Merb

Merb was a model–view–controller web framework in Ruby, notable as a precursor to Rails 3. It brought increased focus on speed and modularity to Rails 3.[4][5] The name Merb is a contraction of "Mongrel" and "Erb".[6]

Merb: No code is faster than no code[1][2]
All you need… nil you don’t
Original author(s)Ezra Zygmuntowicz
Developer(s)Ezra Zygmuntowicz & Yehuda Katz
Final release
1.1.2[3] / June 17, 2010 (2010-06-17)
Repository
Written inRuby
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeWeb application framework
LicenseMIT License
Websitehttp://www.merbivore.com

Precursor to and merge with Rails 3

Merb began as a "clean-room" implementation[7] of the Rails controller stack, but grew to incorporate several ideas that deviated from Rails's spirit and methodology at the time, most notably component modularity, extensible API design, and vertical scalability. It was developed by Ezra Zygmuntowicz and Yehuda Katz. Most of these capabilities were added to Rails during the Rails 3/Merb merger.[8][9] Merb was first released at the 2008 RubyConf[10] and development has since stopped; Rails 3 therefore serves as both the successor to Rails 2 and the successor to Merb.

Differences from Ruby on Rails

Merb's design attempted to address several criticisms of Rails 2:

  • lack of component modularity (monolithic design)
  • lack of an extensible API
  • lack of vertical scalability

Modularity

Merb itself encompassed only the controller layer in MVC architecture, and used a suite of complementary, optional plugins together to assemble applications. The primary integration points were the web server interface, the model layer, the view layer, and controller extensions and add-ons. Merb's default application stack incorporated Datamapper for models, ERB for views, and Rack and Mongrel as the web server layer.[11][12]

Well-defined API

Before the Merb / Rails 3 merge, Rails lacked a well-defined, documented, public API for extensions and plug-ins, leading to issues when Rails changes broke monkey-patches performed by plug-ins. With the Rails 3 / Merb merge, Rails gained a defined public API with a test suite,[9] giving users and plugin developers a clearer, more stable API to build against, reducing plugin breakage from release to release.[8]

Performance and scalability

Some early versions of Rails received bad publicity for lack of performance, frequently due to developer confusion about ActiveRecord queries. David Heinemeier Hansson, the creator of Rails, stated that Merb re-wrote many core Rails pieces to be faster,[8] and incorporated those changes from Merb in the Rails 3 merge, promising users that "Rails 3 will get all the performance attention that the Merb guys are known for".[8]

References

  1. Zygmuntowicz, Ezra. "No Code is Faster Than No Code". Twitter. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  2. Grosenbach, Geoffrey. "Origin of, "No code is faster than no code."". Twitter. Ezra Zygmuntowicz. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  3. "Merb on GitHub". GitHub.
  4. Boone, Paul (18 Sep 2008). "Rails/Merb performance comparison (on mongrel, jruby, tomcat, glassfish)". mindbucket.com. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011.
  5. "Ruby on Rails 3.0 Release Notes". Ruby on Rails Guides. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  6. Zygmuntowicz, Ezra (18 Oct 2006). "ANN: Merb, Mongrel+Erb". osdir.com]. Archived from the original on 2009-12-31.
  7. Zygmuntowicz, Ezra (23 Dec 2008). "Merb *is* Rails".
  8. Hansson, David Heinemeier (23 Dec 2008). "Merb gets merged into Rails 3!". weblog.rubyonrails.org. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  9. Katz, Yehuda (23 Dec 2008). "Rails and Merb Merge". yehudakatz.com.
  10. Aimonetti, Matt (9 Nov 2008). "Merb 1.0 released". Merbist.
  11. "merb-core gem dependencies". 23 Mar 2010.
  12. "merb gem dependencies". 23 Mar 2010.
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