The latest changesets to Ruby 1.9.2 no longer make the current directory . part of your LOAD_PATH. I have a non-trivial number of Rakefiles that assume that . is part of the LOAD_PATH, so this broke them (they reported "no such file to load" for all require statements that based off the project path). Was there a particular justification for doing this?

As for a fix, adding $: << "." everywhere works, but seems incredibly hacky and I don't want to do that. What's the preferred way to make my Rakefiles 1.9.2+ compatible?

link|improve this question

feedback

7 Answers

up vote 52 down vote accepted

It was deemed a "security" risk.

You can get around it by using absolute paths

File.expand_path(__FILE__) et al

or doing

require './filename' (ironically).

or using require_relative. GL.

link|improve this answer
13  
I wound up using require_relative. Thanks. – John Feminella May 24 '10 at 22:50
8  
Is this akin to most unixes not including the current directory in the path for running executables? – Andrew Grimm May 24 '10 at 23:56
1  
@Andrew yes I think so. – rogerdpack May 25 '11 at 3:32
feedback

There's two reasons:

  • robustness and
  • security

Both are based on the same underlying principle: in general, you simply cannot know what the current directory is, when your code is run. Which means that, when you require a file and depend on it being in the current directory, you have no way of controlling whether that file will even be there, or whether it is the file that you actually expect to be there.

link|improve this answer
4  
I don't think that enforcing that two files be in the same location relative to each other is necessarily a bad requirement. If that were true, then we would have no use for directories. – John Feminella May 25 '10 at 12:11
4  
@John Feminella: what does this have to do with putting files in paths relative to each other? The question is about putting them relative to ., i.e. the current working directory. If the user cd s into a different directory, the current working directory changes, and you now require completely different files depending on what directory the user happened to be in when he called your script. I don't think that's a good idea. – Jörg W Mittag May 25 '10 at 12:53
So to maintain a decent interface, you should do this? $: << File.dirname(__FILE__) – Joshua Cheek Sep 11 '10 at 22:07
3  
@Joshua Cheek: Personally, I don't like that. (But please don't look at my older code, because it is littered with that kind of stuff :-) ). I simply pretend that the lib directory is on the $LOAD_PATH and then require all files relative to lib. In other words: I leave it to the administrator to figure out how to set up the $LOAD_PATH correctly. If you use RubyGems, that is trivial, because RubyGems automatically does it for you, and if you use Debian packages, then it's the package maintainer's job. All in all, it seems to work out quite nicely. – Jörg W Mittag Sep 11 '10 at 22:22
8  
@Joshua Cheek: Also, as a sort-of counterbalance to removing . from $LOAD_PATH, Ruby 1.9.2 introduces require_relative which ... surprise ... require s a file relative to the location of the currently executing file (i.e. relative to File.dirname(__FILE__) ). – Jörg W Mittag Sep 11 '10 at 22:24
show 2 more comments
feedback

As others answers point out, it's a security risk because . in your load path refers to the present working directory Dir.pwd, not the directory of the current file being loaded. So whoever is executing your script can change this simply by cding to another directory. Not good!

I've been using full paths constructed from __FILE__ as an alternative.

require File.expand_path(File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), 'filename'))

Unlike require_relative, this is backward compatible with Ruby 1.8.7.

link|improve this answer
1  
There's also this variation (which I personally find more readable): require Pathname.new(__FILE__).dirname + 'filename' – Tyler Rick May 6 '11 at 23:12
feedback

'.' in your path has long been considered a bad thing in the Unix world (see, for example, http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/faq/part2/section-13.html). I assume the Ruby folks have been persuaded of the wisdom of not doing that.

link|improve this answer
feedback

I found this to be a confounding change until I realized a couple of things.

You can set RUBYLIB in your .profile (Unix) and go on with life as you did before:

export RUBYLIB="."

But as mentioned above, it's long been considered unsafe to do so.

For the vast majority of cases you can avoid problems by simply calling your Ruby scripts with a prepended '.' e.g. ./scripts/server.

link|improve this answer
feedback

As Jörg W Mittag pointed out, I think what you want to be using is require_relative so the file you require is relative to the source file of the require deceleration and not the current working dir.

Your deps should be relative to your rake build file.

link|improve this answer
feedback

But now non of examples from common libraries works, like gtk examples or qt samples.

e.g. Main.rb from gtk-demo uses external modules/files for all the examples like application.rb, to use them you need to change all the references in the code to './filename.rb'... I think this is annoying but ... (maybe a little of security worth the hundreds of lines we will need to change)

just my 2 cents!!

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.