10

I have a website using Jekyll with Github Pages. After previously messing about with versions and RVM on another computer, on this one I opted to stick with just one version of Ruby and per-project environments using bundler.

I have a pretty simple Gemfile:

[$]> cat Gemfile
source 'https://rubygems.org'
gem 'github-pages'

and bundler config:

[$]> cat .bundle/config
---
BUNDLE_PATH: env
BUNDLE_DISABLE_SHARED_GEMS: '1'

When I run any command (jekyll, gem, irb) through bundle exec, I get a dependency error:

[$]> bundle exec jekyll
Could not find RedCloth-4.2.9 in any of the sources
Run `bundle install` to install missing gems.

However, the bundle is already installed:

[$]> bundle install
Using RedCloth 4.2.9
Using i18n 0.6.11
Using json 1.8.1
[snip]
Using github-pages 29
Using bundler 1.7.7
Your bundle is complete!
It was installed into ./env

I'm at a bit of a loss as to how bundler can think the gems are installed when using one subcommand, but think they're missing when using another.

[$]> which ruby
/usr/local/bin/ruby
[$]> which bundler
/usr/local/bin/bundler
[$]> ruby --version
ruby 2.2.0p0 (2014-12-25 revision 49005) [x86_64-darwin14]
[$]> bundler --version
Bundler version 1.7.7
2
  • I assume that you earlier did a bundle install --path ./env to set up the local environment for the gems? Have you tried bundle install --local to update this? What happens if you recreate all this in a new directory?
    – Andy Jones
    Commented Jan 28, 2015 at 14:35
  • None of the answers solved this for me. I am using Mac. Hopefully more answers will come. Commented Jul 7, 2016 at 17:56

4 Answers 4

7

After deleting the env directory and reinstalling, I noticed it created subdirectories for two Ruby versions - 2.1.0 and 2.2.0. The latter was my current version of Ruby, but the directory was empty (all the gems were installed into the env/ruby/2.1.0/gems directory). This, combined with Oliver's answer about rbenv, got me thinking about mismatched versions.

I reinstalled bundler with a simple gem install bundler, reran bundle install, and all is good.

It seems in general the answer is to sort out issues with bundler installing for a different version of Ruby than you're actually using. It seems strange to me it would use one thing for bundle install and another for bundle exec, but *shrug* whatever.

4

I had exactly the same problem after installing rbenv as my Ruby manager. In the end I solved the problem with:

rbenv rehash

(additionally you may need to restart terminal, as per @joel-glovier's comment)

That fact it's complaining about Redcloth 4.2.9 is actually a red herring. Bundler probably can't find any of the gems but Redcloth is the first one it looks for and so it exits imediately with that error.

Basically I'd installed rbenv and ruby 2.2.2 and changed to that version with rbenv global 2.2.2 but I'd forgotten to run rbenv rehash. So I'm guessing when running bundle install it was looking at my previously used version of ruby (system ruby) to see what gems were installed but when running bundle exec jekyll serve it was looking at my new ruby version and not finding any of the gems.

2
  • This solution worked for me too, although I didn't realize it for about 20 minutes until it dawned on me that I probably needed to restart my current shell for the rbenv rehash changes to take effect. After closing my iTerm tab and reopening, everything worked as expected. Commented Dec 30, 2015 at 23:34
  • 1
    Thanks, I'll add that as a recommendation to my answer. Commented Jan 2, 2016 at 10:32
1

I had to open ./.bundle/config and set BUNDLE_DISABLE_SHARED_GEMS to true for bundle the gems to be properly locally stored.

0

I had defined BUNDLE_GEMFILE = /home/app/current/Gemfile in .bashrc file. That broke the bundle exec while deploying a new version to the server. Check with env that you don't have the BUNDLE_GEMFILE defined in your environment variables.

I added the BUNDLE_GEMFILE into the .bashrc file to ease with monit commands. Now I just define the variable in the beginning of the monit command.

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.