When developing a website you are required for a somewhat tedious work of handling dynamically uploaded content. The constantly added content includes images uploaded by your users and content administrator, user documents and other files.

As a developer, you'll be responsible for adding integration of attachments to your application's model and taking care of the upload, normalization, storage, transformation and delivery of such assets.

Over time, we've run into a lot of attachment management libraries for many of the web development frameworks available. For Ruby on Rails alone there are CarrierWave, Paperclip, Dragonfly, attachment_fu and quite a few others.

Ruby GEM includes a plugin that seamlessly integrate with CarrierWave for managing uploads and image transformations in the cloud. We've covered this in a previous While Cloudinary streamlines all your image management needs and takes care of uploads, storage, transformations, manipulations and delivery, you still need to integrate it with your application's model. To simplify the integration, Cloudinary offers many client libraries for all major web dev platforms and programming languages. For example, Cloudinary'sincludes a plugin that seamlessly integrate withfor managing uploads and image transformations in the cloud. We've covered this in a previous blog post

Milovan Zogovic and it does an amazing job in simplifying attachment management in your application's model. Today, we wanted to tell you about a new attachment management library for Ruby on Rails - Attachinary . Attachinary was developed byand it does an amazing job in simplifying attachment management in your application's model.

We've tried Attachinary, really liked it and wanted to share our experience working with it.

How is Attachinary different?

There are so many other attachment management libraries, why do we need another one?

Well, here are a few reasons:

Attachinary offers non-intrusive integration with ActiveRecord and Mongoid model. You no longer need to maintain DB columns in your model entities for referencing uploaded images.

With attachinary it's very easy to switch between a single image and multiple images for a model entity.

Attachinary allows for simple integration through Rails 3.2's modern Asset Pipeline.

Attachinary uses Cloudinary for uploading files to the cloud, transforming images and delivering files through a fast CDN. No need to install any image manipulation software.

Attachinary has built-in integration with Cloudinary's jQuery-based direct upload from the browser. Progress indication and image preview included.

Attachinary is extremely simple to use and requires minimal changes to your existing code base.

How is Attachinary used?

After a very quick Cloudinary & Attachinary GEM installation and setup , you can add any attachment attribute to your model class. The following code shows a User model entity:

Copy to clipboard class User < ActiveRecord :: Base attr_accessible :name has_attachment :avatar has_attachments :photos , :maximum => 3 end

The 'has_attachment' and 'has_attachments' methods were used to define a User that can have a single 'avatar' and up to 3 'photo' attachments. That's it, no additional migrations or code changes are required.

Uploading assets to Cloudinary is also very simple with Attachinary. The following HAML view code shows how to create an upload form. The 'attachinary_file_field_tag' view helper method is responsible for all the magic. When this form is submitted, all images will be automatically uploaded to the cloud directly from your website visitor's browser. Multiple photos can be uploaded from this same form and the identifiers of the uploaded images will be automatically stored in your model.

Copy to clipboard = form_for( @user ) do |user_form| = user_form.text_field( :name ) = attachinary_file_field_tag ' user[avatar] ' , @user , :avatar = attachinary_file_field_tag ' user[photos] ' , @user , :photos = user_form.submit( " Save " )

Model management in your controller is exactly the same as always:

Copy to clipboard def create @user = User .new(params[ :user ]) @user .save! end

You can display uploaded images, generate thumbnails and apply image transformations by using Cloudinary's cl_image_tag . Here's an example of a view code that displays a 80x100 face detection based thumbnail of the user's avatar and a 70x50 rounded corner version of all uploaded photos.

Copy to clipboard - if user.avatar.present? = cl_image_tag(user.avatar.path, :width => 80 , :height => 100 , :crop => :thumb , :gravity => :face ) - user.photos.each do |photo| = cl_image_tag(photo.path, :size => ' 70x50 ' , :crop => :fill , :radius => 20 )

Using attachinary allows you to dynamically apply any image transformation supported by Cloudinary . All transformed images are generated on-the-fly in the cloud and are then cached and delivered through a fast CDN.

Last but not least - Attachinary also supports non-image raw files.

Summary

We hope that with this quick introduction, we've managed to pique your interest about Attachinary. Together with Cloudinary, Attachinary is really easy to use and also very powerful. Attaching images to your Rails model has never been easier.

For more details, setup instructions and usage examples, check out Attachinary's page at GitHub

If you are a Rails developer, you should definitely give it a try.