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Ruby on Rails: Compress the complexity of modern web apps

Safer to_i coercion, custom to_fs formats, and more! This Week in Rails: May 16, 2026 This Week in Rails: May 8, 2026 This Week in Rails: May 1, 2026 Active Record gets better every week Great big Rails World 2026 update: CFP, Corporate Support tickets, workshops Query command for database queries and more Explicit query: and body: kwargs for integration tests and more! Speedup ActiveRecord::LogSubscriber#sql_color and more! This Week in Rails: March 27, 2026 Rails Versions 8.0.5 and 8.1.3 have been released! Rails Versions 7.2.3.1, 8.0.4.1, and 8.1.2.1 have been released! This Week in Rails: March 20, 2026 Validate URI scheme in Action Text and more This Week in Rails: March 6, 2026 Planning Center is the newest Rails Foundation Contributing member Action Text gets Markdown conversion, editor links in devcontainers, and more! BARRA seeks Rails developer Joe Agliozzo is looking for a Rails developer The rise of lighttpd as the alternative web server When longer is better and more is more Snowdevil: First e-tailer on Rails Natural selection for frameworks in Ruby vs Java Address book tutorial in Portuguese Becoming a better programmer with Rails 10 Things Every Java Programmer Should Know About Ruby Really Getting Started in Rails Off the Treadmill, Onto the Rails Rails 0.9.5: A world of fixes and tweaks Rich clients with Rails and XUL Pedrosa on Rails vs WebWork: 'Language DOES matter' 'Ruby on Rails is unbelievably good' Celebrating six months anniversary! Speeding up CGI access to Gem Rails CD Baby leaves PHP behind for Ruby on Rails "I think Ruby on Rails is way over hyped" Programmer needed for JSP to Rails conversion Beyond the 10,000th gem install of Rails 'That application is so stupid' Matz takes note of Ta-da and Rails Rails tutorial on O'Reilly's ONLamp Welcome Slashdotters! Ta-da goes international with UTF-8 Make your Ta-da list today Rails 0.9.4.1: Cleaning up the mess Rails 0.9.4: Caching, filters, SQLite3... An unusual high presence of Macs Having problems running tests under 1.8.2? It\'s all about the applications But what does Rails go web services with XML-RPC prototype Rails runs through XP Cincinnati RedHanded out-evangelizes the evangelizer Rails on Lighttpd with FastCGI Have a codefest and collect cash from RubyCentral Jamis Buck is working on Basecamp S5 Presents competes with SoapBX 3,000 people are doing 10,804 things... Using the Rails to impress potential employers Brian discovers the default logging goodness SoapBX: Presentations powered by S5, Textile, Rails Road Map: The rails leading to 1.0 Tracks: A Getting Things Done implementation Nicholas presents the Directors Rails 0.9.3: Optimistic locking, dynamic finders, 1.8.2 Ruby on the German Rails 43things in 5,204 lines of Ruby on Rails Watch for huge requests on default FCGI How the redesign of the website came to be Are you watching the health of your software? "Some amazing web apps appear on Ruby on Rails" Learning Ruby on Rails with 43things The Robot Co-op takes 43things.com live! Giving up on Java for lack of love Setting up EliteJournal on TextDrive without a vhost Celebrating 219 applied patches since 0.7 Escaping Java but not its thinking "Simple design that even my grandma can understand" Rails logo remixed by Olivier Hericord Rake 0.4.14 includes fix for Ruby 1.8.2 Splitting off the research patches Running rake tests with Ruby 1.8.2 Marten opens Epilog for Trac'ing Drew McLellan predicts Rails celebrates more than 10,000 downloads Variations on a railed theme Securing your Rails: Keep it secret, keep it safe Available for hire? Collaboa and EliteJournal joins the Trac Playing Active Records on MS SQLServer and DB2 Open sourcing the Rails logo Rails: Technology of the Year #1 Reacting to customer requests in real time Extracting missing content from wiki backups Ruby on Rails has its web presence overhauled 43 things makes The Seattle Times 5.gets David Heinemeier Hansson Ruby 1.8.2 finally sees the light of day Rails 0.9: Fast development, breakpoints, validations Rails 0.9.1: Small, but important bugfix for Action Pack
This Week in Rails 3.0
David Heinemeier Hansson · 2009-02-05 · via Ruby on Rails: Compress the complexity of modern web apps

Thursday, February 5, 2009
Posted by Mike Gunderloy

Now that Rails 2.3 has hit the release candidate phase, some of the development effort is turning to Rails 3.0. With that activity heating up, it’s time to start keeping you all informed as to happenings on the 3.0 version of the Rails source. I’ll still be posting separate “This Week in Edge Rails” information focused on Rails 2.3, so you can keep straight which changes are ready now and which still lie in the relatively distant future.

The Vision

The Rails 3 vision is based on the announcement that was made in December: we’re bringing in the key ideas from Merb to Rails, including:

  • A more modular Rails core, so you can run applications with less than the full Rails stack
  • Performance optimizations
  • Framework agnosticism with sensible defaults
  • A tested and documented API for extensions

Rails 3 promises to substantially advance the state of the art in Ruby web frameworks, while still providing migration paths from Rails 2.x and Merb 1.×.

The Source Code

The Rails 3.0 branch in the main Rails project on GitHub is the place to be to see what’s going on:


git clone git://github.com/rails/rails.git
git checkout 3-0-unstable

As the branch name might tell you, this is still a fairly experimental place to be: you probably don’t want to roll this out for production applications just yet. But it is tested code (and it’s using continuous integration to stay that way), and it already includes substantial changes from Rails 2.x thanks to the efforts of Yehuda Katz, Joshua Peek, and others. The changes so far are focused on cleaning up and improving Rails internals, rather than on adding new features.

Action Dispatch

Action Dispatch is a new Rails component which lives in Action Pack (along with Action Controller and Action View). Action Dispatch is responsible for all the processing involved with dispatching requests: request and response handling, HTTP status codes, file uploads, URL and parameter parsing, session storage, and so on.

Action View Reorganization

There are substantial changes in the Action View internals. The overall goal was to clean up a bunch of special cases and extra hooks that had built up over the years, and to leave all callers into Action View using a single unified entry point. The code cleanup has been coupled with some rearrangement of the Action View source to make it easier to find bits of functionality. This was a substantial effort; if you’re interested in a detailed look at the refactoring, you can read up on it at Yehuda’s blog

Callback Optimizations

A new method of handling callbacks removes the need for iterating through the callback list at runtime, and provides a substantial speed improvement in this area of the code. Though this is a micro-optimization that may not have much effect by itself, the hope is that by carefully optimizing as many hot spots as possible we can get a visible overall speedup in page creation and delivery – which, after all, is the point of a web framework.

What’s Next?

Obviously, there’s a long distance between where we are today and the Rails 3.0 vision. We’re fortunate to have an excellent team of core programmers devoting substantial time to making that journey. The interim goal is still to have a beta version of Rails 3.0 out in time for RailsConf in May. You can help in the same ways as with earlier versions of Rails: download the source, start testing it with your applications, and submit your own ideas and patches to the Rails Lighthouse. Rails has been a joint effort of thousands of developers over the years, and Rails 3.0 will be no different in that regard.