Ruby Reports (Ruport) is an extensible reporting system.
It aims to be as lightweight as possible while still providing core support for data aggregation and manipulation as well as multi-format rendering of reports.
Ruport provides tools for using a number of data sources, including CSV files, ActiveRecord models, and raw SQL connections via RubyDBI (through ruport-util).
Data manipulation is easy as there are standard structures that support record, table, and grouping operations. These all can be extended to implement custom behavior as needed.
For common tasks, Ruport provides formatters for CSV, HTML, PDF, and text- based reports. However, the real power lies in building custom report controllers and formatters. The base formatting libraries provide a number of helper functions that will let you build complex reports while maintaining a DRY and consistent interface.
To get a quick feel for what you can accomplish with Ruport, take a look at a few simple examples provided on our web site.
ruport.github.com/examples.html
Since Ruport’s core support is intentionally minimalistic, you may be looking for some higher level support for specific needs such as graphing, invoices, report mailing support, etc. For this, you may wish to take a look at the ruport-util package, which contains some generally useful tools and libraries to extend Ruport’s capabilities.
To install ruport via rubygems:
sudo gem install ruport
Check to see if it installed properly:
ruby -rubygems -e "require 'ruport'; puts Ruport::VERSION"
If you get an error, please let us know on our mailing list.
Ruport relies on PDF::Writer and FasterCSV for its formatting support. If you want to make use of textile helpers, you’ll also need RedCloth.
If you wish to use Ruport to report against a rails project, a camping project, or do standalone acts_as_reportable reports, you’ll need ActiveRecord and the acts_as_reportable gem.
If you want to use Ruport::Query for raw SQL support, you’ll need to install ruport-util, RubyDBI and whatever database drivers you might need.
Our developers have published a free-content book about all things Ruport, including complete coverage of acts_as_reportable and some of ruport-util’s features. This book serves as the definitive guide to Ruport, so all users should become acquainted with it:
http://ruportbook.com
The next best way to get help and make suggestions is the Ruport mailing list. This software is on the move, so the list is the most reliable way of getting up to date information.
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You can sign up and/or view the archives here: groups.google.com/group/ruby-reports
If you are looking to dig a little deeper, there are a couple more resources that may be helpful to you.
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The latest stable API documentation is available at: rubydoc.info/gems/ruport/frames
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Our issues tracker is at github.com/ruport/ruport/issues
If you’d like to contribute code to Ruport, please join our development mailing list, and let us know what you’d like to do!
groups.google.com/group/ruport-dev
The main Git repository is on GitHub: github.com/ruport/ruport
It also may be worthwhile to join this list if you plan on running edge versions of Ruport, as this is where we make announcements about major breakage in trunk.
We are very responsive to contributors, and review every patch we receive fairly quickly. Most contributors who successfully get a patch or two applied are given write access to the repositories and invited to join Ruport’s development team. Since we view every user as potential contributor, this approach works well for us.
So if you want to help out with Ruport, we’ll happy accept your efforts!