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I'm using Rails 3.2.13 and the Rails Asset Pipeline. I want to use the Asset Pipeline so I can use SASS and CoffeeScript and ERB for my assets and have the Pipeline automatically compile them, so I cannot turn off the pipeline in development. I am not precompiling assets in development ever and there is not even a public/assets/ directory.

However, when I make changes to an included file, such as to a _partial.html.erb file that is included (rendered) in a layout.html.erb file, without changing the file doing the including itself (in this example layout.html.erb), Sprockets doesn't detect the change and invalidate the cache, so I keep getting the same stale file. When I'm doing this in active development, I want to disable any caching of assets so I can get the changes on every request but I cannot figure out how to do this. I have set all of the following in my development.rb:

config.action_controller.perform_caching = false config.action_dispatch.rack_cache = nil config.middleware.delete Rack::Cache config.assets.debug = true config.assets.compress = false config.cache_classes = false 

Still, even with this, files show up under tmp/cache/assets/ and tmp/cache/sass/ and changes are not available on future requests. Right now I have to manually delete those directories every time I want to see a change.

Unfortunately, the entire contents of the How Caching Works section of the RoR Guide for the Asset Pipeline is:

Sprockets uses the default Rails cache store to cache assets in development and production.

TODO: Add more about changing the default store.

So, how can I get Sprockets to compile assets on demand but not cache the results?

3 Answers 3

30

Here's the magic incantation:

config.assets.cache_store = :null_store # Disables the Asset cache config.sass.cache = false # Disable the SASS compiler cache 

The asset pipeline has it's own instance of a cache and setting config.assets.cache = false does nothing, so you have to set its cache to be the null_store to disable it.

Even then, the SASS compiler has it's own cache, and if you need to disable it, you have to disable it separately.

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5 Comments

This was absolutely killing me having to turn on & off file store cache when trying to test action caching logic. (without the actual caching part). Thank You.
This works for the first request on Rails 4 and then subsequent are cached in tmp/cache (off of Rails root, not /tmp). If you clear tmp/cache, it gets rebuilt. I wonder how to disable tmp/cache completely?
@Cymen, caching works differently in Rails 4. Post a new question if you want to get help with that.
@OldPro Good point -- I was figuring most people end up here due to Google but might as well as so I did: stackoverflow.com/questions/22979839/…
it really seems to be a bug, have you reported an issue?
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I created the following gist (https://gist.github.com/metaskills/9028312) that does just this and found it is the only way that works for me.

# In config/initializers/sprockets.rb require 'sprockets' require 'sprockets/server' Sprockets::Server.class_eval do private def headers_with_rails_env_check(*args) headers_without_rails_env_check(*args).tap do |headers| if Rails.env.development? headers["Cache-Control"] = "no-cache" headers.delete "Last-Modified" headers.delete "ETag" end end end alias_method_chain :headers, :rails_env_check end 

1 Comment

cache problem same here too, worked with a browser cache reset
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The accepted answer is not doing it correctly and it degrades the performance in development by disabling cache totally. Answering your original question, you want changes to referenced files to invalidate the asset cache even if not included directly.

The solution is by simply declaring such dependency such that sprockets knows that the cache should be invalidated:

# layout.html.erb <% depend_on Rails.root.join('app').join('views').join('_partial.html.erb') %> # replace the above with the correct path, could also be relative but didn't try 

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