14

I've got a fork of the rails repo on github, in which I've got a branch, based on the rails-2-3-stable branch. I want to develop some changes based on rails 2.3.10 together with my app. We're using bundler, and the app is versioned with SVN.

What is the cleanest way to use my branch in the github fork of rails and share this across machines ?

One way would be this:

how do I install edge rails?

which would work, but doesn't feel clean enough, as we'd have to update the vendored version manually when the repo changes, and we'd have to check the git repo into svn.

I've tried variations of this in the Gemfile:

gem 'rails', '2.3.10', :git => 'git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git', :branch => 'tiq-fixes'
gem 'rails', '2.3.10', :git => 'git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git', :tag => 'v2.3.10'
gem 'rails', '2.3.10', :git => 'git://github.com/rails/rails.git', :tag => 'v2.3.10'

All of those initially work when running bundle install, but when starting the app, it can't find rails in the load path:

/home/mt/Development/config/boot.rb:57:in `require': no such file to load -- initializer (LoadError)
    from /home/mt/Development/config/boot.rb:57:in `load_initializer'
    from /home/mt/Development/config/boot.rb:117:in `run'
    from /home/mt/Development/config/boot.rb:11:in `boot!'
    from /home/mt/Development/config/boot.rb:130
    from script/console:2:in `re

My Gemfile.lock entries are like this:

GIT
  remote: git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git
  revision: 25139ac92cea5b17791d71359bc3ae2a5d526652
  branch: tiq-fixes
  specs:
    rails (2.3.10)

...

DEPENDENCIES

...

rails (= 2.3.10)!

1
  • Updated the question with Gemfile.lock excerpts
    – Martin T.
    Oct 28, 2010 at 13:39

2 Answers 2

19

balu's answer pointed me to the right course, but here are some more details:

It was necessary to cobble together .gemspec files for most of the gems in the rails repo/2-3-stable branch - my take can be seen or forked at http://github.com/traveliq/rails/commit/46d9042c9125abbbedfc672f8523d81210f4f320

To include that in a Gemfile, use:

git "git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git", :branch => 'tiq-fixes' do
  gem 'rails'
  gem 'actionmailer'
  gem 'actionpack'
  gem 'activerecord'
  gem 'activeresource'
  gem 'activesupport'
end

Note that you can't use 'railties', that only defines the 'rails' gem.

Incidentally, while working on this, it was way easier to point the Gemfile at my local repo, which is done this way (rails being the folder where the repo is cloned, a level down from the Gemfile):

gem 'rails',            :path => 'rails/railties'
gem 'actionmailer',     :path => 'rails/actionmailer'
gem 'actionpack',       :path => 'rails/actionpack'
gem 'activerecord',     :path => 'rails/activerecord'
gem 'activesupport',    :path => 'rails/activesupport'

After defining the rails/railties .gemspec, you could also leave out some of those gems, and have bundler use the normally available versions from gemcutter etc.

7

Looks like at version 2.3.10, rails did not have .gemspec files for its components. Instead, each gemspec is specified in the corresponding Rakefile.

Otherwise you would use:

git "git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git", :branch => 'tiq-fixes', :tag => 'v2.3.10' do
  gem 'actionpack'
  gem 'activesupport'
  gem 'activerecord'
  gem 'activemodel'
  gem 'actionmailer'
  gem 'railties'
end

Further reference: http://gembundler.com/git.html

EDIT: That means that bundler requires a gemspec to be in place.

7
  • Thanks for pointing me to the bundler git docs, didn't know there were more than the "getting started" docs. However, I'm still getting this error: Could not find gem 'actionpack (>= 0, runtime)' in git://github.com/traveliq/rails.git (at tiq-fixes). Source does not contain any versions of 'actionpack (>= 0, runtime)'
    – Martin T.
    Oct 29, 2010 at 8:13
  • 2
    Alright, I take it your answer means: Not possible out of the box with bundler and rails 2.3.x . But I guess I could add .gemspec files in my branch into the dependencies ?
    – Martin T.
    Oct 29, 2010 at 8:18
  • Yup. Just copy it from the Rakefile in the gem directory.
    – balu
    Oct 29, 2010 at 10:24
  • Would be nice if you'd vote me up and mark as correct answer. :)
    – balu
    Oct 29, 2010 at 19:00
  • Sorry, I'm still working on it so I don't know if it actually is correct yet. Didn't forget you :)
    – Martin T.
    Nov 1, 2010 at 8:48

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