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Home/ Questions/Q 8184477
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T01:31:01+00:00 2026-06-07T01:31:01+00:00

I thought I’d come up with a slick way to extend ApplicationController in a

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I thought I’d come up with a slick way to extend ApplicationController in a Rails 3.x gem.

In my gem’s lib/my_namespace/my_controller.rb, I had:

class MyNamespace::MyController < ApplicationController

  before_filter :some_method
  after_filter :another_method

  def initialize
    # getting classname of the subclass to use for lookup of the associated model, etc.
    # and storing the model_class in an instance variable
    # ...
  end

  # define :some_method, :another_method, etc.
  # ...

private
  attr_accessor :subclass_defined_during_initialize # etc.

  # etc.
end

but when the Gem is loaded, app/controllers/application_controller.rb is not yet loaded, so it fails:

/path/to/rvm/gemset/gems/activesupport-3.2.6/lib/active_support/dependencies.rb:251:
in `require': cannot load such file -- my_gem_name/application_controller (LoadError)

As a workaround, I had defined ApplicationController in my gem’s lib/gem_namespace/application_controller.rb as:

class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
end

I assumed that even though I had defined it there, it would be redefined in my Rails 3 application’s app/controllers/application_controller.rb, such that both controllers in the application that extended ApplicationController and controllers that extended MyNamespace::MyController would directly or indirectly extend the ApplicationController defined in app/controllers/application_controller.rb.

However, we noticed that after loading the gem, controllers that extend ApplicationController were unable to access methods defined in app/controllers/application_controller.rb. Also, the ApplicationHelper (app/helpers/application_helper.rb) module was no longer being loaded by other helper modules.

How can I extend ApplicationController within the controller in my gem for the purpose of defining a before_filter and after_filter to and use initialize to access the class’s name to determine the associated model’s class that it could then store and use within its methods?

Update 2012/10/22:

Here’s what I came up with:

In lib/your_gem_name/railtie.rb:

module YourGemsModuleName
  class Railtie < Rails::Railtie
    initializer "your_gem_name.action_controller" do
    ActiveSupport.on_load(:action_controller) do
      puts "Extending #{self} with YourGemsModuleName::Controller"
      # ActionController::Base gets a method that allows controllers to include the new behavior
      include YourGemsModuleName::Controller # ActiveSupport::Concern
    end
  end
end

and in lib/your_gem_name/controller.rb:

module YourGemsModuleName
  module Controller
    extend ActiveSupport::Concern

    # note: don't specify included or ClassMethods if unused

    included do
      # anything you would want to do in every controller, for example: add a class attribute
      class_attribute :class_attribute_available_on_every_controller, instance_writer: false
    end

    module ClassMethods
      # notice: no self.method_name here, because this is being extended because ActiveSupport::Concern was extended
      def make_this_controller_fantastic
        before_filter :some_instance_method_available_on_every_controller # to be available on every controller
        after_filter :another_instance_method_available_on_every_controller # to be available on every controller
        include FantasticStuff
      end
    end

    # instance methods to go on every controller go here
    def some_instance_method_available_on_every_controller
      puts "a method available on every controller!"
    end

    def another_instance_method_available_on_every_controller
      puts "another method available on every controller!"
    end

    module FantasticStuff
      extend ActiveSupport::Concern

      # note: don't specify included or ClassMethods if unused

      included do
        class_attribute :class_attribute_only_available_on_fantastic_controllers, instance_writer: false
      end

      module ClassMethods
        # class methods available only if make_this_controller_fantastic is specified in the controller
        def some_fanastic_class_method
          put "a fantastic class method!"
        end
      end

      # instance methods available only if make_this_controller_fantastic is specified in the controller
      def some_fantastic_instance_method
        puts "a fantastic instance method!"
      end

      def another_fantastic_instance_method
        puts "another fantastic instance method!"
      end
    end
  end
end
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T01:31:03+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 1:31 am

    Here is a Gist
    that shows how to access the class of the subclass and store it in an instance variable and access it in the before and after filters. It uses the include method.

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