I'm working with an initializer that does some monkey patching on app start by including some app concerns into a third party lib. Basically:
# config/initializers/my_initializer.rb
class SomeExternalLib
include MyConcern1
include MyConcern2
end
This works fine in Rails 5.2.3, but I got the following deprecation message when upgrading to Rails 6:
DEPRECATION WARNING: Initialization autoloaded the constants MyConcern1, and MyConcern2.
Being able to do this is deprecated. Autoloading during initialization is going to be an error condition in future versions of Rails.
Reloading does not reboot the application, and therefore code executed during initialization does not run again. So, if you reload ApplicationHelper, for example, the expected changes won't be reflected in that stale Module object.
These autoloaded constants have been unloaded.
Please, check the "Autoloading and Reloading Constants" guide for solutions. (called from at /Users/myuser/code/myapp/config/environment.rb:7)
My concerns are in app/controllers/concerns/. After some investigation, I figured out that that path wasn't being autoloaded, but I can't figure out how to make Zeitwerk—Rails 6's new autoloader—load this dynamically. I tried following the pattern for STI autoloading described here, but no luck. Any idea how to address this deprecation warning?
As described by @Glyoko's answer, using require
on dependencies prevents autoloading in initializers. However, doing so leads to problems during reloading as @Puhlze mentioned in his comment.
I stumbled across an alternate approach that utilizes Rails.configuration.to_prepare
in this post.
An example would be:
# config/initializers/my_initializer.rb
Rails.configuration.to_prepare do
class SomeExternalLib
include MyConcern1
include MyConcern2
end
end
Note that this runs before every request in development but only once before eager loading in production.
Edit: it appears to also work with reloading.
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