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apache - Capistrano to deploy rails application - how to handle long migrations?

So I am using Capistrano to deploy a rails application to my production server (apache+passenger) and at the moment deployment usually goes along the lines:

$cap deploy
$cap deploy:migrations

It got me wondering, let's say my db:migrations took a long time to execute on the production server (a big refactor of the db schema) - in this case what is best practice with Capistrano? What happens if users are connected to my application at the time of deployment? Should I gracefully send users to a static placeholder page while the database is being updated? Does Capistrano handle this automagically? Do I need to code up a recipe to help with this? Or does the internal mechanisms of rails / passenger mean that I don't have to worry at all about this particular case?

Thanks.

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You should put up a maintenance page if the application is not going to be available for a while. I use this Capistrano task:

namespace :deploy do
  namespace :web do
    desc <<-DESC
      Present a maintenance page to visitors. Disables your application's web 
      interface by writing a "maintenance.html" file to each web server. The 
      servers must be configured to detect the presence of this file, and if 
      it is present, always display it instead of performing the request.

      By default, the maintenance page will just say the site is down for 
      "maintenance", and will be back "shortly", but you can customize the 
      page by specifying the REASON and UNTIL environment variables:

        $ cap deploy:web:disable \
              REASON="a hardware upgrade" \
              UNTIL="12pm Central Time"

      Further customization will require that you write your own task.
    DESC
    task :disable, :roles => :web do
      require 'erb'
      on_rollback { run "rm #{shared_path}/system/maintenance.html" }

      reason = ENV['REASON']
      deadline = ENV['UNTIL']      
      template = File.read('app/views/admin/maintenance.html.erb')
      page = ERB.new(template).result(binding)

      put page, "#{shared_path}/system/maintenance.html", :mode => 0644
    end
  end
end

The app/views/admin/maintenance.html.erb file should contain:

<p>We’re currently offline for <%= reason ? reason : 'maintenance' %> as of <%= Time.now.utc.strftime('%H:%M %Z') %>.</p>
<p>Sorry for the inconvenience. We’ll be back <%= deadline ? "by #{deadline}" : 'shortly' %>.</p>

The final step is to configure the Apache virtual host with some directives to look for the maintenance.html file and redirect all requests to it if it's present:

<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
  RewriteEngine On

  # Redirect all requests to the maintenance page if present
  RewriteCond %{REQUEST_URI} !.(css|gif|jpg|png)$
  RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}/system/maintenance.html -f
  RewriteCond %{SCRIPT_FILENAME} !maintenance.html
  RewriteRule ^.*$ /system/maintenance.html [L]
</IfModule>

To put the application into maintenance mode, run cap deploy:web:disable and to make it live again do cap deploy:web:enable.


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