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Home/ Questions/Q 7558953
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T12:30:30+00:00 2026-05-30T12:30:30+00:00

rack-timeout is included in the Gemfile, but we only want it as middleware on

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rack-timeout is included in the Gemfile, but we only want it as middleware on production. Thus in an initializer, we have:

config.middleware.delete Rack::Timeout

Inspecting before and after this line shows rack-timeout removed from the array. Regardless, requests are still timing out, and a quick ‘puts’ in the gem shows that it is indeed the culprit.

Is this because the middleware stack has already been built before delete is called? Or is the stack read in every request? If that’s the case, what could be the issue?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T12:30:32+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 12:30 pm

    Why not just have something like the following?

    group :production do
      gem "rack-timeout"
    end
    

    In theory, the middleware deletion in the initializer should take care of the problem after a server restart, assuming you’re talking about putting something in config/initializers/.


    Did a little more experimentation and dropped this into config/initializers/rack-timeout.rb:

    if Rails.env.production?
      Rack::Timeout.timeout = 0.5
    else
      Rails.configuration.middleware.delete Rack::Timeout
    end
    

    And this in a scaffolded controller:

    sleep 1
    

    Everything seemed cool after I restarted the dev server (no timeouts in sight :D). So, maybe just a bad variable.

    I still think using a production-only group is the better solution.

    Ran with Rails 3.2.2 with ruby 1.9.2-p290 on OSX.

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