What is the best practice if I want to require a relative file in Ruby and I want it to work in both 1.8.x and >=1.9.2?

I see a few options:

  • just do $LOAD_PATH << '.' and forget everything
  • do $LOAD_PATH << File.dirname(__FILE__)
  • require './path/to/file'
  • check if RUBY_VERSION < 1.9.2, then define require_relative as require, use require_relative everywhere where it's needed afterwards
  • check if require_relative already exists, if it does, try to proceed as in previous case
  • use weird constructions such as
    require File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), 'path/to/file')
    - alas they don't seem to work in Ruby 1.9 throughly, because, for example:
    $ cat caller.rb
    require File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), 'path/to/file')
    $ cat path/to/file.rb
    puts 'Some testing'
    $ ruby caller
    Some testing
    $ pwd
    /tmp
    $ ruby /tmp/caller
    Some testing
    $ ruby tmp/caller
    tmp/caller.rb:1:in 'require': no such file to load -- tmp/path/to/file (LoadError)
        from tmp/caller.rb:1:in '<main>'
  • Even weirder construction:
    require File.join(File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__)), 'path/to/file')
    seems to work, but it's weird and not quite good looking.
  • Use backports gem - it's kind of heavy, it requires rubygems infrastructure and includes tons of other workarounds, while I just want require to work with relative files.

There's a closely related question at StackOverflow that gives some more examples, but it doesn't give a clear answer - which is a best practice.

Is there are any decent, accepted-by-everyone universal solution to make my application run on both Ruby <1.9.2 and >=1.9.2?

UPDATE

Clarification: I don't want just answers like "you can do X" - in fact, I've already mentioned most of choices in question. I want rationale, i.e. why it is a best practice, what are its pros and cons and why it should be chosen among the others.

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8 Answers

A workaround for this was just added to the 'aws' gem so thought I'd share as it was inspired by this post.

https://github.com/appoxy/aws/blob/master/lib/awsbase/require_relative.rb

unless Kernel.respond_to?(:require_relative)
  module Kernel
    def require_relative(path)
      require File.join(File.dirname(caller[0]), path.to_str)
    end
  end
end

This allows you to use require_relative as you would in ruby 1.9.2 in ruby 1.8 and 1.9.1.

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How do you require the require_relative.rb file? You have to require require_relative.rb and then require_relative the rest of the requires. Or am I missing something? – ethicalhack3r Mar 23 at 22:47
The require_relative function is included in an extension project to the Ruby core libraries, found here: rubyforge.org/projects/extensions You should be able to install them with gem install extensions. Then in your code add the following line before the require_relative: require 'extensions/all' (sourced from Aurril's post here) – thegreendroid Apr 17 at 5:24
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Before I made the jump to 1.9.2 I used the following for relative requires:

require File.expand_path('../relative/path', __FILE__)

It's a bit weird the first time you see it, because it looks like there's an extra '..' at the start. The reason is that expand_path will expand a path relative to the second argument, and the second argument will be interpreted as if it were a directory. __FILE__ obviously isn't a directory, but that doesn't matter since expand_path doesn't care if the files exist or not, it will just apply some rules to expand things like .., . and ~. If you can get over the initial "waitaminute isn't there an extra .. there?" I think that the line above works quite well.

Assuming that __FILE__ is /absolute/path/to/file.rb, what happens is that expand_path will construct the string /absolute/path/to/file.rb/../relative/path, and then apply a rule that says that .. should remove the path component before it (file.rb in this case), returning /absolute/path/to/relative/path.

Is this best practice? Depends on what you mean by that, but it seems like it's all over the Rails code base, so I'd say it's at least a common enough idiom.

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I see this commonly as well. It's ugly, but it seems to work well. – yfeldblum Dec 2 '10 at 12:47
1  
a bit cleaner: require File.expand_path('relative/path', File.dirname(FILE)) – Yannick Wurm May 3 '11 at 7:07
I don't think it's much cleaner, it's just longer. They are both fugly as hell, and when choosing between two bad options I prefer the one that requires less typing. – Theo May 3 '11 at 20:14
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The Pickaxe has a snippet for this for 1.8. Here it is:

def require_relative(relative_feature)
  c = caller.first
  fail "Can't parse #{c}" unless c.rindex(/:\d+(:in `.*')?$/)
  file = $`
  if /\A\((.*)\)/ =~ file # eval, etc.
    raise LoadError, "require_relative is called in #{$1}"
  end
  absolute = File.expand_path(relative_feature, File.dirname(file))
  require absolute
end

It basically just uses what Theo answered, but so you can still use require_relative.

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How to check if this snippet should be activated or not properly? Using $RUBY_VERSION or by checking if require_relative exists directly? – GreyCat Dec 2 '10 at 19:56
Always duck type, check if require_relative is defined. – Theo Dec 12 '10 at 12:39
@Theo @GreyCat yes, I would check if it's needed. I was just putting the snippet here for people to show. Personally, I use would Greg's answer anyways, I was really just posting this because someone had mentioned it without having it themselves. – phoffer Dec 12 '10 at 21:20
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$LOAD_PATH << '.'

$LOAD_PATH << File.dirname(__FILE__)

It's not a good security habit: why should you expose your whole directory?

require './path/to/file'

This doesn't work if RUBY_VERSION < 1.9.2

use weird constructions such as

require File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), 'path/to/file')

Even weirder construction:

require File.join(File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__)), 'path/to/file')

Use backports gem - it's kind of heavy, it requires rubygems infrastructure and includes tons of other workarounds, while I just want require to work with relative files.

You have already answered why these are not the best options.

check if RUBY_VERSION < 1.9.2, then define require_relative as require, use require_relative everywhere where it's needed afterwards

check if require_relative already exists, if it does, try to proceed as in previous case

This may work, but there's safer and quicker way: to deal with the LoadError exception:

begin
  # require statements for 1.9.2 and above, such as:
  require "./path/to/file"
  # or
  require_local "path/to/file"
rescue LoadError
  # require statements other versions:
  require "path/to/file"
end
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I would define my own relative_require if it doesn't exist (i.e. under 1.8) and then use the same syntax everywhere.

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backports gem has a require_relative...

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1  
That option was mentioned in the question. – Andrew Grimm Mar 9 '11 at 22:39
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If you were building a gem, you would not want to pollute the load path.

But, In the case of a standalone application it is very convenient to just add the current directory to the load path as you do in the first 2 examples.

My vote goes to the first option on the list.

I would love to see some solid Ruby best practices literature.

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You can try Ruby version Manager rather than manually tweaking or messing round your code.

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If you mean this Ruby Version Manager then it's directly the opposite that I'm asking for. RVM allows me to have different versions of Ruby for testing, but I want my application to work on any recent Ruby version that an end user would have, behaving exactly the same despite user's having 1.8.x or >=1.9.2. – GreyCat Dec 2 '10 at 9:25
1  
As much as I like RVM, that's not a solution to the problem. – the Tin Man Dec 2 '10 at 23:44
This is not a solution to the problem posed. – mpd Dec 8 '10 at 19:12
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