We currently work with a setup quite similar with what you are describing.
We started developing a somewhat big Rails app (sales, stock management, product catalogue, etc) for a client. After finishing it, there came several new requests for almost identical functionality.
The original app, however, had to keep being maintained, adding new features, correcting bugs and whatnot.
The extended ones needed to maintain most functionality, but change appearance and looks.
What we did was follow a series of steps:
- First we started cleaning up the code, pulling hardcode references to tables, reducing and optimizing queries, looking up missing indexes and ways to improve our ActiveRecord use
- After being somewhat satisfied, we started developing missing tests. I can't stress hard enough why it's useful, since we'll be maintaining a same codebase for several apps, and need the core functionality to be as protected as it can be from new changes.
- That was also the magic word: core functionality. We started selecting base functionality that could be reused, and extrating all generic code. That gave us a mix of controllers, models and views, which we started to change into modules, plugins and gems.
What goes where? Depends greatly on your code. As a rule of thumb, functionality that doesn't deal with the domain language goes to plugins (or gems if it doesn't depends too much on Rails)
- This approach led us to a several of plugins, gems which we then pulled together reassembling the original project, and then it got to it's own GIT repository. That way, we had a main "template" repository which glued all the components and several other GIT repositories for each of them.
- Finally, we develop an easy theme system (basically loading /stylesheets/themes/:theme_name/ and getting theme_name from the DB). Since it's an intranet project, we could almost do anything with proper CSS styling. I'd guess for working with IE you'd need a more complex approach.
- Then, we just used that main repository developing the new functionality on top of it.
Now, how do we deal with changes to the core base. We start with our template repository. We fix or define where the fix or change should be and either change it there or on it's corresponding gem/plugin. After properly testing it, we deploy it to our GitHub account.
Finally, we merge/rebase the other projects from that template repository, getting the new updates.
Sounds a bit complicated, but it was only for the setup. The current workflow is quite simple and easy, with the given advantage of working with several developers without bigger issues.