16

in ~/.irbrc i have these lines:

require 'irb/ext/save-history'
#History configuration
IRB.conf[:SAVE_HISTORY] = 100
IRB.conf[:HISTORY_FILE] = "#{ENV['HOME']}/.irb-save-history"

and yet when i run irb and hit the up arrow nothing happens. also the irb history file specified is not getting created and nothing is logged to it.

7
  • 1
    What platform are you using? I'm pretty sure the default OS X install doesn't have readline support built in due to licensing issues. Commented Jan 14, 2010 at 17:53
  • What you have there appears to work for me on doze, except that I have to hit two up arrows for some reason.
    – rogerdpack
    Commented Apr 27, 2010 at 18:54
  • This solution worked for me: stackoverflow.com/questions/1752461/history-not-saving Commented Jan 20, 2011 at 13:21
  • 4
    Code in the question worked fine for me on OS X Mavericks. Commented Dec 1, 2013 at 18:04
  • 2
    See also stackoverflow.com/questions/37847822/… which discusses how ruby must be complied with readline
    – Jared Beck
    Commented Jan 31, 2018 at 17:04

7 Answers 7

20

irb history works in Debian Linux out of the box. There's no etc/irbrc, nor do I have a ~/.irbrc. So, hmmmm.

This person put a bit more in his irbrc than you did. Do you suppose the ARGV.concat could be the missing piece?

require 'irb/completion'
require 'irb/ext/save-history'
ARGV.concat [ "--readline", "--prompt-mode", "simple" ]
IRB.conf[:SAVE_HISTORY] = 100
IRB.conf[:HISTORY_FILE] = "#{ENV['HOME']}/.irb-save-history" 
5
  • 1
    RVM automatically adds an irbrc that does it. Not present on Ubuntu out of box without RVM. Commented Oct 14, 2014 at 16:51
  • You are right! This is true of my Ubuntu 20.04-based Linux distro as well as Debian Bullseye (stable, which I tried out with Docker), no /etc/irbc, no ~/.irbc. The difference on my desktop was I had a ~/.inputrc that was messing up the up/down arrow key bindings for some reason. Folks who find themselves in that situation might want to try Ctrl + P to see if that works, before totally giving up.
    – Kevin E
    Commented Jan 13, 2023 at 1:47
  • I don't think that ARGV.concat does anything though; I had to use IRB.conf[:PROMPT_MODE] = :SIMPLE instead, as described in the irb docs. The other settings above were the defaults, excepting the history seems to default to 1000 and the :HISTORY_FILE is ~/.irb_history. So the config settings might be extraneous to the OP's problem, as stated, which probably has more to do with a bug in irb that the time that they posted, or a misconfigured readline or libedit library.
    – Kevin E
    Commented Jan 13, 2023 at 2:00
  • 1
    @TheDudeAbides I would bet money on things having changed since 2010 Commented Jan 13, 2023 at 2:54
  • Not that much, though, if you're using a Linux distro like CentOS 7.
    – Kevin E
    Commented Jan 23, 2023 at 22:10
11

I don't have an answer for you why the above doesn't work, but I did find a file, /etc/irbrc on my system (OS X - Snow Leopard, Ruby 1.8.7) that does provide a working, persistent history for me. So two pieces of advice: i) check your /etc/irbrc (or equivalent) to make sure that there isn't anything in there that might interfere with your settings, and ii) try out the settings below to see if you can get history working that way.

# Some default enhancements/settings for IRB, based on
# http://wiki.rubygarden.org/Ruby/page/show/Irb/TipsAndTricks

unless defined? ETC_IRBRC_LOADED

  # Require RubyGems by default.
  require 'rubygems'

  # Activate auto-completion.
  require 'irb/completion'

  # Use the simple prompt if possible.
  IRB.conf[:PROMPT_MODE] = :SIMPLE if IRB.conf[:PROMPT_MODE] == :DEFAULT

  # Setup permanent history.
  HISTFILE = "~/.irb_history"
  MAXHISTSIZE = 100
  begin
    histfile = File::expand_path(HISTFILE)
    if File::exists?(histfile)
      lines = IO::readlines(histfile).collect { |line| line.chomp }
      puts "Read #{lines.nitems} saved history commands from '#{histfile}'." if $VERBOSE
      Readline::HISTORY.push(*lines)
    else
      puts "History file '#{histfile}' was empty or non-existant." if $VERBOSE
    end
    Kernel::at_exit do
      lines = Readline::HISTORY.to_a.reverse.uniq.reverse
      lines = lines[-MAXHISTSIZE, MAXHISTSIZE] if lines.nitems > MAXHISTSIZE
      puts "Saving #{lines.length} history lines to '#{histfile}'." if $VERBOSE
      File::open(histfile, File::WRONLY|File::CREAT|File::TRUNC) { |io| io.puts lines.join("\n") }
    end
  rescue => e
    puts "Error when configuring permanent history: #{e}" if $VERBOSE
  end

  ETC_IRBRC_LOADED=true
end
4
  • despite that this seems kind of like faking it, this works for me. I know irb must have this feature built in somewhere. Oh well, i have a history now. thanks!
    – quinn
    Commented Jan 14, 2010 at 19:59
  • 1
    This was a great help to me. I would however note that I changed: lines.nitems into lines.count because lines.nitems don't work for me. Commented Jun 8, 2012 at 8:38
  • 2
    I also had to add: require 'irb/ext/save-history' Commented Jun 8, 2012 at 8:41
  • /etc/irbrc on OS X is now out of date. See this question. Commented Nov 19, 2016 at 20:15
1

This is a known bug with a patch available. Easiest solution is to overwrite save-history.rb:

/usr/lib/ruby/1.8/irb/ext/save-history.rb

with a fixed version:

http://pastie.org/513500

or to do it in one go:

wget -O /usr/lib/ruby/1.8/irb/ext/save-history.rb http://pastie.org/pastes/513500/download
1
  • 1
    is there a bug report on this anywhere? a linK? Thanks.
    – rogerdpack
    Commented Apr 27, 2010 at 18:52
0

Check to make sure you built ruby with libreadline as irb history seems to not work without it.

0

This may also happen if you have extra irb config file, e.g. ~/.irbrc. If this is the case, copy the content from liwp's answer to the extra config and it should work.

0

I had the same problem on ubuntu 20.04 and fixed it by running:

gem install irb
0

You may simply just need to set IRBRC environment variable. Add to your ~/.bash_profile or equivalent,

export IRBRC=~/.irbrc

which can/should contain:

require 'irb/ext/save-history'
IRB.conf[:SAVE_HISTORY] = 1000
IRB.conf[:HISTORY_FILE] = File.expand_path('~/.irb_history')

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.