Could not find a valid gem 'xxx' in any repository

3,016 views
Skip to first unread message

Carl Jenkins

unread,
Nov 11, 2010, 3:03:27 PM11/11/10
to rubyonra...@googlegroups.com
I am attempting to install Ruby/Rails on an Windows XP box.
After following these instructions -
(http://pragmaticstudio.com/blog/2010/9/23/install-rails-ruby-windows)
including the comments at the bottom about Devkit.

I get an error when trying to do a 'gem install sqlite3-ruby'.
The reply is 'Could not find a valid gem 'sqlite3-ruby' <>=0> in any
repository.'

Any instructions on what I did wrong would be great.

Thanks!

--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.

Luis Lavena

unread,
Nov 11, 2010, 3:24:14 PM11/11/10
to Ruby on Rails: Talk
On Nov 11, 5:03 pm, Carl Jenkins <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:
> I am attempting to install Ruby/Rails on an Windows XP box.
> After following these instructions -
> (http://pragmaticstudio.com/blog/2010/9/23/install-rails-ruby-windows)
> including the comments at the bottom about Devkit.
>
> I get an error when trying to do a 'gem install sqlite3-ruby'.
> The reply is 'Could not find a valid gem 'sqlite3-ruby' <>=0> in any
> repository.'
>
> Any instructions on what I did wrong would be great.
>

Most likely you're behind a proxy and you are not aware of.

Please check your browser settings. take note of the HTTP proxy
information and then use the --http-proxy option of gem install
command.

More details in the syntax use "gem help install"

Also, you can see if your proxy is not blocking S3/CDN downloads by
manually downloading in the browser one gem from rubygems.org:

http://rubygems.org/

HTH,
--
Luis Lavena

Carl Jenkins

unread,
Nov 11, 2010, 5:25:57 PM11/11/10
to rubyonra...@googlegroups.com
Using a browser I can download gems from http://rubygems.org.
Does this mean I should NOT have to use the --http_proxy switch on the
command line?


Luis Lavena wrote in post #960804:


> On Nov 11, 5:03pm, Carl Jenkins <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:
>>
> Most likely you're behind a proxy and you are not aware of.
>
> Please check your browser settings. take note of the HTTP proxy
> information and then use the --http-proxy option of gem install
> command.
>
> More details in the syntax use "gem help install"
>
> Also, you can see if your proxy is not blocking S3/CDN downloads by
> manually downloading in the browser one gem from rubygems.org:
>
> http://rubygems.org/
>
> HTH,
> --
> Luis Lavena

--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.

Luis Lavena

unread,
Nov 11, 2010, 9:03:24 PM11/11/10
to Ruby on Rails: Talk
On Nov 11, 7:25 pm, Carl Jenkins <li...@ruby-forum.com> wrote:
> Using a browser I can download gems fromhttp://rubygems.org.
> Does this mean I should NOT have to use the --http_proxy switch on the
> command line?
>

No, you *should* use --http-proxy option, please check your browser
options about proxy connection and use that information in the --http-
proxy option

You will end with something like this:

gem install xxx --http-proxy=http://user:password@server

--
Luis Lavena

Carl Jenkins

unread,
Nov 11, 2010, 9:10:01 PM11/11/10
to rubyonra...@googlegroups.com
> No, you *should* use --http-proxy option, please check your browser
> options about proxy connection and use that information in the --http-
> proxy option
>
> You will end with something like this:
>
> gem install xxx --http-proxy=http://user:password@server
>
> --
> Luis Lavena

I understand now - thanks for your help. It is working like a charm. :)

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages