The best practice is to use the same dbms for development, testing, and production. But I doubt that's what you wanted to hear...
In any event, bundler doesn't support this scenario. That is, you can't simply tell it to not install certain gems in a given environment - even if they won't be used. You can tell it to not load up certain gems by declaring them in a group
block (as @mind.blank proposed), but they will still be installed. You can, however, use simple ruby constructs, namely if-else
or case
blocks, to only run certain code (and load/install certain gems) given a specific condition.
The problem with this is that your Gemfile.lock file will be out of sync across your deployments - which is not what bundler (or Capistrano) expects. But there are flags you can use to tell your deployment to ignore the Gemfile.lock file and bundle install
based on it's reading of the Gemfile if you really want to...