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I have a script that I run when behind a proxy called proxy.sh which auto-sets various proxy settings such as:

  • http_proxy=<PROXY>
  • https_proxy=<PROXY>

Once I run this script I would love if it could auto-intercept the ruby gem command and add the proxy information as well:

sudo gem install ..... => sudo gem install --http-proxy=<PROXY> ....

At first I wanted to write an alias but I understand I need to actually make a function? Is that correct?

How would I handle this?

If i run proxy.sh typing: sudo gem install TEST would automatically run sudo gem install --http-proxy=<PROXY> TEST

1 Answer 1

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You could make an alias. In ~/.bash_aliases :

alias sudo="sudo "
alias gemproxy="gem install --http-proxy=<PROXY>"

The sudo alias (with a space) is important if you want to use the alias gemproxy with sudo.

EDIT : to intercept gem install, you can add this in your .bash_aliases :

gem() {
    if [[ $@ == install* ]]; then
        arg=${@#"install "}
        command gem install --http-proxy=PROXY $arg
    fi
}

But with this, you will always export the proxy even if you're not behind it. You can add a verification to see if the environment variable http_proxy is set.

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  • This works but I really want to be able to intercept sudo gem install and auto-insert the proxy if i'm in proxy mode.
    – Jeef
    Apr 1, 2015 at 13:22
  • I have edited my answer. Maybe now it's what you want.
    – Shan-x
    Apr 1, 2015 at 13:39
  • I wrapped this in: if [[ -z "$http_proxy" ]]; then and it all worked great
    – Jeef
    Apr 8, 2015 at 15:03

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