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I recently started learning Ruby and Ruby on Rails, and have watched a plethora of getting started materials. I have been finding lately that I keep getting errors where gems won't install or they will be installed but they can't be used for some reason, and I have decided that I want to remove everything down to once again just having Ruby installed and start over with the installation. One training video had me install most of my gems with RVM, so I don't know if that changes anything.

So in short my question is "How to I get rid of RVM, Rubygems, and all installed Gems so that I can start over with just Ruby?"

Edit: I am on Mac OS 10.6

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8 Answers 8

187
gem uninstall -aIx

Uninstalls all gems without prompt.

Options

-a, --[no-]all                   Uninstall all matching versions
-I, --[no-]ignore-dependencies   Ignore dependency requirements while
                                 uninstalling
-x, --[no-]executables           Uninstall applicable executables without
                                 confirmation
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  • 7
    That gives me: ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::InstallError) gist is not installed in GEM_HOME, try: gem uninstall -i /usr/share/rubygems-integration/all gist Nov 2, 2020 at 22:58
  • 5
    then you should do as it suggest. then after that, rerun gem uninstall -aIx again. repeat if error occured for other gem untill it finisehd Jan 14, 2021 at 14:56
  • 3
    That's what I did, I had to repeat those steps a few dozen times. Sometimes, the gem was complaining that I didn't have the right permissions for a directory: ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::FilePermissionError) You don't have write permissions for the /usr/share/rubygems-integration/2.7.0/bin directory. In fact, the directory didn't exist: I just had to mkdir it and re-run the gem command.
    – Pierre
    Jun 18, 2022 at 16:03
  • So gem uninstall --all --ignore-dependencies --executables
    – Dorian
    Jan 16 at 15:06
140

From the RVM support site:

RVM installs everything into ~/.rvm. To remove RVM from your system run 'rm -rf ~/.rvm'. You may have one additional config file in ~/.rvmrc and of course the RVM hook in your bash/zsh startup files.

So, just go to the command line and type rm -rf ~/.rvm

All the installed gems are in the ~/.rvm folders, so doing the above will remove the gems and installed rubies in one go.

Gems you added pre-RVM with the default ruby install can be removed by typing this at the command prompt:

for x in `gem list --no-versions`; do gem uninstall $x -a -x -I; done
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  • 1
    I just ran that, but gems is still installed. It does however look like it reloaded it. Not sure if it reloaded with defaults from Mac XCode or what...
    – Dave Long
    Feb 5, 2011 at 15:31
  • added another line to get rid of the gems you added pre-RVM Feb 5, 2011 at 15:39
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    I'd add the '-all -x -I' options to gem uninstall to prevent it from prompting you (for binaries, versions, or dependencies) while uninstalling.
    – timmfin
    Feb 25, 2012 at 0:54
  • 5
    For reference, the full command is: for x in `gem list --no-versions`; do gem uninstall $x -a -x -I; done Sep 18, 2012 at 18:34
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    For more reference, another option: gem list --no-versions | xargs gem uninstall -aIx
    – trisweb
    Nov 20, 2012 at 16:29
35

For Windows and Unix copy/paste in command prompt (Ruby 1.9.x).

ruby -e "`gem list`.split(/$/).each { |line| puts `gem uninstall -Iax #{line.split(' ')[0]}` unless line.strip.empty? }"
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    ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::CommandLineError) Please specify at least one gem name (e.g. gem build GEMNAME) -e:1: no .<digit> floating literal anymore; put 0 before dot bundle (0.0.1) ^ -e:1: syntax error, unexpected tINTEGER bundle (0.0.1) ^ Feb 26, 2013 at 21:14
  • @isomorphismes not sure if I have fixed it, but you can try command now. Mar 4, 2013 at 9:41
29

using RVM, you could just type...

rvm gemset empty GEMSET

where GEMSET is the gemset which you would like to empty. then...

install bundle

yum install bundler and finally

bundle install
18

rvm implode (see cli docs) seems to work - and it even tells you where to look at for leftovers

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  • 2
    This is technically the most correct answer and exactly what it was designed for.
    – mpowered
    Oct 22, 2017 at 20:03
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    "implode - removes all ruby installations it manages, everything in ~/.rvm"
    – Nein
    May 21, 2020 at 11:36
  • "implode does not uninstall the RVM itself. Basically, there is no way to automatically uninstall RVM other than manually cleaning up everything that the installation did to your system. And that’s a huge downside. The only way to uninstall RVM is to manually clean up everything it did to your system." source: duseev.com/articles/rbenv-vs-rvm NOTE: I'm a novice and unqualified to determine whether the advice in the article is accurate. Nov 17, 2020 at 21:08
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    @MarkGavagan I agree it does not do everything, but it will tell you what else needs to be done (what I refer to above as "leftovers"). In fact, that very article's step zero on uninstalling rvm is... rvm impode :-)
    – chesterbr
    Nov 23, 2020 at 22:25
  • Does this have the same effect as rvm gemset empty GEMSET?
    – Ray
    Apr 14, 2021 at 8:01
7
  1. This is work for me on Ubuntu 16.04. For me, when I was executing command rails -v it throw errors because of NameError. I have installed 3 version of rails (4.2.0, 4.2.6, 5.0.0.1). I was trying to uninstall unnecessary gem using command gem uninstall rails -v version number but I won't able to, but I find a way to solve this problem. In order to uninstall all gems, you have to loop through all entries in gem list with bash scripting. This method is very inconvenient. Thanks to Rubygems 2.1.0, you now could do it with one command.

    STEP - 1

    Firstly, please make sure you upgrade your Rubygems to 2.1.0 or newer. For this run this command (Incase you are working on an older version. You can check your gem version using this command any one of them gem -v or gem --version)

    gem update --system

    gem --version

    STEP - 2

    Run this command in you terminal

    gem uninstall --all

    Step - 3

    Install gem bundles (it is not necessary I think just for precautions) gem install bundle

    Step - 4
    Install the rails on your system using this command gem install rails -v specific version you want to install you can check the rails version on the official site rails all versions example :- I have installed rails 4.2.6 version, you install as per requirement. gem install rails -v 4.2.6

    Step - 5

    Finally check the version of installed rails framework application by Using basic command rails -v. It will echoed the current version of rails frameworks. Enjoy :)

    References

http://ruby-journal.com/how-to-uninstall-all-ruby-gems/ http://guides.rubyonrails.org/v4.1/getting_started.html

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Step 1:

I first kept running into an error that said:

You don't have write permissions for the /usr/bin directory

To get permission, I became a root user with (this is potentially dangerous for reasons beyond my current understanding):

sudo -s

Credit

Step 2:

Then, I kept running into an error that said:

[gem] cannot be uninstalled because it is a default gem

This allowed me to uninstall everything:

for i in `gem list --no-versions`; do gem uninstall -aIx $i; done

Credit

1

FWIW, there are some weird cases where gems are installed but not really installed:

This should do the trick reasonably reliably.

gem uninstall -Iax `gem list  | grep default | awk '{print $1}'`
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  • You might want to grep for 'default:' instead (including the colon) since there are quite a few gems that include "default" in their name.
    – jox
    Dec 10, 2021 at 11:17

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