Sha256: 02d5714e2b9e772a5da5c76d0e80dfdd5bfa14dc3f966e47a6e5b5a1f62ccdd9
Contents?: true
Size: 1.92 KB
Versions: 4
Compression:
Stored size: 1.92 KB
Contents
# <%= class_name.gsub(/(?<=[^A-Z])([A-Z])/, ' \1') %> [](https://circleci.com/gh/<%= repo %>) [](https://codecov.io/gh/<%= repo %>) <!-- Explain what your extension does. --> ## Installation Add <%= file_name %> to your Gemfile: ```ruby gem '<%= file_name %>' ``` Bundle your dependencies and run the installation generator: ```shell bin/rails generate <%= file_name %>:install ``` ## Usage <!-- Explain how to use your extension once it's been installed. --> ## Development ### Testing the extension First bundle your dependencies, then run `bin/rake`. `bin/rake` will default to building the dummy app if it does not exist, then it will run specs. The dummy app can be regenerated by using `bin/rake extension:test_app`. ```shell bin/rake ``` To run [Rubocop](https://github.com/bbatsov/rubocop) static code analysis run ```shell bundle exec rubocop ``` When testing your application's integration with this extension you may use its factories. You can load Solidus core factories along with this extension's factories using this statement: ```ruby SolidusDevSupport::TestingSupport::Factories.load_for(<%= class_name %>::Engine) ``` ### Running the sandbox To run this extension in a sandboxed Solidus application, you can run `bin/sandbox`. The path for the sandbox app is `./sandbox` and `bin/rails` will forward any Rails commands to `sandbox/bin/rails`. Here's an example: ``` $ bin/rails server => Booting Puma => Rails 6.0.2.1 application starting in development * Listening on tcp://127.0.0.1:3000 Use Ctrl-C to stop ``` ### Releasing new versions Please refer to the [dedicated page](https://github.com/solidusio/solidus/wiki/How-to-release-extensions) in the Solidus wiki. ## License Copyright (c) <%= Time.now.year %> <%= gemspec.authors.join ', ' %>, released under the New BSD License.
Version data entries
4 entries across 4 versions & 1 rubygems