I need to update my ruby version from 2.0.0 to the latest version, I can not use some gems because my version is not updated. I had used Homebrew to install Ruby some time ago, How can i update my Ruby version?
Open your terminal and run
curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rvm/rvm/master/binscripts/rvm-installer | bash -s stable
When this is complete, you need to restart your terminal for the rvm
command to work.
Now, run rvm list known
This shows the list of versions of the ruby.
Now, run rvm install ruby@latest
to get the latest ruby version.
If you type ruby -v
in the terminal, you should see ruby X.X.X
.
If it still shows you ruby 2.0.
, run rvm use ruby-X.X.X --default
.
Prerequisites for windows 10:
- C compiler. You can use http://www.mingw.org/
make
command available otherwise it will complain that "bash: make: command not found". You can install it by runningmingw-get install msys-make
- Add "C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin" and "C:\MinGW\bin" to your path enviroment variable
Brew only solution
Update:
From the comments (kudos to Maksim Luzik), I haven't tested but seems like a more elegant solution:
After installing ruby through brew, run following command to update the links to the latest ruby installation:
brew link --overwrite ruby
Original answer:
Late to the party, but using brew is enough. It's not necessary to install rvm and for me it just complicated things.
By brew install ruby
you're actually installing the latest (currently v2.4.0). However, your path finds 2.0.0 first. To avoid this just change precedence (source). I did this by changing ~/.profile
and setting:
export PATH=/usr/local/bin:$PATH
After this I found that bundler gem was still using version 2.0.0, just install it again: gem install bundler
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2Exactly what I was looking for, thanks. If I was a ruby dev then rvm would make sense, but I'm not, so this is perfect. – Max Jun 23 '17 at 3:17
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4
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10or after installing ruby through brew, run following command to update the links to the latest ruby installation:
brew link --overwrite ruby
– Maksim Luzik Aug 31 '17 at 14:41 -
1instead of
overwrite
ruby version, you can just writebrew unlink ruby && brew link ruby
– hamsternik Nov 2 '17 at 15:25 -
8@MaksimLuzik 's solution does not work for me in MacOS.
brew link --overwrite ruby
leads toWarning: Refusing to link macOS-provided software: ruby
– Rafael Beckel Jul 3 '19 at 7:42
I recommend rbenv* https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv
* If this meets your criteria: https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv/wiki/Why-rbenv?:
rbenv does…
- Provide support for specifying application-specific Ruby versions.
- Let you change the global Ruby version on a per-user basis.
- Allow you to override the Ruby version with an environment variable.
In contrast with RVM, rbenv does not…
- Need to be loaded into your shell. Instead, rbenv's shim approach works by adding a directory to your
$PATH
.- Override shell commands like
cd
or require prompt hacks. That's dangerous and error-prone.- Have a configuration file. There's nothing to configure except which version of Ruby you want to use.
- Install Ruby. You can build and install Ruby yourself, or use ruby-build to automate the process.
- Manage gemsets. Bundler is a better way to manage application dependencies. If you have projects that are not yet using Bundler you can install the rbenv-gemset plugin.
- Require changes to Ruby libraries for compatibility. The simplicity of rbenv means as long as it's in your
$PATH
, nothing else needs to know about it.
INSTALLATION
Install Homebrew http://brew.sh
Then:
$ brew update$ brew install rbenv$ brew install rbenv ruby-build # Add rbenv to bash so that it loads every time you open a terminal echo 'if which rbenv > /dev/null; then eval "$(rbenv init -)"; fi' >> ~/.bash_profile source ~/.bash_profile
UPDATE
There's one additional step afterbrew install rbenv
Runrbenv init
and add one line to.bash_profile
as it states. After that reopen your terminal window […] SGI Sep 30 at 12:01 —https://stackoverflow.com/users/119770
$ rbenv install --list Available versions: 1.8.5-p113 1.8.5-p114 […] 2.3.1 2.4.0-dev jruby-1.5.6 […] $ rbenv install 2.3.1 […]
Set the global version:
$ rbenv global 2.3.1 $ ruby -v ruby 2.3.1p112 (2016-04-26 revision 54768) [x86_64-darwin15]
Set the local version of your repo by adding .ruby-version
to your repo's root dir:
$ cd ~/whatevs/projects/new_repo $ echo "2.3.1" > .ruby-version
For MacOS visit this link
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3@ChuchaC No prob. But before you do, this is from the rbenv readme: "Compatibility note: rbenv is incompatible with RVM. Please make sure to fully uninstall RVM and remove any references to it from your shell initialization files before installing rbenv." — github.com/rbenv/rbenv#installation – SoAwesomeMan Jul 6 '16 at 2:33
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18didn't helped. Still getting standard 2.0.0 version for
ruby -v
afterrbenv global ...
– tuxSlayer Sep 8 '16 at 10:57 -
8There's one additional step after
brew install rbenv
Runrbenv init
and add one line to .bash_profile as it states. After that reopen your terminal window, dorbenv install 2.3.1
,rbenv global 2.3.1
and rbenv will do its work – SGI Sep 30 '16 at 12:01 -
7Probably late but for future references for people who encountered the same issue as @tuxSlayer ,
rbenv rehash
afterrbenv global
worked for me – Sean Feb 1 '17 at 3:01 -
2After
rbenv init
,ruby -v
outputs the correct version 2.1.2, but bundle runs encounters some error like thispaperclip-5.0.0.beta1 requires ruby version >= 2.1.0, which is incompatible with the current version, ruby 2.0.0p648
. Finally manage to get it work with a run ofrbenv rehash
. Thanks @Sean – James Apr 14 '17 at 3:43
Open Terminal:
sudo gem update --system
It works!
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3This does indeed seem to work, and is a unmeasurably more straight forward than the other answers. But when installing some gems (listen for example) they complain that the version is lower than required. – William Isted Nov 9 '16 at 9:38
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9
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4I was misled by this answer too. It "works" in that no errors are generated when you run it from the console. However, it does not update Ruby. It updates Ruby Gems. Follow one of the other answers to update Ruby (using OS X Sierra). – informaton Aug 14 '17 at 19:40
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Tried it, but i got the following error:
ERROR: Error installing rubygems-update: rubygems-update requires Ruby version >= 2.3.0. ERROR: While executing gem ... (NoMethodError) undefined method `version' for nil:NilClass
– Cesare Iurlaro Jul 20 '20 at 13:26
Fast way to upgrade ruby to v2.4+
brew upgrade ruby
or
sudo gem update --system
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5This appears to do a ton of stuff, but upgrading ruby isn't one of them. It terminates with:
/usr/local/Homebrew/Library/Homebrew/brew.rb:12:in '<main>': Homebrew must be run under Ruby 2.3! You're running 2.0.0. (RuntimeError)
– nkoren Jan 5 '18 at 16:06 -
1This is the correct and best way to upgrade ruby version using brew. – user1101733 Apr 23 '18 at 20:12
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Doesn't work for me.
ERROR: While executing gem ... (Errno::EPERM) Operation not permitted @ rb_sysopen - /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/2.3/usr/bin/gem
– Sébastien Loisel Mar 20 '20 at 10:14 -
@SébastienLoisel can you please give some detail about your OS, command etc. – fatihyildizhan Mar 20 '20 at 10:15
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1@fatihyildizhan apparently ruby/gems/etc is in a semibroken state on Mavericks. I've resolved my issues by upgrading to Catalina. I don't remember all the errors I had, but there were multitudes. I can't remember if I was trying to upgrade cocoapods or gems or what, but it was essentially hopeless. – Sébastien Loisel Mar 21 '20 at 14:05
You can specify the latest version of ruby by looking at https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/downloads/
Fetch the latest version:
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable --ruby
Install it:
rvm install 2.2
Use it as default:
rvm use 2.2 --default
Or run the latest command from ruby:
rvm install ruby --latest
rvm use 2.2 --default
In case anyone gets the same error I did: “Requirements installation failed with status: 1.” here's what to do:
Install Homebrew (for some reason might not work automatically) with this command:
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
Then proceed to install rvm again using
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable --ruby
Quit and reopen Terminal and then:
rvm install 2.2
rvm use 2.2 --default
brew install rbenv ruby-build
echo 'if which rbenv > /dev/null; then eval "$(rbenv init -)"; fi' >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
rbenv install 2.6.5
rbenv global 2.6.5
ruby -v
In terminal : rvm gemset use global
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5While this code snippet may be the solution, including an explanation really helps to improve the quality of your post. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, and those people might not know the reasons for your code suggestion. – Adam Apr 13 '17 at 15:21
If you are on mac, Use rvm to install your specific version of ruby. See https://owanateamachree.medium.com/how-to-install-ruby-using-ruby-version-manager-rvm-on-macos-mojave-ab53f6d8d4ec
Make sure you follow all the steps. This worked for me.
Simplest way is definitely to enter the following command in the terminal:
sudo gem update --system
You can add the flag --no-document
if you do not want to download the documentation. Here is sample output after running the command:
sudo gem update --system
Password:
Updating rubygems-update
Fetching: rubygems-update-2.6.8.gem (100%)
Successfully installed rubygems-update-2.6.8
Parsing documentation for rubygems-update-2.6.8
Installing ri documentation for rubygems-update-2.6.8
Installing darkfish documentation for rubygems-update-2.6.8
Installing RubyGems 2.6.8
RubyGems 2.6.8 installed
Parsing documentation for rubygems-2.6.8
Installing ri documentation for rubygems-2.6.8
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RubyGems installed the following executables:
/System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/2.0/usr/bin/gem
Ruby Interactive (ri) documentation was installed. ri is kind of like man
pages for ruby libraries. You may access it like this:
ri Classname
ri Classname.class_method
ri Classname#instance_method
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1Isn't this the same as the answer above? I'm curious why the number of downvotes here versus upvotes there? Is it because of the duplicate answer, or is it because people did not realize soon enough, that the earlier solution was also just for rubygems, not Ruby? – informaton Aug 14 '17 at 19:27
which rvm
orwhich rbenv
in your command line – MageeWorld Jul 5 '16 at 1:36brew install ruby
is enough. check here – Venugopal Oct 27 '18 at 6:04