8

Any commands that use sudo don't seem to work with RBenv.

I'm trying to install ActiveRecord and it says I don't have write permission, so when I try this:

ERROR:  While executing gem ... (Gem::FilePermissionError)
    You don't have write permissions into the /usr/local/rbenv/versions/1.9.3-p194/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1 directory.

It says:

sudo: gem: command not found

How can I get around this?

1
  • 1
    Looks like you've installed rbenv at /usr/local/rbenv instead of ~/.rbenv. You'll have better luck with permissions if you install in a user's home directory.
    – Andrew
    Dec 12, 2013 at 6:54

4 Answers 4

12

The idea behind tools like rbenv and RVM is that you don't need to use sudo, because your entire Ruby environment exists inside your own workspace as a sandbox.

RVM allows multi-user configurations though it was originally designed for single users.

As far as I've ever seen or read, rbenv is single-user only. At no time should you need to use sudo to manipulate or change your Ruby environment when using rbenv. If you do, something is wrong. If you try to use sudo, you'll screw things up. You might not find out immediately but eventually something will pop up and you'll need to change the ownership of the files back to you.

On Linux and Mac OS you can do that pretty easily using:

sudo chown -R <your_user_name>:<your_group> ~/.rbenv

You have to run that as sudo because only the super-user can change ownership of files owned by root. sudo escalates your privileges to allow you to change those things.

2
  • 1
    There are times you will want to use sudo even if you have a sandbox. For instance, you want to use chef-solo installed as a gem by a Ruby managed by rbenv. In RVM you can use rvmsudo for doing things like that. I'm looking for an alternative for rbenv.
    – rosenfeld
    May 6, 2014 at 13:20
  • People use sudo rvm ... and sudo rbenv ..., which is not the same as rvmsudo. The first two cause all sorts of problems. That's what this question and answer was about. May 6, 2014 at 15:58
3

I realise this is kind of old now, but this may help people in future:

rbenv-sudo is a plugin for rbenv that allows you to run rbenv-provided Rubies and Gems from within a sudo session.

https://github.com/dcarley/rbenv-sudo

1
  • 1
    better idea: sudo env PATH=$PATH bundle exec ...
    – Kaia Leahy
    Nov 20, 2018 at 20:45
0

My answer in "Installing Ruby 2.0 and Rails 4.0.0beta on AWS EC2" might be useful to you.

In short, the root user needs to have rbenv loaded in its environment for you to use the gems installed by rbenv. This can be done by adding the following

# /etc/profile.d/rbenv.sh
export RBENV_ROOT=/usr/local/rbenv
export PATH="${RBENV_ROOT}/bin:$PATH"
eval "$(rbenv init -)"

This should be sufficient for sudo to work. If you are writing a shell script, you might need to use

. /etc/profile.d/rbenv.sh 

before using executables from other gems.

1
  • 3
    A problem with this approach is that when "rbenv init -" is evaluated as the root user, it will modify the rbenv/shims directory and by doing so change the ownership to root. Then when the same command is run by a user it will fail with a permission denied error. Similar problems occur when installing ruby versions and/or gems as root.
    – jpadams
    Apr 13, 2015 at 20:03
-1

My answer is a little bit late but I have simple solution for this issue. Use symbolic links to be able use binstubs and other Ruby stuff.

ln -s ~/.rbenv/bin/rbenv /usr/local/bin/rbenv
ln -s ~/.rbenv/shims/* /usr/local/bin

I hope that helps to other users who is having the same issue.

1
  • rbenv manages creating links to executables created by gems. See github.com/rbenv/rbenv#rbenv-rehash. If rbenv is set up correctly it's not necessary to put links in /usr/local at all as the PATH should point to the right place. Dec 30, 2015 at 23:42

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.