So, it's probably a little moot because I'm not likely to ever run into the problem again (and the css_parser gem was the only iconv-requiring gems in my current Rails 3.1/Ruby 1.9.3 projects).
But it was a puzzle, so I wanted to find some way of solving it.
The problem is very iconv-specific in this case. There are other ruby deprecations, but for the most part they seem to go through Kernel#warn (if ruby) or rb_warn() (if C) - but the warning in iconv.c is a little different than the others - at any rate it's a puts to rb_stderr.
So maybe I can do the following
- Override Kernel#require to capture stderr
- Check for an iconv message after calling the original Kernel#require
- Raise an exception if the message found, thereby getting a trace
- Do this before bundler runs if at all possible.
It turns out I can't do #4 - because Bundler calls Kernel.require directly - but I can use Bundler to parse the Gemfile to give me a list of things to require myself.
So this is what I get - thanks to this stack overflow post for a pointer on capturing standard error - and the rubygems source for the idea on aliasing the original Kernel#require
# override Kernel#require to intercept stderr messages on require
# and raise a custom error if we find one mentioning 'iconv'
require "stringio"
class RequireError < StandardError
end
module Kernel
alias :the_original_require require
private :the_original_require
def capture_stderr
# The output stream must be an IO-like object. In this case we capture it in
# an in-memory IO object so we can return the string value. You can assign any
# IO object here.
previous_stderr, $stderr = $stderr, StringIO.new
yield
$stderr.string
ensure
# Restore the previous value of stderr (typically equal to STDERR).
$stderr = previous_stderr
end
def require(name)
captured_output = capture_stderr do
the_original_require(name)
end
if(captured_output =~ %r{iconv})
raise RequireError, 'iconv requirement found'
end
end
end
require 'bundler'
# load the list of Bundler requirements from the Gemfile
required_libraries = Bundler.definition.dependencies.map(&:name)
# loop through and require each, ignoring all errors other than
# our custom error
required_libraries.each do |requirement|
begin
require(requirement)
rescue Exception => e
if(e.class == RequireError)
raise e
end
end
end
And voila! A trace message that helps track down where the iconv requirement was.
In the end, probably just a search for "require 'iconv'" is still best (once it's clear that's the what was causing the error).
But, as in life. Some Yaks Must Be Shaved.