Until Now.
Today, you can finally download the GlassFish-Rails preview release gem.
So what is this tasty little morsel? Well, it's a 2.9MB Ruby gem containing the GlassFish server and the Grizzly connector for JRuby on Rails. It installs a "glassfish_rails" script in JRuby's bin directory, and you're done.
Witness!
~ $ gem install glassfish-gem-10.0-SNAPSHOT.gem
Successfully installed GlassFish, version 10.0.0
~ $ glassfish_rails testapp
Sep 14, 2007 3:00:45 PM com.sun.enterprise.v3.services.impl.GrizzlyAdapter postConstruct
INFO: Listening on port 8080
Sep 14, 2007 3:00:46 PM com.sun.enterprise.v3.services.impl.DeploymentService postConstruct
INFO: Supported containers : phobos,php,web,jruby
Sep 14, 2007 3:00:46 PM com.sun.grizzly.standalone.StaticResourcesAdapter <init>
INFO: New Servicing page from: /Users/headius/testapp/public
/Users/headius/NetBeansProjects/jruby/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/actionmailer-1.3.3/lib/action_mailer.rb:50 warning: already initialized constant MAX_LINE_LEN
Sep 14, 2007 3:00:53 PM com.sun.enterprise.v3.server.AppServerStartup run
INFO: Glassfish v3 started in 9233 ms
That's all there is to it...you've got a production-ready server. Oh, did I mention you only have to run one instance? No more managing a dozen mongrel processes, ensuring they stay running, starting and stopping them all. One command, one process.
Of course this is a preview...we expect to see bug reports and find issues with it. For example, it currently deploys under a context rather than at the root of the server, so my app above would be available at http://localhost:8080/testapp instead of http://localhost:8080/. That's going to be fixed soon (and configurable) but for now you'll want to set the following in environment.rb:
ActionController::AbstractRequest.relative_url_root = "/<app name>/"
ActionController::CgiRequest.relative_url_root = "/<app name>/"
And of course, you're going to be running JRuby, so you'll need to take that into consideration. JRuby's general Rails performance still needs more tweaking and work to surpass Mongrel + Ruby, but out of the box you already get stellar static-file performance with the GlassFish gem...something like 2500req/s for the testapp index page on my system. The remaining JRuby performance is continuing to improve as well...we'll get there soon.
So! Give it a try, report bugs on the GlassFish issue tracker, and let us know on the GlassFish mailing lists what you'd like to see improved.
Mongrel...your days are numbered.