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# RakeDashboard

Does your application's deployment environment include shell access? Does it include ruby? No? RakeDashboard might be for you too!

Without a command line with ruby, it is hard to use rake. You may already have a lot of important functionality invested in your rake tasks. That makes sense, Rails ships a lot of great rake tasks.

RakeDashboard lets you run your rake tasks from a browser! Now you can throw your Rails apps over the fence as a warfile into a system you have no real permissions to use, and still:

* update your database schema
* seed your database
* run your test suites

## Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

```ruby
gem 'rake_dashboard'
```

And then execute:

    $ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

    $ gem install rake_dashboard

## Usage

RakeDashboard adds a route ```/rake``` that'll list your rake tasks for one click execution.

## Development

After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies. Then, run `bin/console` for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`. To release a new version, update the version number in `version.rb`, and then run `bundle exec rake release` to create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the `.gem` file to [rubygems.org](https://rubygems.org).

## Contributing

1. Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/rake_dashboard/fork )
2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`)
4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
5. Create a new Pull Request

Version data entries

1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
rake_dashboard-0.0.0 README.md