Do some browser detection with Ruby. Includes ActionController integration.
gem install browser
require "rubygems"
require "browser"
browser = Browser.new(:ua => "some string", :accept_language => "en-us")
browser.name # readable browser name
browser.version # major version number
browser.full_version
browser.safari?
browser.opera?
browser.chrome?
browser.chrome_os?
browser.mobile?
browser.tablet?
browser.console?
browser.firefox?
browser.ie?
browser.ie6? # this goes up to 11
browser.modern? # Webkit, Firefox 17+, IE 9+ and Opera 12+
browser.platform # return :mac, :windows, :linux or :other
browser.mac?
browser.windows?
browser.windows_x64?
browser.linux?
browser.blackberry?
browser.bot?
browser.search_engine?
browser.phantom_js?
browser.quicktime?
browser.core_media?
browser.silk?
browser.known? # has the browser been successfully detected?
browser.meta # an array with several attributes
browser.to_s # the meta info joined by space
See the tests and implementation for more examples.
The current rules that define a modern browser are pretty loose:
- Webkit
- IE9+
- Firefox 17+
- Firefox Tablet 14+
- Opera 12+
You can define your own rules. A rule must be a proc/lambda or any object that implements the method === and accepts the browser object. To redefine all rules, clear the existing rules before adding your own.
# Only Chrome Canary is considered modern.
Browser.modern_rules.clear
Browser.modern_rules << -> b { b.chrome? && b.version >= '37' }
Just add it to the Gemfile.
gem "browser"
This adds a helper method called browser
, that inspects your current user agent.
<% if browser.ie6? %>
<p class="disclaimer">You're running an older IE version. Please update it!</p>
<% end %>
Browser used to detect empty user agents as bots, but this behaviour has changed. If you want to bring this detection back, you can activate it through the following call:
Browser::Bots.detect_empty_ua!
You can use the Browser::Middleware
to redirect user agents.
use Browser::Middleware do
redirect_to "/upgrade" unless browser.modern?
end
If you're using Rails, you can use the route helper methods. Just add something like the following to a initializer file (config/initializers/browser.rb
).
Rails.configuration.middleware.use Browser::Middleware do
redirect_to upgrade_path unless browser.modern?
end
Notice that you can have multiple conditionals.
Rails.configuration.middleware.use Browser::Middleware do
next if browser.search_engine?
redirect_to upgrade_path(browser: "oldie") if browser.ie? && !browser.modern?
redirect_to upgrade_path(browser: "oldfx") if browser.firefox? && !browser.modern?
end
If you need acccess to the Rack::Request
object (e.g. to exclude a path), you can do so with request
.
Rails.configuration.middleware.use Browser::Middleware do
redirect_to upgrade_path unless browser.modern? || request.env['PATH_INFO'] == '/exclude_me'
end
- Nando Vieira - http://nandovieira.com.br
(The MIT License)
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