2

If I add a bash script as an executable in a gem, installing the gem causes the executable to get wrapped in something like:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby_executable_hooks
#
# This file was generated by RubyGems.
#
# The application 'my_bash_script' is installed as part of a gem, and
# this file is here to facilitate running it.
#

require 'rubygems'

version = ">= 0.a"

if ARGV.first
  str = ARGV.first
  str = str.dup.force_encoding("BINARY") if str.respond_to? :force_encoding
  if str =~ /\A_(.*)_\z/ and Gem::Version.correct?($1) then
    version = $1
    ARGV.shift
  end
end

gem 'my_bash_script', version
load Gem.bin_path('my_bash_script', 'my_bash_script', version)

This makes it dysfunctional because the ruby interpreter obviously doesn't speak bash.

What's a good way of dealing with this? Can I turn the wrapping off (preferable, as bash starts about 12 times faster than the YARV ruby interpreter), or do I need to wrap my bash in ruby in order for the generated load wrapper to be happy?

1 Answer 1

1

I found the following answer in one of the rubygem repo's ticket discussions.

I don't know of a good way to do this that works across platforms and makes sense. Rubygems is for ruby. If a file is in your gem's bindir and listed as a gem executable, it should be ruby. If your gem has "special needs" then it should do it out of band, like create a Rakefile that does your special steps for you and list the Rakefile as an extension in the spec. Or just use a post-install message telling people to install with --no-wrapper.

Also I found the following comment in rubygems specification documentation.

# # For example, the rake gem has rake as an executable. You don’t specify the # full path (as in bin/rake); all application-style files are expected to be - # found in bindir. + # found in bindir. These files must be executable ruby files. Files that + # use bash or other interpreters will not work. #

Hope this information helps.

4
  • I found it too. But since SO is mainly about copying and pasting anyway ... :D Jul 6, 2015 at 20:53
  • How will we know if you found your answer long time back?. I hope you are aware that you can answer your own questions :)
    – Nik
    Jul 7, 2015 at 14:12
  • Also I never claimed it to be my own. I have given links to where I found the italicized text in this answer.
    – Nik
    Jul 7, 2015 at 14:20
  • Just in case you didn't get it, the three dots stand for ", I'm upvoting and accepting your answer" Jul 7, 2015 at 14:26

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