Imagine a Rack application that, on startup, creates instances of some other Ruby applications and maps routes to those applications. This application has a Rack dependency of 1.2.2.
Now imagine we're developing a sub-application which will be run by this application. It has a Sinatra dependency of 1.2.6 and uses Bundler. It's gemfile is a barren:
source "http://rubygems.org"
gem "sinatra", "1.2.6"
Unfortunately, when we bundle install
this sub-application, Bundler, with no knowledge of the Rack 1.2.2 dependency of the parent application, will install the most recent version of Rack that is compatible with Sinatra 1.2.6: currently 1.3.2. Our Gemfile.lock will be:
GEM
remote: http://rubygems.org/
specs:
rack (1.3.2)
sinatra (1.2.6)
rack (~> 1.1)
tilt (< 2.0, >= 1.2.2)
tilt (1.3.2)
PLATFORMS
ruby
DEPENDENCIES
sinatra (= 1.2.6)
When we try to start the parent application (which starts our sub-application), we'll get:
You have already activated rack 1.2.2, but your Gemfile requires rack 1.3.2. Consider using bundle exec. (Gem::LoadError)
What is the correct way to handle this situation? Yes, we could explicitly require rack 1.2.2, but we'd effectively be stating a dependency of a dependency. I'd imagine that, ideally, the parent application would be a gem which our sub-application would require, but in this situation, we don't have the ability to make it so.
bundle exec rackup
might be a good idea to stick with locked dependencies