I am working through the Ruby on Rails 3 tutorial book and typed the following on the command line:

rake db:migrate

which produced the following warning.

WARNING: Global access to Rake DSL methods is deprecated.  Please Include
    ...  Rake::DSL into classes and modules which use the Rake DSL methods.

WARNING: DSL method DemoApp::Application#task called at /Users/imac/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p180@rails3tutorial/gems/railties-3.0.7/lib/rails/application.rb:215:in `initialize_tasks'

I am not sure what to do about it or how to work with it. I don't know any other command for Rake.

How can I fix this problem?

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5 Answers

up vote 62 down vote accepted

I found this in Stack Overflow question Ruby on Rails and Rake problems: uninitialized constant Rake::DSL. It refers to a @DHH tweet.

Put the following in your Gemfile

gem "rake", "0.8.7"

You may see something like

rake aborted!
You have already activated Rake 0.9.1 ...

I still had a copy of Rake 0.9.1 in my directory so I deleted it.

You can "delete" Rake 0.9.1 by running the following command:

gem uninstall rake -v=0.9.1

If you have multiple versions of the gem installed, you'll be prompted to pick a version.

After 0.9.1 was cleaned out, I ran

bundle update rake

and was finally able to create my database files. I was using rake db:create, but it should work for rake db:migrate as well.

I hope it helps.

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5  
That did not work for me. I had to actually remove rake 0.9.1 > gem uninstall rake -v=0.9.1 and then > bundle update Thanks Antonio – Antonio Rosado Jun 1 '11 at 12:20
1  
I agree with Antonio - when I said to remove rake 0.9.1 I meant through using gem uninstall rake -v=0.9.1. My mistake for not making it clear. Thanks for the clarification Antonio! Cheers, Brian – Brian Bruijn Jun 1 '11 at 17:46
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Thanks worked like a charm. – chell Jun 2 '11 at 1:41
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I don’t think it’s good to deliberately use old libraries, when newer one can be made to work, seeing comment below. – Smar Jun 11 '11 at 19:52
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The more simple solution is the one suggested by NPatel below. Just add one line to Rakefile. – Slobodan Kovacevic Jun 12 '11 at 11:43
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Adding include Rake::DSL to the Rakefile before the applications load_tasks were called also worked for me.

So in the above user's case before the DemoApp::Application.load_tasks in the Rakefile.

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Thanks. Fixed my "WARNING: Global access to Rake DSL methods is deprecated." problem. – Slobodan Kovacevic Jun 12 '11 at 11:41
Is this the proper way to fix this issue? – Marc Jun 15 '11 at 8:54
2  
@Marc, currently this is the only fix I know off without upgrading to rails 3.0.8 or higher. This issue is resolved in that release: github.com/rails/rails/commit/…. If you find a better fix please let me know. Also, according to the warning I would think that it is the proper fix. – NPatel Jun 16 '11 at 9:14
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This is the solution I went with. I'd prefer to simply add the line than to play games with which version of Rake works with what. – jaydel Jun 20 '11 at 12:36
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This worked for me with 1.9.2 and Rails 3.0.7 with Rake 0.9.2 – Steven Chanin Jul 19 '11 at 16:46
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I was having the same problem on Windows with the installer. Ruby 1.9.2 and Rails 3.0.9. Here is what I did:

bundle update rake
bundle show rake

After doing that I was running rake 0.9.2.

Then I updated the Rakefile in application root folder as follows:

require File.expand_path('../config/application', __FILE__)
require 'rake'
# If you named your application something other than SampleApp, change that below
module ::SampleApp
    class Application
        include Rake::DSL
    end
end

module ::RakeFileUtils
    extend Rake::FileUtilsExt
end

SampleApp::Application.load_tasks

As noted in the comment, make sure the name of your app is correct in the two appropriate lines above.

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And to get the heroku rake db:migrate command to work, I also had to add require 'rake/dsl_definition' to the rakefile (above the require 'rake' line). – LikeMaBell Jul 1 '11 at 11:15
Doing all of this works for me, but isn't needed. The suggestion by NPatel handled it fine. – Scott S. Jul 2 '11 at 2:07
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If you are seeing this on later versions of Rails (like 3.+) you may also want to verify that your environment is clean by using RVM http://beginrescueend.com/ and creating a specific ruby & gemset for your projects.

Use an .rvmrc file on a per-project basis, this will guarantee you aren't getting older system gems into your projects. Which has bitten me before.

This prevents having to monkey around with generated Rakefiles & such.

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bundle exec rake db:migrate will solve your ruby version issues

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