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I'm in the process of writing a Ruby-based daemon to sit and run on one of my Ubuntu servers. I'll be wanting this to run on startup, so will be writing an upstart job file for it. However, I've used bundler for managing the various gems it uses and intend to do this after deploying it to the server:

bundle install --deployment

This puts bundler into the so-called 'deployment mode', whereby various options are set and all the gems are installed into a 'vendor' directory rather than system-wide. However this creates a problem with running it, whereby it must be executed from its own directory as this is where the gems end up:

<in the app's dir>
$ ./runmyapp
<it runs>

If I cd to a different location and then try to run it using it's full path, it fails:

<in another directory>
$ /path/to/runmyapp
<it crashes as it can't locate its gems>

I've read through lots of bundler documentation and this entire scenario is never even covered? Should I just install the gems to the system instead? Is there something else I ought to do?

3 Answers 3

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You use bundler as gem manager for your app. I think in this case using bundle exec is the best way to run executables.

If you run your app from different directory than directory that contains Gemfile you should set Gemfile location by setting BUNDLE_GEMFILE (see bundle help exec). Following will help you:

BUNDLE_GEMFILE=/path/to/Gemfile bundle exec /path/to/runmyapp
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    I thought bundle exec was for executing executables in the gems. That is, the gems which bundler has installed for my app based upon the gemfile, but not my own ones. Is that not true? Jul 31, 2011 at 14:10
  • bundle exec is for run executables in your gems environment. Citation from gembundler.com/man/bundle-exec.1.html: bundle-exec - Execute a command in the context of the bundle
    – petRUShka
    Jul 31, 2011 at 14:33
  • Well the way I read it, it implies its for executables provided by the gems themselves. However, just running it normally with the BUNDLE_GEMFILE variable set was good enough - I just updated the upstart config to set that variable. Therefore I consider this to be the accepted answer. Thanks for pointing me in the right direction. Jul 31, 2011 at 14:36
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    Setting this in a script with ENV["BUNDLE_GEMFILE"] = "/path/to/Gemfile" before you do Bundler.setup also works just fine. Sep 22, 2016 at 17:40
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Tackling a similar problem myself I ended up creating a wrapper script,

#!/bin/bash
BUNDLE_GEMFILE="$(dirname $0)"/Gemfile bundle exec ruby "$(dirname $0)"/app.rb $*

Here app.rb is the app's "main" entry point. You might call the wrapper script runmyapp or the app's name or whatever.

Note: $0 is set by bash to the wrapper script's file location, e.g. /home/foo/app/runmyapp or ./runmyapp

bundle exec "executes the command, making all gems specified in the Gemfile available to require in Ruby programs." (docs)

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There are some good answers here, but I thought I'd add a quick answer that works in my scenario, where I am explicitly setting up Bundler with a call to Bundler.require, and don't often execute the script via bundle exec.

If you are doing this, and the Gemfile/Gemfile.lock files are in the same directory as the script, you can use a combination of Dir.chdir and Kernel.__dir__ like so:

  Dir.chdir(__dir__) { Bundler.require }

This works by changing the directory for the call to Bundler.require (as this expects the relevant files to exist in the current working directory) before returning to the original directory.

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