FireFly is a simple URL shortener for personal (or not so personal) use.
Firefly 2.0 is a complete rewrite of the original Firefly URL shortener.
Some features that 2.0 will sport:
- Fully ruby 1.9 compatible.
- Easy to install and upgrade.
- Support for postgres, sqlite3 and mysql.
- Better documentation.
Among those features there are also some other significant changes:
- No longer a gem, just a plain Rack application.
If you're looking to have a working install of Firefly, use the latest 1.5.3 version.
The master
branch contains the next version, 2.0.0-pre, of Firefly and is
not suitable for any kind of serious use at this time.
Installation should be as easy as:
git clone https://github.com/ariejan/firefly.git mydomain
cd mydomain
Then, put the configuration in place:
cp config/database.example.yml config/database.yml
cp config/firefly.example.yml config/firefly.yml
Before you edit these, open up Gemfile
and comment out the database
gems you don't need. So, if you want to use Postgres, comment out
the mysql2
and sqlite3
gems, like so:
gem 'pg'
# gem 'mysql2'
# gem 'sqlite3'
Next, open up config/database.yml
and config/firefly.yml
and configure
everything according to your needs.
Run bundle install
to install all gem dependencies.
Just create a new database:
psql -c 'create database firefly_test;'
Make sure to create a database that uses the utf8
character set and
utf8_bin
collation. This is to ensure MySQL can lookup case sensitive strings.
mysql -e 'create database firefly_test character set utf8 collate utf8_bin;'
Nothing special to do here.
rake db:migrate
rackup
The entire spec suite is run against the latest ruby-1.9.2 and ruby-1.9.3. These are the officially supported rubies.
The spec suite is also run against Rubinius in 1.9-mode and ruby-head. Although I strife to get these builds passing, they are not officially supported by me at this time.
jruby, ruby-1.8.x and others are currently not supported.
Heroku is a popular deploy target and is fully supported by Firefly. There's
nothing holding you back from deploying to Heroku, except that the
config/database.yml
and config/firefly.yml
files a currently ignored by git.
Edit, .gitignore
and remove the entries for these files, commit your changes
and push to Heroku.
I develop against Postgres and have Travis run the specs against MySQL and sqlite3.
To get your own environment setup, follow the installation guide, with the following twist:
- Don't comment out the database gems. If you can't or don't want to install database specific gems, feel free to comment them out, but don't ever commit these changes
Then you should be able to run the spec suite like so:
RACK_ENV=test rake
Firefly was started in 2009 as side project to dive into the world of URL shorteners. I've been using Firefly since then for my own domain and many others have joined me.
After writing the last 1.5.x release in 2011 I kind of forgot about Firefly. Nearing the end of 2012 I picked it up again and I'm now in the process of dusting of the cobwebs and giving Firefly a nice make-over.
If you encounter an issue with Firefly, please feel free to create an issue in Github Issues.
In case you want to contribute, fork the project, create a feature or bugfix branch and sen in a pull request.
I prefer pull requests with only added failing specs over a pull request with working code and no specs.
Author: Ariejan de Vroom URL: http://ariejan.net
See LICENSE for more information.