48

In Rails 2.X, I could simply copy gems into vendor/gems/gem_name, or use the rake command rake gems:unpack. Since Rails3 uses bundler, it doesn't appear to work anymore. I have found the command bundle package, but it doesn't work the same way.

Edit:

So, just to elaborate a bit on this:

The way that rails 2 worked, I could easily grep to find stuff in vendor/gems. If they are bundled up in .gem files, that isn't possible. Also, when developing a gem/plugin, it's very helpful to have it placed within a rails application to test it out in context. How would I do such things with bundler/rails3? Is my workflow inherently broken somehow?

1
  • I have a rails 2 application, in that already I have mysql2 gem inside vendor folder. My doubt is, in case of Rails 3 we can call the gems inside the vendor folder in Gemfile like, gem 'gemname', :path => 'path to gemfile inside vendor directory' But I don't know where and how to call the gems in vendor folder in Rails 2. Can anyone please help me in this. How to require and mention the path of the gem that present inside the vendor folder(as we dont have the Gemfile)?
    – Abhiram
    Apr 16, 2017 at 14:36

5 Answers 5

113

Answering the second part of your question, developing a plugin/gem and shipping it with the rails app without making the gem publicly available, you may do this

Gemfile

gem 'my_private_gem', :path => "vendor/gems/my_private_gem-VERSION"

assuming you performed a gem unpack my_private_gem --target vendor/gems

note: bundle package unpacks all gems (as many as in Gemfile.lock). I wouldn't want those in git.

4
  • 1
    Just a note to add that if you have used the "gem unpack" command then you will need to explicitly list the version number of the gem you have vendored, as there will be no *.gemspec file - see the manpage
    – nobody
    Dec 25, 2010 at 20:02
  • 17
    I had to include the gem version number for bundler to find the gem in the given path. gem 'my_private_gem', '1.2.3', :path => "vendor/gems/my_private_gem-VERSION"
    – Nicolo77
    Jun 1, 2011 at 16:51
  • The my_private_gem-VERSION approach to unpacking didn't work for me, but this did: gem unpack my_private_gem --version VERSION --target vendor/gems
    – Zeke
    Sep 22, 2011 at 18:03
  • 3
    This worked for me gem unpack my_private_gem --target vendor/gems --spec but it put the gem spec in the current directory not the target! so then mv my_private_gem.gemspec vendor/gems now bundler won't complain about the gem version.
    – JosephL
    Jan 23, 2014 at 1:27
27

The Bundler equivalent is bundle package. It packages all of the .gem files specified in the Gemfile into vendor/cache so that future installs get the gems from this cache rather than from http://rubygems.org/

1
  • Thanks for reassuring me that this is expected behavior. It doesn't really solve my root problem though, so I have accepted Ole's answer instead.
    – troelskn
    Sep 13, 2010 at 8:15
23

The correct Bundler equivalent is bundle install --deployment. This will install the gems, in their unpacked state, in vendor/bundle.

2
  • 1
    Thanks. This seems to be equivalent to rake gems:unpack. For my use case, I just want to vendorize a single gem, so here Ole's answer is still the best solution, but it's good to know that there is a better way, if you want to vendorize all gems.
    – troelskn
    Feb 12, 2011 at 8:29
  • This answer and comments are important to the question because many people seek to 'vendorize' most-but-not-all gems Jan 30, 2012 at 18:42
6

This is what worked for me:

gem unpack <GEM_NAME> [-v <VERSION>] --target vendor/gems
gem specification <GEM_NAME> [-v <VERSION>] --ruby > vendor/gems/<GEM_NAME>[-<VERSION>].gemspec

For example:

gem unpack sidekiq-pro -v 2.1.4 --target vendor/gems
gem specification sidekiq-pro -v 2.1.4 --ruby > vendor/gems/sidekiq-pro-2.1.4.gemspec

The first command unpacks the gem into the vendor/gems directory. However, that doesn't contain the gemspec. The second command creates the associated gemspec. It's noteworthy that another poster mentioned something similar. This solution correctly writes the gemspec in ruby format instead of in yaml.

You can then update your Gemfile to point to the vendored gem:

gem '<GEM_NAME>', '<VERSION>', :path => "vendor/gems/<GEM_NAME>-<VERSION>"

For example:

gem 'sidekiq-pro', '2.1.4', :path => "vendor/gems/sidekiq-pro-2.1.4"
0

Consider using "hosted" development infrastructure delivered by the hosted_gem_development gem.

Developing gems is often tricky because they act like separate projects with regard to the applications you use them in.

"Hosted" development infrastructure makes gem development easier by including them into (making them "hosted by") your live application. Then you update your gem's code like you update regular application code.

Go to project page

3
  • It's nice you downvoted me guys, but this post isn't a blind promotion. It is related to gem vendorization, too. May 1, 2012 at 19:54
  • Say I have a versioned app and I want to always use the latest commit of a gem. Would your gem work (and in production as well)?
    – lulalala
    Aug 15, 2013 at 6:46
  • @lulalala, with hosted_gem_development you'll have to manually update gem source, e.g. by issuing a git pull or whatever. Aug 26, 2013 at 11:14

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