233

On both my work and home computers, I recently upgraded Ruby to 2.3.1, using ruby-install. I use chruby as my Ruby switcher.

I started seeing this warning in my terminal:

Ignoring bcrypt-3.1.11 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine bcrypt --version 3.1.11
Ignoring bcrypt-3.1.10 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine bcrypt --version 3.1.10
Ignoring binding_of_caller-0.7.2 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine binding_of_caller --version 0.7.2
Ignoring byebug-9.0.5 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine byebug --version 9.0.5
Ignoring byebug-5.0.0 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine byebug --version 5.0.0
Ignoring concurrent-ruby-ext-1.0.2 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine concurrent-ruby-ext --version 1.0.2
Ignoring debug_inspector-0.0.2 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine debug_inspector --version 0.0.2

On my work, computer, the list was much longer, but easy to resolve. When I tried the suggested gem pristine GEM, it told me it couldn't find the gem, so I ran gem install GEM, and that solved it.

At home, nothing is working.

Things I have tried, from common sense and various other Stack questions:

  • gem pristine GEM
  • gem pristine --all
  • uninstalling and reinstalling the gem
  • gem update
  • gem update --system
  • bundle update
  • uninstalling and reinstalling bundler
  • uninstalling and reinstalling rails (Though, it's not a Rails specific problem.)
  • deleting ~/.bundle/
  • opening XCode and letting it install some extensions (It did need to do it, but it didn't fix anything.)
  • running brew doctor and solving all the minor issues, then brew update and brew upgrade
  • gem install curb (I can't imagine what this gem has to do with this issue, but two different people listed it as the last step of their fix to the same warning.)
7
  • 1
    I am even seeing the same warning if the gems are not installed. I uninstalled bcrypt and it still gave me two warnings about it. Aug 7, 2016 at 19:51
  • 1
    did you update bundler? uninstalling and reinstalling will just use whatever is in your Gemfile.lock. Bundler is the one who will build the extensions. Also, your output is listing multiple versions of gems so you should know this is system wide for that version of ruby (meaning you'll have multiple gems to rebuild).
    – Anthony
    Aug 7, 2016 at 21:43
  • I was in my home folder, not a Rails project, so there was no Gemfile. Aug 8, 2016 at 14:45
  • Same issue happened to me (using rvm). gem pristine --all did not work. Solved by deleting all gems including bundler. Then installed bundler gem install bundler and finally navigated back to my project and ran bundle install which reinstalled all my gems and everything is working Feb 5, 2018 at 16:03
  • In my case, it was caused by a vim extension. I did alias vim="rvm use system do vim" to work around it. But I only saw the warning when I exited vim so if you are seeing it in other situations this probably won't apply. Jan 3, 2019 at 17:32

24 Answers 24

246

I came across this exact issue today - getting warnings like this for gems that weren't even installed!

... Well, it turns out the gems were installed - for a different ruby than the one I had set active with chruby (2.2.3 vs 2.3.1).

Switching to all the different rubies and running gem pristine --all on all of them solved the problem.

10
  • 3
    This worked for me doing this only on the current ruby (I use rvm). Maybe this prevents someone from doing too much cleanup ;)
    – Sandro L
    Apr 11, 2017 at 11:44
  • 1
    Sometimes gem pristine --all will do no good. See this answer on Ask Different for more info.
    – GDP2
    Jan 29, 2018 at 6:51
  • 4
    if gem pristine --all has permission issues, you should check which ruby. brew link --overwrite ruby && source ~/.bash_profile and run gem pristine --all may help
    – Chris Yim
    Oct 20, 2018 at 4:01
  • 2
    None of those solutions are working for me and I have this same issue.
    – Alex Cohen
    Dec 18, 2018 at 18:59
  • 1
    gem pristine --all put me into several toubles, I strongly recommend not to use it without care
    – AleGiovane
    Sep 18, 2020 at 11:00
36

I ran into this issue and followed all the same commands as above, even going so far as to remove all my previously installed Ruby versions. However, the error persisted.

Turns out, there were some leftover gems for the various (previously uninstalled) versions in ~/.gem/ruby/. After removing the folders I no longer used, the errors disappeared.

4
  • 3
    This did it for me. rm -rf. I'd previously tried to pristine install all of my gems to no avail. Dec 6, 2016 at 19:49
  • 1
    This fixed it for me too after switching to asdf from ruby-install & chruby
    – omnikron
    Nov 11, 2021 at 17:58
  • 1
    this fixed sudo rm -rf ~/.gem/ruby/
    – Ram Suthar
    Dec 3, 2021 at 5:10
  • 1
    Removing the cache folder under ~/.gem/ruby/ fixed the issue. May 11, 2022 at 9:28
16

I've had this problem today too and it frustrated because I couldn't type because my whole editor flashed red with error messages.

I'm not entirely sure what exactly caused it but I believe it's because we have multiple ruby versions OR multiple ruby version managers installed and they overwrite each other and otherwise mess up your paths towards the gems.

The gem command also gets overwritten when you have rbenv and rvm.

See which ones you've installed by typing;

which rvm
which rbenv
which chruby

If one of those is installed it'll return a path. Then delete them, make sure to completely clean out all the directories and start with a clean install.


Remove

Here's what I did for rvm;

rvm implode
gem uninstall rvm
rm -rf ~/.rvm
rm -rf ~/.rvmrc

Here's what I did for rbenv

First installed https://github.com/meowsus/rbenv-clean, then

rbenv clean
sudo apt-get remove rbenv
rm -rf ~/.rbenv

Reinstall

Then you have a clean home directory to work from. I reïnstalled rbenv with How to install Ruby 2.1.4 on Ubuntu 14.04. And finally;

rbenv rehash
2
  • Just removing the rvm related stuff fixed this problem for me on macOS
    – neu242
    Aug 23, 2019 at 6:28
  • This solved my problem with msfconsole (aka metasploit) Oct 15, 2020 at 0:36
15

In my case the warning itself has suggested the solution , so I just run them one by one.

Ignoring bigdecimal-2.0.0 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine bigdecimal --version 2.0.0
Ignoring date-3.0.1 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine date --version 3.0.1
Ignoring dbm-1.1.0 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine dbm --version 1.1.0
Ignoring etc-1.1.0 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine etc --version 1.1.0

Here an example:

gem pristine bigdecimal --version 2.0.0

so running the command of each line has solved my problem.

2
  • Awesome, i just needed to open my eyes 👍
    – Elly Ambet
    Dec 30, 2022 at 15:47
  • works finally!!
    – Gaurav
    Nov 30, 2023 at 10:13
14

I did everything mentioned above including

  • xcode-select --install
  • reinstall ruby
  • reinstall all gems
  • gem pristine --all

but the issue was the same for me. I just rebooted my Mac as the last hope, and the warning messages are disappeared.

Weird, but if anyone's struggling with this issue after trying everything on StackOverflow, try reboot your machine.

1
  • 12
    Thanks for sharing the reboot tip. I had the same problem, on a Mac, and was able to resolve just by starting a new terminal session.
    – Libby
    Feb 5, 2018 at 17:27
9

Running gem pristine --all didn't help at first, but then I realized: the script I was running began with the line:

#!/usr/bin/ruby

On my macOS system (Catalina, but I don't think it matters), this points to the Ruby that came with the system, not the one installed by RVM. Running gem pristine --all was fixing up the RVM installation, but my script was calling a different version of Ruby.

The fix for me was to use the env command to call whichever Ruby is specified in the current shell's PATH. Changing the top line of the script to this fixed it:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby

3
  • Just happened to me – thanks! It means that bundle install installed the gems (and their native extensions) for a the ruby selected via the RVM Ruby switcher, where a script referring to the system Ruby cannot find them. Your solution is the standard practice to make Ruby scripts and gems work with user installed rubies (see).
    – tanius
    Apr 24, 2020 at 23:41
  • This put me on the right track! In my case, I wanted tmuxinator to be a util (not a bundled dep for a specific project), so I apt installed it on Ubuntu. So doing apt purge tmuxinator and then gem install tmuxinator made it work. I'll probably have to gem install it whenever I upgrade my non-project ruby version, but I like this better. Thanks!
    – labyrinth
    Jun 5, 2020 at 15:07
  • 1
    I wish I could upvote this thrice. Solved it for me. Dec 5, 2020 at 18:45
8

Adding my own flavor here. I use rbenv installed via Homebrew and was getting four of these "ignoring... extensions not built" messages. Specifically:

Ignoring bcrypt-3.1.12 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine bcrypt --version 3.1.12
Ignoring bindex-0.5.0 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine bindex --version 0.5.0
Ignoring bootsnap-1.3.2 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine bootsnap --version 1.3.2
Ignoring byebug-10.0.2 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine byebug --version 10.0.2

I tried many things in this thread with no luck. Finally in my case I did:

  • brew uninstall rbenv
  • rm -rf ~/.rbenv
  • brew install rbenv

At this point I was still getting the errors, but now I had only a single Ruby version to contend with:

$ rbenv versions
* system (set by /Users/will/.rbenv/version)

At this point I tried sudo gem pristine --all but was rejected for permissions on the system Gems directory.

So I went through and ran pristine on each gem, like

sudo gem pristine bcrypt --version 3.1.12 (etc)

And finally the errors were gone.

1
  • Fantastic, that saved my day! I tried everything else mentioned before your answer, and it did not work. Only your procedure made it for me. Thanks! Feb 24, 2021 at 17:37
4

TL;DR - Ruby gems don't like Rubies running from symlinks or moved from where they were built (because of embedded shebangs)

If the Ruby directory is invoked or environment vars point to a symlink'ed directory, or are copied or renamed, this message is likely. I am using chruby and was symlinking /opt/rubies/ -> /usr/local/ruby/, but Ruby's dynamic library-finding logic doesn't play well with this.

The solution in my case was to replace the symlink with actual rubies in /opt/rubies/ and run gem pristine --all in each Ruby. For others using RVM or Rbenv, good luck with that without starting over from scratch.

This may not be your exact issue, but hopefully it helps.

1
  • 1
    It turned out to be the running gem pristine --all on all of them part. Thanks for resurrecting this dead question. I was close to just burning it all down and starting over. Oct 6, 2016 at 1:10
4

If you have installed RVM, possible you're catching the error because you have installed different versions.

Check and remove useless versions, but I think this is not good approach. Anyway errors gone.

rvm list
rvm use ruby-version
rvm remove ruby-useless-version

After refresh cocoapods, it should be injected in .rvm GEM_HOME

gem uninstall cocoapods
gem install cocoapods

Probably pod COMMAND will throw the error about minitest gem, so – gem install minitest

0
4

Running Mac OS Catalina, brew and rbenv ...

Having come across this exact problem today, and gone through all the answers here I eventually stumbled across another reason for this error:

Ignoring nokogiri 1.10.7 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine nokogiri --version 1.10.7

And of course gem pristine did no work.

My problem was a hard coded GEM_HOME and GEM_PATH environment variables which were overriding rbenv.

So, check that you haven't set GEM_PATH and GEM_HOME in ~/.zshrc

1
  • Yup, was my issue also!
    – orkenstein
    Dec 14, 2022 at 12:17
3

This is an old thread, but I just came across this issue myself.

You don't need to restart your machine, you just need to refresh your environment, you can do this with the rehash command:

rehash

From the man page: rehash command re-computes the internal hash table of the contents of directories listed in the path environmental variable to account for new commands added.

3
  • 1
    What OS are you talking about?
    – rbanffy
    Jun 3, 2019 at 12:12
  • rehash or hash -r for bash is a shell command available on *nix. When the C shell starts, it builds a hash table of all the commands in its path: each command name and its absolute pathname. So, after you start a csh running, if new programs are added to directories along the path, you need to use the shell's rehash command to rebuild its hash table. (cf: docstore.mik.ua/orelly/unix3/upt/ch27_06.htm)
    – Yacc
    Mar 8, 2020 at 20:04
  • THIS! The point is that even with rbenv I had this issue but I forgot using rbenv rehash so the internals were still pointing to the system Ruby (macos) instead of the fresh installed one... so much for reading ;-)
    – Ray Oei
    Nov 30, 2021 at 22:34
3

This is also a problem when you're developing on Mac and then build a Docker image: https://forums.aws.amazon.com/thread.jspa?messageID=879802&tstart=0

When you do a "bundle install --deployment", bundler will create a vendor directory w/ your gems in it. Note that whilst this includes your gems in the local folder, it will only include the native extensions for your platform. As you're on macOS this will be Darwin. You'll need to do repeat the process on a 64-bit x86 linux environment.

3

Most comments here are on the right track. This problem often occurs after a Ruby version upgrade. I reviewed the gem command code and here is the gist of it.

Extensions are compiled into the gems/gem/ext subdirectory of the gems home directory. For example, on my Cygwin installation (and similarly under Raspbian), the BigDecimal extension is compiled into /usr/share/gems/gems/bigdecimal-1.3.5/ext/bigdecimal/bigdecimal.so.

However, this is not where the extension is referenced when executed - that is from /usr/lib/gems/ruby/ver/gem. Again using BigDecimal, the extension file when executed is loaded from /usr/lib/gems/ruby/2.3.0/bigdecimal-1.3.5/bigdecimal.so

Here is the key: in this same directory, there is an empty tag file /usr/lib/gems/ruby/2.3.0/bigdecimal-1.3.5/gem.build_complete

When the gem command starts up, it refers to the gems/specifications directory to get a list of installed gems and information as to whether they have extensions. If a gem does have extensions, gem (among other sanity checks) looks for the tag file gem.build_complete. If that is not found, it emits the error message "Ignoring gem because its extensions are not built".

Any action which rebuilds all extensions will fix this problem. Or, as total hack, if you in a hurry and brave, you can try copying all contents of /usr/lib/gems/ruby/oldver to /usr/lib/gems/ruby/newver e.g.

cd /usr/lib/gems/ruby
cp -nv 2.3.0/* 2.6 
2

Libby's suggestion to just start a new terminal session (which she commented on Sebastian Kim's answer) worked for me. Much quicker than any of the others too so I wanted to make it an answer so it was more visible.

1

I had this problem but only when I was starting tmux session using tmuxinator.

Turned out it's because I'm using tmuxinator from brew instead of installing it using gem install. Maybe using chruby at the same time contributed to the problem as well.

p/s: I also removed unused ruby from ~/.gem/ruby but I doubt that's the reason this issue was resolved for me.

0

Uninstall and reinstall of Vagrant also works. There's an unistall.tool bash script included in the installer .dmg image that will remove Vagrant.

Found this solution here: Updating Vagrant and Gems Extentions Not Built In

0

I had the same issue and I'm using rbenv. For some reason my global rbenv setting went missing. In order to fix this problem I set the global version to one of my rbenv versions... for instance:

rbenv global 2.5.1

0

On my case I was trying to run pristine --all but I was getting:

Ignoring ffi-1.11.1 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine ffi --version 1.11.1
Ignoring jaro_winkler-1.5.3 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine jaro_winkler --version 1.5.3
Ignoring psych-3.1.0 because its extensions are not built.  Try: gem pristine psych --version 3.1.0
/.rbenv/versions/2.3.1/lib/ruby/2.3.0/rubygems/core_ext/kernel_require.rb:55:in `require': incompatible library version - /.gem/gems/psych-3.1.0/lib/psych.bundle (fatal) 

Then, I deleted the content on Users/{{user.name}}⁩/⁨.gem⁩ then as I needed to run bundle install --force, it reinstalled everything, then the command pristine --all worked as expected

0

This solution worked for me for RubyMine IntelliJ

I had two different terminals being used and RVM and ruby<Version>.

Solution:

I had to switch it to the RVM version for the errors to go away in Preferences>Languages&Frameworks>Ruby SDK

Errors:

Ignoring executable-hooks-1.6.0 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine executable-hooks --version 1.6.0 rubymine

Ignoring gem-wrappers-1.4.0 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine gem-wrappers --version 1.4.0

enter image description here

0

If you are using rvm like me, the fix could a simple:

rvm get stable
rvm reload

As stated in this answer https://apple.stackexchange.com/a/192513

0

I have executed these commands in Terminal and worked for me:

  1. /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
  2. brew install ruby, it may need sudo (sudo brew install ruby).
  3. echo 'export PATH="/usr/local/opt/ruby/bin:$PATH"' >> ~/.bash_profile
  4. source ~/.bash_profile
  5. sudo gem pristine --all
0

In Ubuntu this worked for me.

  1. source ~/.bash_profile
  2. sudo gem pristine --all
0

I've stumbled across it while running ruby 2.6 under docker with gems installed with ruby 2.7. It appears in 2.7.0 the extension dir changed ($GEM_HOME/extensions/x86_64-linux -> $GEM_HOME/extensions/x86_64-linux-musl). As such ruby 2.6 couldn't find the installed extensions.

In my case I simply had to run the correct ruby version.

If that's not your case, bundle pristine won't help, since gems without their extensions are not considered installed.

You can follow the ruby's advice and do gem pristine GEM --version VERSION. But that will leave the old extensions dir. Which is probably not a big deal, but if you want to avoid that... If you're running the ruby (docker) image, you can delete $GEM_HOME (/usr/local/bundle) and reinstall all the gems.

More on it here.

0

After I run command brew install cocoapods, I was getting this error

Ignoring ffi-1.16.3 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine ffi --version 1.16.3
Ignoring ffi-1.15.5 because its extensions are not built. Try: gem pristine ffi --version 1.15.5

I have tried a lot of commands, nothing helped. Then I run

  • brew uninstall cocoapods
  • bundle install
  • gem install cocoapods
  • pod install

And it is installing now without above error.

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