Search Engine Optimization (SEO) plugin for Ruby on Rails applications.
MetaTags master branch fully supports Ruby on Rails 4.2+, and is tested against all major Rails releases up to 5.1.
Ruby versions older than 2.2.0 are no longer officially supported.
Please note that we are no longer support Ruby versions older than 2.2.0 and Ruby on Rails older than 4.2, because they reached their End of Life.
Add the "meta-tags" gem to your Gemfile
.
gem 'meta-tags'
And run bundle install
command.
MetaTags follows best-practices for meta tags. Although default limits for truncation have recommended values, you can change them to reflect your own preferences. Keywords are converted to lowercase by default, but this is also configurable.
To overide the defaults, create an initializer
config/initializers/meta_tags.rb
using the following command:
rails generate meta_tags:install
By default meta tags are rendered with the key name
. Since, some meta tags are
required to use property
instead (like Facebook Open Graph object), MetaTags gem
allows to configure which tags to render with property
attribute. By default
the pre-configured list includes all possible Facebook Open Graph object types, but
you can add your own in case you need it.
First, add this code to your main layout:
<head>
<%= display_meta_tags site: 'My website' %>
</head>
Then, to set the page title, add this to each of your views (see below for other options):
<h1><%= title 'My page title' %></h1>
When views are rendered, the page title will be included in the right spots:
<head>
<title>My website | My page title</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>My page title</h1>
</body>
You can find allowed options for display_meta_tags
method below.
You can define following instance variables:
@page_title = 'Member Login'
@page_description = 'Member login page.'
@page_keywords = 'Site, Login, Members'
Also you could use set_meta_tags
method to define all meta tags simultaneously:
set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login',
description: 'Member login page.',
keywords: 'Site, Login, Members'
You can find allowed options for set_meta_tags
method below.
To set meta tags you can use following methods:
<% title 'Member Login' %>
<% description 'Member login page.' %>
<% keywords 'Site, Login, Members' %>
<% nofollow %>
<% noindex %>
<% refresh 3 %>
Also there is set_meta_tags
method exists:
<% set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login',
description: 'Member login page.',
keywords: 'Site, Login, Members' %>
You can pass an object that implements #to_meta_tags
method and returns a Hash:
class Document < ApplicationRecord
def to_meta_tags
{
title: title,
description: summary,
}
end
end
@document = Document.first
set_meta_tags @document
The title
method returns title itself, so you can use it to show the title
somewhere on the page:
<h1><%= title 'Member Login' %></h1>
If you want to set the title and display another text, use this:
<h1><%= title 'Member Login', 'Here you can login to the site:' %></h1>
Use these options to customize the title format:
Option | Description |
---|---|
:site |
site title |
:title |
page title |
:description |
page description |
:keywords |
page keywords |
:charset |
page character set |
:prefix |
text between site name and separator |
:separator |
text used to separate website name from page title |
:suffix |
text between separator and page title |
:lowercase |
when true, the page name will be lowercase |
:reverse |
when true, the page and site names will be reversed |
:noindex |
add noindex meta tag; when true, 'robots' will be used, otherwise the string will be used |
:index |
add index meta tag; when true, 'robots' will be used, otherwise the string will be used |
:nofollow |
add nofollow meta tag; when true, 'robots' will be used, otherwise the string will be used |
:follow |
add follow meta tag; when true, 'robots' will be used, otherwise the string will be used |
:noarchive |
add noarchive meta tag; when true, 'robots' will be used, otherwise the string will be used |
:canonical |
add canonical link tag |
:prev |
add prev link tag |
:next |
add next link tag |
:image_src |
add image_src link tag |
:og |
add Open Graph tags (Hash) |
:twitter |
add Twitter tags (Hash) |
:refresh |
refresh interval and optionally url to redirect to |
And here are a few examples to give you ideas.
<%= display_meta_tags separator: "—".html_safe %>
<%= display_meta_tags prefix: false, separator: ":" %>
<%= display_meta_tags lowercase: true %>
<%= display_meta_tags reverse: true, prefix: false %>
<%= display_meta_tags og: { title: 'The Rock', type: 'video.movie' } %>
<%= display_meta_tags alternate: { 'zh-Hant' => 'http://example.com.tw/base/url' } %>
You can specify :title
as a string or array:
set_meta_tags title: ['part1', 'part2'], site: 'site'
# site | part1 | part2
set_meta_tags title: ['part1', 'part2'], reverse: true, site: 'site'
# part2 | part1 | site
Keywords can be passed as string of comma-separated values, or as an array:
set_meta_tags keywords: ['tag1', 'tag2']
# tag1, tag2
Description is a string (HTML will be stripped from output string).
Sometimes, it is desirable to mirror meta tag values down into namespaces. A
common use case is when you want open graph's og:title
to be identical to
the title
.
Say, you have the following in your application layout:
display_meta_tags og: {
title: :title,
site_name: :site,
}
The value of og[:title]
is a symbol and therefore references the value of the
top level title
meta tag. With the following in any view:
title 'my great view'
You get this open graph meta tag for free:
<meta property="og:title" content="my great view"></meta>
Please note, that title does not include site. If you need to reference the exact
value rendered in the <title>
meta tag, use :full_title
.
Turbolinks is a simple solution for getting the performance benefits of a single-page application without the added complexity of a client-side JavaScript framework. MetaTags supports Turbolinks out of the box, no configuration is necessary.
jQuery.pjax is a nice solution for navigation
without full page reload. The main difference is that layout file will not be rendered,
so page title will not change. To fix this, when using a page fragment, pjax will check
the fragment DOM element for a title
or data-title
attribute and use any value it finds.
MetaTags simplifies this with display_title
method, which returns fully resolved
page title (include site, prefix/suffix, etc.) But in this case you will have to
set default parameters (e.g, :site
) both in layout file and in your views. To minimize
code duplication, you can define a helper in application_helper.rb
:
def default_meta_tags
{
title: 'Member Login',
description: 'Member login page.',
keywords: 'Site, Login, Members',
separator: "—".html_safe,
}
end
Then in your layout file use:
<%= display_meta_tags(default_meta_tags) %>
And in your pjax templates:
<!-- set title here, so we can use it both in "display_title" and in "title" -->
<% title "My Page title" %>
<%= content_tag :div, data: { title: display_title(default_meta_tags) } do %>
<h1><%= title %></h1>
<!-- HTML goes here -->
<% end %>
Page titles are very important for Search engines. The titles in the browser are displayed in the title bar. The search engines look at the title bar to determine what the page is all about.
set_meta_tags title: 'Member Login'
# <title>Member Login</title>
set_meta_tags site: 'Site Title', title: 'Member Login'
# <title>Site Title | Member Login</title>
set_meta_tags site: 'Site Title', title: 'Member Login', reverse: true
# <title>Member Login | Site Title</title>
Recommended title tag length: up to 70 characters, 10 words.
Further reading:
Description tags are called meta tags as they are not displayed by the browsers unlike the titles. However, these descriptions may be displayed by some search engines. They are used to describe the contents of a page in 2 or 3 sentences.
set_meta_tags description: "All text about keywords, other keywords"
# <meta name="description" content="All text about keywords, other keywords">
Recommended description tag length: up to 300 characters.
Further reading:
Meta keywords tag are used to place your keywords that you think a surfer would search in Search engines. Repeating keywords unnecessarily would be considered spam and you may get permanently banned from SERP's
set_meta_tags keywords: %w[keyword1 Keyword2 KeyWord3]
# <meta name="keywords" content="keyword1, keyword2, keyword3">
Recommended keywords tag length: up to 255 characters, 20 words.
Please note, that both Google and Bing publicly indicated that keywords meta tags is completely ignored.
By using the noindex meta tag, you can signal to search engines to not include specific pages in their indexes.
set_meta_tags noindex: true
# <meta name="robots" content="noindex">
set_meta_tags noindex: 'googlebot'
# <meta name="googlebot" content="noindex">
This is useful for pages like login, password reset, privacy policy, etc.
Further reading:
Although it is not required to add 'index' to 'robots' as it is default value for Google, some SEO specialists recommend to add it to website
set_meta_tags index: true
# <meta name="robots" content="index">
Nofollow meta tag tells a search engine not to follow the links on a specific page. It's entirely likely that a robot might find the same links on some other page without a nofollow (perhaps on some other site), and so still arrives at your undesired page.
set_meta_tags nofollow: true
# <meta name="robots" content="nofollow">
set_meta_tags nofollow: 'googlebot'
# <meta name="googlebot" content="nofollow">
Further reading:
Follow will work with Noindex meta tag
set_meta_tags noindex: true, follow: true
# <meta name="robots" content="noindex, follow">
It will not look at this page but will crawl through the rest of the pages on your website.
Canonical link element tells a search engine what is the canonical or main URL for a content which have multiple URLs. The search engine will always return that URL, and link popularity and authority will be applied to that URL.
set_meta_tags canonical: "http://yoursite.com/canonical/url"
# <link rel="canonical" href="http://yoursite.com/canonical/url">
Further reading:
A favicon (short for Favorite icon), also known as a shortcut icon, Web site icon, tab icon or bookmark icon, is a file containing one or more small icons, most commonly 16×16 pixels, associated with a particular website or web page.
set_meta_tags icon: '/favicon.ico'
# <link rel="icon" href="/favicon.ico" type="image/x-icon">
set_meta_tags icon: '/favicon.png', type: 'image/png'
# <link rel="icon" href="/favicon.png" type="image/png">
set_meta_tags icon: [
{ href: '/images/icons/icon_96.png', sizes: '32x32 96x96', type: 'image/png' },
{ href: '/images/icons/icon_itouch_precomp_32.png', rel: 'apple-touch-icon-precomposed', sizes: '32x32', type: 'image/png' },
]
# <link rel="icon" href="/images/icons/icon_96.png" type="image/png" sizes="32x32 96x96">
# <link rel="apple-touch-icon-precomposed" href="/images/icons/icon_itouch_precomp_32.png" type="image/png" sizes="32x32">
Further reading:
Alternate link elements tell a search engine when there is content that's translated or targeted to users in a certain region.
set_meta_tags alternate: { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" }
# <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" hreflang="fr">
set_meta_tags alternate: { "fr" => "http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url",
"de" => "http://yoursite.de/alternate/url" }
# <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.fr/alternate/url" hreflang="fr">
# <link rel="alternate" href="http://yoursite.de/alternate/url" hreflang="de">
If you need more than just multi-lingual links, you can use an alternative syntax:
set_meta_tags alternate: [
{ href: 'http://example.fr/base/url', hreflang: 'fr' },
{ href: 'http://example.com/feed.rss', type: 'application/rss+xml', title: 'RSS' },
{ href: 'http://m.example.com/page-1', media: 'only screen and (max-width: 640px)'},
]
Further reading:
Previous and next links indicate indicate the relationship between individual URLs. Using these attributes is a strong hint to Google that you want us to treat these pages as a logical sequence.
set_meta_tags prev: "http://yoursite.com/url?page=1"
# <link rel="prev" href="http://yoursite.com/url?page=1">
set_meta_tags next: "http://yoursite.com/url?page=3"
# <link rel="next" href="http://yoursite.com/url?page=3">
Further reading:
Basically, when you submit/share this to Facebook , this helps Facebook determine which image to put next to the link. If this is not present, Facebook tries to put in the first image it finds on the page, which may not be the best one to represent your site.
set_meta_tags image_src: "http://yoursite.com/icons/icon_32.png"
# <link rel="image_src" href="http://yoursite.com/icons/icon_32.png">
AMP is a way to build web pages for static content that render fast. If you have
two versions of the page – non-AMP and AMP, you can link the AMP version from
normal one using amphtml
tag:
set_meta_tags amphtml: url_for(format: :amp, only_path: false)
# <link rel="amphtml" href="https://www.example.com/document.amp">
To link back to normal version, use canonical
.
Meta refresh is a method of instructing a web browser to automatically refresh the current web page or frame after a given time interval. It is also possible to instruct the browser to fetch a different URL when the page is refreshed, by including the alternative URL in the content parameter. By setting the refresh time interval to zero (or a very low value), this allows meta refresh to be used as a method of URL redirection.
set_meta_tags refresh: 5
# <meta content="5" http-equiv="refresh">
set_meta_tags refresh: '5;url=http://example.com'
# <meta content="5;url=http://example.com" http-equiv="refresh">
Further reading:
Open Search link element to describe a search engine in a standard and accessible format.
set_meta_tags open_search: {
title: "Open Search",
href: "/opensearch.xml"
}
# <link href="/opensearch.xml" rel="search" title="Open Search" type="application/opensearchdescription+xml">
Further reading:
Any namespace can be built just passing any symbol name and a Hash. For example:
set_meta_tags foo: {
bar: "lorem",
baz: {
qux: "ipsum"
}
}
# <meta property="foo:bar" content="lorem">
# <meta property="foo:baz:qux" content="ipsum">
Repeated meta tags can be built just using an Array inside a Hash. For example:
set_meta_tags og: {
image: ["http://example.com/rock.jpg", "http://example.com/rock2.jpg"]
}
# <meta property="og:image" content="http://example.com/rock.jpg">
# <meta property="og:image" content="http://example.com/rock2.jpg">
To turn your web pages into graph objects, you'll need to add Open Graph
protocol <meta>
tags to your webpages. The tags allow you to specify
structured information about your web pages. The more information you provide, the more opportunities your web pages can be surfaced within Facebook today
and in the future. Here's an example for a movie page:
set_meta_tags og: {
title: 'The Rock',
type: 'video.movie',
url: 'http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117500/',
image: 'http://ia.media-imdb.com/rock.jpg',
video: {
director: 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000881/',
writer: ['http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0918711/', 'http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0177018/']
}
}
# <meta property="og:title" content="The Rock">
# <meta property="og:type" content="video.movie">
# <meta property="og:url" content="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117500/">
# <meta property="og:image" content="http://ia.media-imdb.com/rock.jpg">
# <meta property="og:video:director" content="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000881/">
# <meta property="og:video:writer" content="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0918711/">
# <meta property="og:video:writer" content="http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0177018/">
Multiple images declared as an array (look at the _
character):
set_meta_tags og: {
title: 'Two structured image properties',
type: 'website',
url: 'view-source:http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/image-array.html',
image: [{
_: 'http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/75.png',
width: 75,
height: 75,
},
{
_: 'http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/50.png',
width: 50,
height: 50,
}]
}
# <meta property="og:title" content="Two structured image properties">
# <meta property="og:type" content="website">
# <meta property="og:url" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/image-array.html">
# <meta property="og:image" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/75.png">
# <meta property="og:image:width" content="75">
# <meta property="og:image:height" content="75">
# <meta property="og:image" content="http://examples.opengraphprotocol.us/media/images/50.png">
# <meta property="og:image:width" content="50">
# <meta property="og:image:height" content="50">
Article meta tags are supported too:
set_meta_tags article: {
published_time: '2013-09-17T05:59:00+01:00',
modified_time: '2013-09-16T19:08:47+01:00',
section: 'Article Section',
tag: 'Article Tag',
}
# <meta property="article:published_time" content="2013-09-17T05:59:00+01:00">
# <meta property="article:modified_time" content="2013-09-16T19:08:47+01:00">
# <meta property="article:section" content="Article Section">
# <meta property="article:tag" content="Article Tag">
Further reading:
Twitter cards make it possible for you to attach media experiences to Tweets that link to your content. There are 3 card types (summary, photo and player). Here's an example for summary:
set_meta_tags twitter: {
card: "summary",
site: "@username"
}
# <meta name="twitter:card" content="summary">
# <meta name="twitter:site" content="@username">
Take in consideration that if you're already using OpenGraph to describe data on your page, it’s easy to generate a Twitter card without duplicating your tags and data. When the Twitter card processor looks for tags on your page, it first checks for the Twitter property, and if not present, falls back to the supported Open Graph property. This allows for both to be defined on the page independently, and minimizes the amount of duplicate markup required to describe your content and experience.
When you need to generate a Twitter Photo card, twitter:image
property is a string, while image dimensions are specified using twitter:image:width
and twitter:image:height
, or a Hash
objects in terms of MetaTags gems. There is a special syntax to make this work:
set_meta_tags twitter: {
card: "photo",
image: {
_: "http://example.com/1.png",
width: 100,
height: 100,
}
}
# <meta name="twitter:card" content="photo">
# <meta name="twitter:image" content="http://example.com/1.png">
# <meta name="twitter:image:width" content="100">
# <meta name="twitter:image:height" content="100">
Further reading:
App Links is an open cross platform solution for deep linking to content in your mobile app. Here's an example for iOS app integration:
set_meta_tags al: {
ios: {
url: "example://applinks",
app_store_id: 12345,
app_name: "Example App"
}
}
# <meta property="al:ios:url" content="example://applinks">
# <meta property="al:ios:app_store_id" content="12345">
# <meta property="al:ios:app_name" content="Example App">
Further reading:
Starting from version 1.3.1, you can specify arbitrary meta tags, and they will be rendered on the page, even if meta-tags gem does not know about them.
Example:
set_meta_tags author: "Dmytro Shteflyuk"
# <meta name="author" content="Dmytro Shteflyuk">
You can also specify value as an Array, and values will be displayed as a list
of meta
tags:
set_meta_tags author: [ "Dmytro Shteflyuk", "John Doe" ]
# <meta name="author" content="Dmytro Shteflyuk">
# <meta name="author" content="John Doe">