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I'm trying to use the Mongoid / Devise Rails 3.1 template (Mongoid and Devise), and I keep getting an error stating ExecJS cannot find a JavaScript runtime. Fair enough when I didn't have any installed, but I've tried installing Node.js, Mustang and the Ruby Racer, but nothing is working.

I could not find a JavaScript runtime. See sstephenson/ExecJS (GitHub) for a list of available runtimes (ExecJS::RuntimeUnavailable).

What do I need to do to get this working?

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  • 4
    btw - I am using ubuntu karmic.
    – srboisvert
    Jun 8, 2011 at 18:21
  • You should really consider changing the answer. The Node.js answer is not nearly as good as the execjs/rubyracer. Feb 2, 2013 at 4:43
  • 3
    The rubyracer has other issues with it. Heroku no longer recommends including it in your Gemfile if you can avoid it. devcenter.heroku.com/articles/rails-asset-pipeline#therubyracer I think that installing a proper Javascript runtime on Ubuntu is the correct answer to this question. Mar 27, 2013 at 16:00

18 Answers 18

453

Ubuntu Users

I'm on Ubuntu 11.04 and had similar issues. Installing Node.js fixed it.

As of Ubuntu 13.04 x64 you only need to run:

sudo apt-get install nodejs

This will solve the problem.


CentOS/RedHat Users

sudo yum install nodejs
16
  • 1
    tried it. no luck. I wonder if it is a rvm conflict or something. Everything other people have suggested hasn't worked for me.
    – srboisvert
    Jun 8, 2011 at 18:21
  • 78
    gem 'execjs' gem 'therubyracer' it's a better solution than this one.
    – dwaynemac
    Aug 2, 2011 at 14:42
  • 27
    Heroku is now strongly discouraging therubyracer due to memory use. I installed nodejs on my dev machine per this answer and took therubyracer out of my gemfile. See also stackoverflow.com/questions/7092107/….
    – Mark Berry
    Jan 17, 2012 at 1:58
  • 11
    @dwaynemac I disagree. I'd rather the runtime exist as an OS library (as with Mac and Windows by default), rather than adding yet another gem to the dependancy list. Feb 2, 2012 at 14:13
  • 1
    It seems that therubyracer and execjs are causing problems with heroku deployment, unless there's something else that was modified that I missed. This is the preferred solution.
    – Sturm
    Mar 14, 2013 at 22:35
446

Just add ExecJS and the Ruby Racer in your gem file and run bundle install after.

gem 'execjs'

gem 'therubyracer'

Everything should be fine after.

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  • 6
    This worked for me, rails 3.1rc4 and Ubuntu 11.04 (my first try with rails 3.1). I was trying to generate a scaffold when I got the error. Still pretty lame that rails 3.1 is "broken" out of the box. Jun 24, 2011 at 21:00
  • 35
    For Rails 3.1 RC 6, you just need to specify gem 'therubyracer'
    – Amree
    Aug 18, 2011 at 9:07
  • 5
    Is there anyway to have these gems included in the default Gemfile when a new application is created? Sep 25, 2011 at 16:16
  • 2
    this is a better solution than installing node.js. If you're deploying to a remote server or sharing the app with other developers, having everyone install node.js is a lot more pain than just running bundle install, which they would be doing anyway.
    – jdkealy
    Oct 29, 2011 at 12:34
  • 20
    Heroku is now strongly discouraging therubyracer due to memory use. I installed nodejs on my dev machine (github.com/joyent/node/wiki/…) and took therubyracer out of my gemfile. See also stackoverflow.com/questions/7092107/….
    – Mark Berry
    Jan 17, 2012 at 1:56
78

In your Gem file, write

gem 'execjs'
gem 'therubyracer'

and then run

bundle install

Everything works fine for me :)

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  • 10
    You don't need to add 'execjs' Feb 21, 2012 at 17:53
  • Yes u r right in rails 3.2.1 you have to use only gem'therubyracer' Feb 22, 2012 at 10:47
  • Thanks @manish nautiyal and @ Peter Mortensen. it works for me
    – Ravindra
    Aug 2, 2013 at 13:33
48

I had a similar problem: my Rails 3.1 app worked fine on Windows but got the same error as the OP when running on Linux. The fix that worked for me on both platforms was to add the following to my Gemfile:

gem 'therubyracer', :platforms => :ruby

The trick is knowing that :platforms => :ruby actually means only use this gem with "C Ruby (MRI) or Rubinius, but NOT Windows."

Other possible values for :platforms are described in the bundler man page.

FYI: Windows has a builtin JavaScript engine which execjs can locate. On Linux there is not a builtin although there are several available that one can install. therubyracer is one of them. Others are listed in the execjs README.md.

3
  • Thanks, this one fixed it for me on Ubuntu Oneiric using rvm installation of ruby 1.9.3 and Rails 3.2.1
    – Yashima
    Mar 1, 2012 at 16:27
  • I ran into the error on a CentOS server with node.js installed. This got me past it. Thanks!
    – ncherro
    Feb 20, 2013 at 23:14
  • 1
    New man page for bundler gemfile: bundler.io/v2.2/man/gemfile.5.html#PLATFORMS
    – Luke Abel
    Jan 13, 2021 at 21:05
37

Adding the following gem to my Gemfile solved the issue:

gem 'therubyracer'

Then bundle your new dependencies:

$ bundle install
2
  • also add gem 'execjs' in Gemfile
    – Bijendra
    Dec 14, 2011 at 14:47
  • 6
    execjs is already included by rails now. It was only also required during the release candidates.
    – JDutil
    Dec 14, 2011 at 23:09
17

An alternative way is to just bundle without the gem group that contains the things you don't have.

So do:

bundle install --without assets

you don't have to modify the Gemfile at all, providing of course you are not doing asset chain stuff - which usually applies in non-development environments. Bundle will remember your '--without' setting in the .bundle/config file.

2
  • Best Answer. Worked for rails version 3.2.3 Apr 12, 2012 at 5:23
  • 1
    This is great, and such a simple fix. The Heroku site says RubyRacer is no longer required (with Cedar stack) so I was puzzled over why suddenly my program wasn't running locally. This did the trick.
    – Mike Blyth
    Aug 20, 2012 at 21:41
8

Add following gems in your gem file

gem 'therubyracer'
gem 'execjs'

and run

bundle install

you are done :)

7

For amazon linux(AMI):

sudo yum install nodejs npm --enablerepo=epel
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  • 2
    Thanks, this should be in a higher level
    – damuz91
    May 17, 2016 at 13:56
  • 1
    this was essential to getting a capistrano deployment to work on AWS standard linux distro.
    – jjk
    Nov 16, 2017 at 23:42
6

I had this same error but only on my staging server not my production environment. nodejs was already installed on both environments.

By typing:

which node

I found out that the node command was located in: /usr/bin/node on production but: /usr/local/bin/node in staging.

After creating a symlink on staging i.e. :

sudo ln -s /usr/local/bin/node /usr/bin/node

the application then worked in staging.

No muss no fuss.

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  • works like charm! A advice: I needed make symlink for nodejs also Jan 13, 2019 at 15:18
  • BOOM. Still a great answer in 2021. Kudos. In my case, I had to simlink for NVM, but the process was the same.
    – Matt West
    Apr 30, 2021 at 21:38
4

I used to add the Ruby Racer to the Gem file to fix it. But hey, Node.js works!

1
  • how do you add nodejs to the gemfile? I didn't find a nodejs gem. Feb 28, 2014 at 20:41
4

I installed node via nvm and encountered this issue when deploying with Capistrano. Capistrano didn't load nvm automatically because it runs non-interactively.

To fix, simply move the lines that nvm adds to your ~/.bashrc up to the top. The file will then look something like this:

export NVM_DIR="$HOME/.nvm"
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh"  # This loads nvm
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion"  # This loads nvm bash_completion

# If not running interactively, don't do anything
case $- in
    *i*) ;;
      *) return;;
esac
3

Don't Use RubyRacer as it is bad on memory. Installing Node.js as suggested by some people here is a better idea.

This list of available runtimes that can be used by ExecJs Library also documents the use of Node.js

https://github.com/sstephenson/execjs

So, Node.js is not an overkill, and much better solution than using the RubyRacer.

2

FYI, this fixed the problem for me... it's a pathing problem: http://forums.freebsd.org/showthread.php?t=35539

0
1

The answer on a Mac in 2022 is simply:

brew install nodejs

Then rerun rails server.

0

I started getting this problem when I started using rbenv with Ruby 1.9.3 where as my system ruby is 1.8.7. The gem is installed in both places but for some reason the rails script didn't pick it up. But adding the "execjs" and "therubyracer" to the Gemfile did the trick.

0

In your gem file Uncomment this line.

19 # gem 'therubyracer', platforms: :ruby

And run bundle install

You are ready to work. :)

0

Attempting to debug in RubyMine using Ubuntu 18.04, Ruby 2.6.*, Rails 5, & RubyMine 2019.1.1, I ran into the same issue.

To resolve the issue, I uncommented the mini_racer line from my Gemfile and then ran bundle:

# See https://github.com/rails/execjs#readme for more supported runtimes
# gem 'mini_racer', platforms: :ruby

Change to:

# See https://github.com/rails/execjs#readme for more supported runtimes
gem 'mini_racer', platforms: :ruby
0

I'm using Rails 7 and the bootstrap 5.2.3 Gem. On production it runs in a Docker Container, based on Alpine Linux. For my case it was not enough to install nodejs and npm. I had to install yarn like this:

apk add --no-cache yarn

Only after that, the error message disappeared on production.

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