it will create a default site if none exists, but this should happen invisibly.
This version of multi_site does cause failures in radiant's main tests, usually when a site is required but the tests don't supply it. I will probably add a 'lax mode' at some point that doesn't mind if no site is defined.
If you want to site-scope a model class (let's say you want your assets to be site-specific as well as your pages), all you have to do is add a line to the top of the class:
is_site_scoped
If you want the option to share some instances between sites (say you want some of your users to be confined to one site but a few admin users to see all of them):
is_site_scoped :shareable => true
The scoping takes effect at the ActiveRecord level - it wraps with_scope
round every call to find (actually, to find_every) and a few other methods. If an object is out of site scope it is as though it didn't exist. This usually means your controller and view code hardly need to change at all: they just see fewer objects. You can fine-tune the scoping by specifying the site_scope_condition
method in each scoped class.
If a site-scoped class includes any calls to validates_uniqueness_of
, those too will be scoped to the site. There's a hack there, though: the validations are defined with the model and saved as procs which causes all sorts of misery when you want to change them. Instead we've alias_chained the validates_uniqueness_of
method to apply scope from the start. This has to happen very early in the initialisation procedure, when we don't really have much configuration information, so the uniqueness validation scope is applied to every model with a site_id
column. I hope to find a better solution but it does work.
Please Note: a site_scoped
class must be watched by the UserActionObserver
in order to get the before_validation hook that sets the site id.
There is, or will soon be, more about this in the wiki and one day I'll get round to posting some proper documentation.
The scoped_admin extension uses this method to confine layouts, snippets and (some) users to sites. It only takes four lines of code and two partials.
We've also shrunk the paperclipped_multi_site extension to a one-liner.
Our reader extension - which handles the mechanics of site membership - is site scoped if this extension is present. It includes a useful fake_site_scope
class that drops a warning in the log if site-scoping is not possible but otherwise lets the extension work in a single-site installation.
Is one of the main goals. A couple of our clients are very security-conscious and we needed something in which there was no risk at all of the wrong person seeing a page. This will make more sense when I publish the reader-groups extension), which is next. If you see a loophole we'll be very glad to know of it.
Would be very welcome. Contact Will on will at spanner.org or drop something into lighthouse. Github messages also fine.
Each site has its own independent sitemap/page-tree and these attributes:
- name: Whatever you want to call the site
- domain: A Ruby regular expression (without the //) to match the request against
- base_domain: A canonical domain name for doing quicker matches and for generating absolute URLs against
- homepage_id: The numerical database ID of the root page (usually you can just leave this alone).
Included images are slightly modified from FamFamFam Silk Icons by Mark James: http://www.famfamfam.com/lab/icons/silk/
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Unpack/checkout/export the extension into vendor/extensions of your project.
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Run the extension migrations.
$ rake production db:migrate:extensions
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Run the extension update task.
$ rake production radiant:extensions:multi_site:update
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Restart your server
Multi Site allows you to customize routes within your other extensions. To restrict a route to a particular site, pass the site's name into the conditions hash:
map.resources :things, :conditions => { :site => 'My Site' }
You can also scope a route to multiple sites with an array:
map.resources :things, :conditions => { :site => ['My Site', 'Your Site'] }
Thanks to Digital Pulp, Inc. for funding the initial development of this extension as part of the Redken.com project.