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Using Rails for API-only Applications

In this guide you will learn:


What is an API Application?

Traditionally, when people said that they used Rails as an "API", they meant providing a programmatically accessible API alongside their web application. For example, GitHub provides an API that you can use from your own custom clients.

With the advent of client-side frameworks, more developers are using Rails to build a back-end that is shared between their web application and other native applications.

For example, Twitter uses its public API in its web application, which is built as a static site that consumes JSON resources.

Instead of using Rails to generate HTML that communicates with the server through forms and links, many developers are treating their web application as just an API client delivered as HTML with JavaScript that consumes a JSON API.

This guide covers building a Rails application that serves JSON resources to an API client, including client-side frameworks.

Why Use Rails for JSON APIs?

The first question a lot of people have when thinking about building a JSON API using Rails is: "isn't using Rails to spit out some JSON overkill? Shouldn't I just use something like Sinatra?".

For very simple APIs, this may be true. However, even in very HTML-heavy applications, most of an application's logic lives outside of the view layer.

The reason most people use Rails is that it provides a set of defaults that allows developers to get up and running quickly, without having to make a lot of trivial decisions.

Let's take a look at some of the things that Rails provides out of the box that are still applicable to API applications.

Handled at the middleware layer:

While you could obviously build these up in terms of existing Rack middleware, this list demonstrates that the default Rails middleware stack provides a lot of value, even if you're "just generating JSON".

Handled at the Action Pack layer:

Of course, the Rails boot process also glues together all registered components. For example, the Rails boot process is what uses your config/database.yml file when configuring Active Record.

The short version is: you may not have thought about which parts of Rails are still applicable even if you remove the view layer, but the answer turns out to be most of it.

The Basic Configuration

If you're building a Rails application that will be an API server first and foremost, you can start with a more limited subset of Rails and add in features as needed.

Creating a new application

You can generate a new api Rails app:

$ rails new my_api --api

This will do three main things for you:

Changing an existing application

If you want to take an existing application and make it an API one, read the following steps.

In config/application.rb add the following line at the top of the Application class definition:

config.api_only = true

In config/environments/development.rb, set config.debug_exception_response_format to configure the format used in responses when errors occur in development mode.

To render an HTML page with debugging information, use the value :default.

config.debug_exception_response_format = :default

To render debugging information preserving the response format, use the value :api.

config.debug_exception_response_format = :api

By default, config.debug_exception_response_format is set to :api, when config.api_only is set to true.

Finally, inside app/controllers/application_controller.rb, instead of:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
end

do:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::API
end

Choosing Middleware

An API application comes with the following middleware by default:

See the internal middleware section of the Rack guide for further information on them.

Other plugins, including Active Record, may add additional middleware. In general, these middleware are agnostic to the type of application you are building, and make sense in an API-only Rails application.

You can get a list of all middleware in your application via:

$ bin/rails middleware

Using the Cache Middleware

By default, Rails will add a middleware that provides a cache store based on the configuration of your application (memcache by default). This means that the built-in HTTP cache will rely on it.

For instance, using the stale? method:

def show
  @post = Post.find(params[:id])

  if stale?(last_modified: @post.updated_at)
    render json: @post
  end
end

The call to stale? will compare the If-Modified-Since header in the request with @post.updated_at. If the header is newer than the last modified, this action will return a "304 Not Modified" response. Otherwise, it will render the response and include a Last-Modified header in it.

Normally, this mechanism is used on a per-client basis. The cache middleware allows us to share this caching mechanism across clients. We can enable cross-client caching in the call to stale?:

def show
  @post = Post.find(params[:id])

  if stale?(last_modified: @post.updated_at, public: true)
    render json: @post
  end
end

This means that the cache middleware will store off the Last-Modified value for a URL in the Rails cache, and add an If-Modified-Since header to any subsequent inbound requests for the same URL.

Think of it as page caching using HTTP semantics.

Using Rack::Sendfile

When you use the send_file method inside a Rails controller, it sets the X-Sendfile header. Rack::Sendfile is responsible for actually sending the file.

If your front-end server supports accelerated file sending, Rack::Sendfile will offload the actual file sending work to the front-end server.

You can configure the name of the header that your front-end server uses for this purpose using config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header in the appropriate environment's configuration file.

You can learn more about how to use Rack::Sendfile with popular front-ends in the Rack::Sendfile documentation.

Here are some values for this header for some popular servers, once these servers are configured to support accelerated file sending:

# Apache and lighttpd
config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header = "X-Sendfile"

# Nginx
config.action_dispatch.x_sendfile_header = "X-Accel-Redirect"

Make sure to configure your server to support these options following the instructions in the Rack::Sendfile documentation.

Using ActionDispatch::Request

ActionDispatch::Request#params will take parameters from the client in the JSON format and make them available in your controller inside params.

To use this, your client will need to make a request with JSON-encoded parameters and specify the Content-Type as application/json.

Here's an example in jQuery:

jQuery.ajax({
  type: 'POST',
  url: '/people',
  dataType: 'json',
  contentType: 'application/json',
  data: JSON.stringify({ person: { firstName: "Yehuda", lastName: "Katz" } }),
  success: function(json) { }
});

::ActionDispatch::Request will see the Content-Type and your parameters will be:

{ :person => { :firstName => "Yehuda", :lastName => "Katz" } }

Using Session Middlewares

The following middlewares, used for session management, are excluded from API apps since they normally don't need sessions. If one of your API clients is a browser, you might want to add one of these back in:

The trick to adding these back in is that, by default, they are passed session_options when added (including the session key), so you can't just add a session_store.rb initializer, add use ActionDispatch::Session::CookieStore and have sessions functioning as usual. (To be clear: sessions may work, but your session options will be ignored - i.e the session key will default to _session_id)

Instead of the initializer, you'll have to set the relevant options somewhere before your middleware is built (like config/application.rb) and pass them to your preferred middleware, like this:

# This also configures session_options for use below
config.session_store :cookie_store, key: '_interslice_session'

# Required for all session management (regardless of session_store)
config.middleware.use ActionDispatch::Cookies

config.middleware.use config.session_store, config.session_options

Other Middleware

Rails ships with a number of other middleware that you might want to use in an API application, especially if one of your API clients is the browser:

Any of these middleware can be added via:

config.middleware.use Rack::MethodOverride

Removing Middleware

If you don't want to use a middleware that is included by default in the API-only middleware set, you can remove it with:

config.middleware.delete ::Rack::Sendfile

Keep in mind that removing these middlewares will remove support for certain features in Action Controller.

Choosing Controller Modules

An API application (using ::ActionController::API) comes with the following controller modules by default:

Other plugins may add additional modules. You can get a list of all modules included into ::ActionController::API in the rails console:

irb> ActionController::API.ancestors - ActionController::Metal.ancestors
=> [ActionController::API,
    ActiveRecord::Railties::ControllerRuntime,
    ActionDispatch::Routing::RouteSet::MountedHelpers,
    ActionController::ParamsWrapper,
    ... ,
    AbstractController::Rendering,
    ActionView::ViewPaths]

Adding Other Modules

All Action Controller modules know about their dependent modules, so you can feel free to include any modules into your controllers, and all dependencies will be included and set up as well.

Some common modules you might want to add:

The best place to add a module is in your ApplicationController, but you can also add modules to individual controllers.