When you said "I tried to add "require_relative" to file1 in my spec and still does not work"
were you talking about file2_spec.rb?
It just looks like you've not got require_relative in File2?
With the following, I get the same as you:
$ find -type f
./lib/modules/file1.rb
./lib/modules/file2.rb
./spec/file2_spec.rb
$ cat lib/modules/file1.rb
puts "hello world"
$ cat lib/modules/file2.rb
require 'file1'
$ cat spec/file2_spec.rb
require_relative '../lib/modules/file2'
$ ruby spec/file2_spec.rb
/opt/chefdk/embedded/lib/ruby/site_ruby/2.1.0/rubygems/core_ext/kernel_require.rb:54:in `require': cannot load such file -- file1 (LoadError)
from /opt/chefdk/embedded/lib/ruby/site_ruby/2.1.0/rubygems/core_ext/kernel_require.rb:54:in `require'
from /apps/stackoverflow/lib/modules/file2.rb:1:in `<top (required)>'
from spec/file2_spec.rb:1:in `require_relative'
from spec/file2_spec.rb:1:in `<main>'
But with a relative include in file2.rb, it works fine:
$ cat spec/file2_spec.rb
require_relative '../lib/modules/file2'
$ cat lib/modules/file2.rb
require_relative 'file1'
$ ruby spec/file2_spec.rb
hello world
That said, if you're looking to create a library, then it's probably worth setting up your LOAD_PATH properly so you don't have to do this everywhere:
$ cat spec/file2_spec.rb
$LOAD_PATH.unshift("{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/../lib/modules")
require 'file2'
$ cat lib/modules/file2.rb
require 'file1'
$ ruby spec/file2_spec.rb
hello world
(or just setup your environment variables etc)
NB, the use of
require './file1'
does a require relative to the working directory, so it's not equivalent to
require_relative 'file1'