however from the IRB I'm getting errors it can't find my gems? how do I
fix this, I assume I need to define some environment variables?
irb(main):003:0> require 'rubygems'
LoadError: no such file to load -- rubygems
from (irb):3:in `require'
from (irb):3
from :0
irb(main):004:0> require 'grackle'
LoadError: no such file to load -- grackle
from (irb):4:in `require'
from (irb):4
from :0
--
Kind Regards,
Rajinder Yadav
Do Good! - Share Freely
http://docs.rubygems.org/read/chapter/3
You need to install RubyGems.
--
Phillip Gawlowski
I already had gems installed? are you telling me I got to repeat the
entire process to install gem and then all the gem packages?
yadav@KubuntuX64:$ gem list
*** LOCAL GEMS ***
actionmailer (2.3.5)
actionpack (2.3.5)
activerecord (2.3.5)
activeresource (2.3.5)
activesupport (2.3.5)
cgi_multipart_eof_fix (2.5.0)
curb (0.6.0.0)
daemons (1.0.10)
fastthread (1.0.7)
gem_plugin (0.2.3)
grackle (0.1.7)
haml (2.2.15)
haml-edge (2.3.100)
hpricot (0.8.2)
json (1.2.0)
mechanize (0.9.3)
mime-types (1.16)
mongrel (1.1.5)
nokogiri (1.4.1)
oauth (0.3.6)
patron (0.4.4)
rack (1.0.1)
rails (2.3.5)
rake (0.8.7)
ruby-hmac (0.3.2)
sqlite3-ruby (1.2.5)
export PATH=/var/lib/gems/1.8/bin:$PATH
See:
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RubyOnRails#Installing RubyGems
> I already had gems installed? are you telling me I got to repeat the
> entire process to install gem and then all the gem packages?
Apparently, if your compiled-from source Ruby cannot find "rubygems". ;)
Most likely, installing RubyGems should be enough.
How did you remove Ruby? Using apt-get? Which options? Or by other means?
--
Phillip Gawlowski
unfortunately that doesn't seem to fix the issue
> https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RubyOnRails#Installing RubyGems
>
> On Dec 26, 2009, at 11:22 PM, Rajinder Yadav wrote:
>
>> Phillip Gawlowski wrote:
>>> On 27.12.2009 05:12, Rajinder Yadav wrote:
>>>> I removed my older ruby package from my ubuntu, built ruby from source
>>>> successfully. added the sym link from ruby1.8 -> ruby in /usr/bin/
>>>>
>>>> however from the IRB I'm getting errors it can't find my gems? how do I
>>>> fix this, I assume I need to define some environment variables?
>>> http://docs.rubygems.org/read/chapter/3
>>> You need to install RubyGems.
>>> --
>>> Phillip Gawlowski
>> I already had gems installed? are you telling me I got to repeat the entire process to install gem and then all the gem packages?
>>
>> yadav@KubuntuX64:$ gem list
>>
>> *** LOCAL GEMS ***
>>
>> actionmailer (2.3.5)
>> actionpack (2.3.5)
>> activerecord (2.3.5)
(truncalted)
sudo aptitude remove ruby
>
> --
> Phillip Gawlowski
is there another location rubygems can be install? I did an ls and found
the following entries. should there not be more stuff here bases on my
gem list showing??
yadav@KubuntuX64:$ ls -l
total 20
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 349 2009-11-30 02:36 gpgen
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 351 2009-11-30 02:49 mongrel_rails
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 338 2009-11-30 01:09 rackup
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 339 2009-11-30 01:09 rails
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 336 2009-11-30 01:08 rake
> https://help.ubuntu.com/community/RubyOnRails#Installing RubyGems
>
> On Dec 26, 2009, at 11:22 PM, Rajinder Yadav wrote:
>
>> Phillip Gawlowski wrote:
>>> On 27.12.2009 05:12, Rajinder Yadav wrote:
>>>> I removed my older ruby package from my ubuntu, built ruby from source
>>>> successfully. added the sym link from ruby1.8 -> ruby in /usr/bin/
>>>>
>>>> however from the IRB I'm getting errors it can't find my gems? how do I
>>>> fix this, I assume I need to define some environment variables?
>>> http://docs.rubygems.org/read/chapter/3
>>> You need to install RubyGems.
>>> --
>>> Phillip Gawlowski
>> I already had gems installed? are you telling me I got to repeat the entire process to install gem and then all the gem packages?
>>
>> yadav@KubuntuX64:$ gem list
>>
>> *** LOCAL GEMS ***
>>
>> actionmailer (2.3.5)
>> actionpack (2.3.5)
>> activerecord (2.3.5)
(truncated)
Right, I'm a little foggy here (It's been a while since I last touched
any from of *NIX).
However, it seems that you now have a rather curious state for your Ruby.
For one, Ruby is split into several packages (ruby, irb, ruby-dev,
libruby, ri; off the top of my head), and a couple of Ruby packages
exit, too, most famously RubyGems.
However, each distribution (more or less), tweaks their offered packages
to conform to the distribution's file system layout.
These tweaks are not necessarily identical to what a build from source
provides.
So, it seems that your Ruby install is in an inconsistent state, where
Ruby, and RubyGems don't "know" about each other, since they use
different directories.
A solution would be to do a "sudo aptitude remove ruby*" to remove
anything the distro installed, re-do "sudo make install" in your Ruby
source directory, and then install RubyGems and your desired gems (it
might be enough to monitor the filesystem, and see which directories
"make install" and the RubyGems install create, and to copy your gems
into this new directory.
Or:
You remove compiled-Ruby with the hopefully existing "make uninstall",
and then reinstall Ruby from Ubuntu's repositories, and hope that fixes
everything (it should).
Aside: A tool I found handy when installing from source is Checkinstall:
http://checkinstall.izto.org/ allowing to introduce software compiled
from source to a distribution's packet management system. :)
--
Phillip Gawlowski
As many possibilities as there are Linux distributions. ;)
Usually, it is "/[var|opt]/lib/ruby/1.8/gems/". The particulars depend
on your distribution.
--
Phillip Gawlowski
I've given up the battle and reinstalling rubygems ;)
> --
> Phillip Gawlowski
Phillip,
thanks for helping out. A simple reinstall of rubygems and the gems is
all that was needed to restore the state. (I was trying to avoid this
being lazy).
RI is happy again, gems are being found with no issue.
Despite some of the kind suggestions from others, the particular file
rubygems.rb should be in
../lib/ruby/site_ruby/1.8/
if Ruby and rubygems are both installed. Note that this is not the
gem binary, but rather the file which allows your program to load
gems.
The ... stands in for an installation path which varies from system to
system. But should be something like /usr or /usr/local on a Debian
based system. Actually self installed stuff should be in /user/local
IIRC so as not to collide with packaged stuff.
--
Rick DeNatale
Blog: http://talklikeaduck.denhaven2.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/RickDeNatale
WWR: http://www.workingwithrails.com/person/9021-rick-denatale
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/rickdenatale