The program 'gem' can be found in the following packages Windows Bash - ruby-on-rails

I have installed Ruby via RVM on Windows Insider Build(Ubuntu Bash). RVM installed successfully and so did ruby.
I have also installed bundler with "gem install bundler". Updated few gems and stuff. But now it says on ruby -v
cooldudeabhi#ACERASPIRE:~$ ruby -v
The program 'ruby' can be found in the following packages:
* ruby
* ruby1.8
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
cooldudeabhi#ACERASPIRE:~$ gem
The program 'gem' can be found in the following packages:
* ruby
* rubygems
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
cooldudeabhi#ACERASPIRE:~$
I suspect its a PATH problem but I am not sure if it really is? If its a PATH problem I don't know what to set in bashrc files please tell that. Thanks
I have found similar question on stackoverflow but it doesn't help in case of Windows.
Also /usr/local/bin is empty that's strange

Add this line to your profile settings (.bashrc or .bash_profile)
[[ -s "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm" ]] && source "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm" # Load RVM into a shell session *as a function*
answer referred from here

Related

Ruby does not detect after installing using RVM

My configurations
Ubuntu 14.04 amd64
I followed this tutorial to install Ruby
Successfully installed ruby.
Closed the Terminal.
Checking
ruby -v
shows
The program 'ruby' can be found in the following packages:
* ruby
* ruby1.8
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
4.Runs the command
[[ -s "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm" ]] && source "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm"
from the tutorial and then check with ruby -v and it works !!( Shows the version )
5.I tried a many times by closing the terminal and typing ruby -v command every time it shows ruby is not installed and typed the same command from the tutorial then it detect the ruby.
How can avoid this ?
The instructions on making rvm work in gnome-terminal can be found here, quoting the instructions:
For RVM to work properly, you have to set the 'Run command as login
shell' checkbox on the Title and Command tab inside of
gnome-terminal's Settings page

downloaded ruby on rails but it wont run commands

I downloaded ruby on rails on ubuntu 12.10 through this tutorial http://technical-feeds.blogspot.ca/2013/02/how-to-install-ubuntu-and-ruby-on-rails.html.
I did everything and it worked fine.
I checked ruby -v and it came back as ruby 2.0.0p0. I also checked rails, rubygems and git they came back good.
Then I closed the terminal and opened a new one and tried to check the version but this came back for ruby:
bimbola#ubuntu:~$ ruby -v
The program 'ruby' can be found in the following packages:
* ruby1.8
* ruby1.9.1
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
And this came for rails:
bimbola#ubuntu:~$ rails -v
The program 'rails' can be found in the following packages:
* rails
* ruby-railties-3.2
Try: sudo apt-get install <selected package>
git is still fine though
bimbola#ubuntu:~$ git --version
git version 1.7.10.4
You need to state which version of ruby you want to use. Try this:
rvm use 2.0.0
You can also set a particular version of ruby to be used as default as shown below
rvm --default use 2.0.0
RVM (Ruby Version Manager) allows you to install multiple versions of ruby and use any one of them at a time as according to your whim.
To see all the available ruby versions on your system try this:
rvm list
Add a line to your bashrc to load rvm automatically: (execute in Terminal)
echo '[[ -s "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm" ]] && source "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm"' >> .bashrc
or load rvm manually:
source "$HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm"

how to solve "ruby installation is missing psych" error?

I used rvm to install ruby 1.9.3. even though it was successfully installed, it complained about libyaml. and now every time i wanna install a gem (say rails) this warning shows up:
It seems your ruby installation is missing psych (for YAML output). To eliminate this warning, please install libyaml and reinstall your ruby.
I use Mac os X 10.7 (Lion).
In my case
rvm pkg install libyaml
and
rvm reinstall ruby-1.9.3-p125
solved the problem.
For people using Ubuntu, make sure that libtool is installed prior to the steps above:
sudo apt-get install libtool
For macOS users (with homebrew):
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/ && brew reinstall ruby
brew install libyaml
rvm reinstall 1.9.3
Is what worked for me (on Snow Leopard).
for ubuntu and rvm
sudo apt-get install libtool
rvm pkg install libyaml
rvm reinstall 1.9.3
worked
If not using rvm, but rather you are building and installing ruby 1.9.3 from scratch — for example, you're managing your ruby versions with rbenv — you must install libyaml first. Get it from http://pyyaml.org/; at the moment, the file you want is http://pyyaml.org/download/libyaml/yaml-0.1.4.tar.gz. Open the tarball and cd into the resulting folder. Then:
./configure --prefix=/usr/local
make
sudo make install
You are now ready to build ruby. Download ruby from http://ftp.ruby-lang.org/pub/ruby/. Open the tarball and cd into the resulting folder. Now:
./configure --prefix=/wherever/you/want/it/to/go
make
make install
(Or possibly sudo make install, depending on where you're putting it.) If using rbenv, you'll know it has worked if you switch to rbenv global 1.9.3-p194 (or whatever your version is called) and gem --version works without a warning. That worked for me on Mac OS X 10.6.8. (Update: I just tried this on Mac OS X 10.8.1 and it seems to have worked fine there too.)
In my case the solution was to add the psych gem to the Gemfile.
I had this problem. libyaml wouldn't compile. It turns out I was missing libtool.
yum install libtool
yum install libyaml (or rvm pkg install libyaml)
rvm reinstall 1.9.3
That solved my problem.
If you have installed ruby on macOS with homebrew, try this solution.
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/ && brew reinstall ruby
Note that this will get rid of all installed gems. Best save a list of installed gems with gem list before you run this.
$ brew doctor
$ brew link libyaml
I reinstalled ruby 1.9.3 with libyaml support:
rvm reinstall 1.9.3 --with-libyaml
I made sure that I would use 1.9.3 before installing psych:
rvm use 1.9.3
I installed psych:
gem install psych
I got this fixed finally. The issue was that even though I installed libyaml with brew, it was never linked. I had to remove a conflicting header file and then brew link libyaml.
Installing ruby with rvm for mac osx, use autolibs to install libyaml and first uninstalling libyaml helps.
This worked for me:
brew uninstall libyaml
rvm autolibs enable
rvm reinstall ruby-2.1.1
I had the same problem (Lion 10.7.4), and fixed it by upgrading rvm then reinstalling ruby
1) upgrade rvm https://rvm.io//rvm/install/
curl -L https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable --ruby
2) Then use rvm to reinstall ruby 1.9.3 (which had been previously installed with the earlier version of rvm)
rvm reinstall 1.9.3
sudo port install libyaml # or brew install libyaml
rvm get latest
rvm pkg install iconv
rvm pkg install openssl
rvm reinstall 1.9.3 --with-openssl-dir=~/.rvm/usr --with-iconv-dir=~/.rvm/usr
curl -OL http://rubyforge.org/frs/download.php/75414/linecache19-0.5.13.gem
curl -OL http://rubyforge.org/frs/download.php/75415/ruby-debug-base19-0.11.26.gem
gem install linecache19-0.5.13.gem ruby-debug-base19-0.11.26.gem -- --with-ruby-include=$rvm_path/src/ruby-1.9.3-p125/
gem install ruby-debug19
rvm reload
reload your .rvmrc (cd out, cd in)
bundle
None of these answers worked for me.
I found my answer on https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-build/issues/119
I am on Centos 6.3 Virtual Machine.
YOU MUST install libyaml before you install ruby. IF you ALREADY installed ruby you must get rid of the files before compiling source again!!!
# cd to your ruby source location
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby # clean out ruby files
./configure
make && make install
gem -v # check if error is fixed
I built the libyaml files separately from source and installed them in /usr/local/lib. The ruby that RVM created still did not see them, and rather than muck with the makefile or the system LD_LIBRARY_PATH I just copied /usr/local/lib/libyaml* to ~/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.3-p327/lib/
That quieted the warning.
This is what worked for me on Ubuntu:
- installing libyaml-dev (sudo apt-get install libyaml-dev)
- installing rvm + ruby 1.9.3
I tried all of these answers and still wasn't able to get it working. I installed libyaml with homebrew and then installed Ruby 1.9.3 and 2.0.0 with rvm. Each time it complained that I was missing psych (libyaml). But trying to install libyaml told me it was already installed. Rinse, repeat. Urgh.
Finally, what I did was to uninstall libyaml. Then I enabled autolibs in rvm, which (at least in OSX) allows rvm to install and manage dependencies more directly. Now when I installed the Rubies, rvm was able to install libyaml and recognize that it was in the right spot.
So if you've tried all of the other options, try actually removing libyaml and then installing your Rubies. It's count-intuitive from the error messages, but that's what finally worked for me.
I had the same problem (Cent OS 5.7), none of the above solutions worked to me.
// My console warning
/usr/local/rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.3-p286/lib/ruby/1.9.1/yaml.rb:56:in `<top (required)>':
It seems your ruby installation is missing psych (for YAML output).
To eliminate this warning, please install libyaml and reinstall your ruby.
After doing several re-installs, I realized it's looking for yaml in ruby version of 1.9.1 instead of 1.9.3. So i downgraded
// obviously after installing `libyaml`
rvm remove all
rvm install 1.9.1
rvm use 1.9.1 --default
And it worked 8D!
On CentOS 6.3 none of the above worked. However installing libyaml from source before installing ruby resolved the problem.
$ wget http://pyyaml.org/download/libyaml/yaml-0.1.4.tar.gz
$ tar xzvf yaml-0.1.4.tar.gz
$ cd yaml-0.1.4
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr/local
$ make
$ sudo make install
and then
rvm install 1.9.3
gem install rails
I'm using
rvm 1.16.20 (version) by Wayne E. Seguin ,
Michal Papis [https://rvm.io/]
and also got the following error during bundle install
.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.3-p194/lib/ruby/1.9.1/yaml.rb:56:in `': It seems
your ruby installation is missing psych (for YAML output). To
eliminate this warning, please install libyaml and reinstall your
ruby.
Here are three different ways to resolve this error w/o having to gem install psych
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
alter /etc/ld.so.conf
sudo su - root
echo /usr/local/lib64 >> /etc/ld.so.conf
echo /usr/local/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf
ldconfig
Fix rvm ruby 1.9.3 installation via
patch .rvm/scripts/functions/manage/ruby < ruby-1.9.3-LDFLAGS.patch
rvm uninstall ruby-1.9.3-p194
export LDFLAGS='-L /usr/local/lib64 -L/usr/local/lib -Xlinker -R/usr/local/lib64 -Xlinker -R/usr/local/lib'
rvm install ruby-1.9.3-p194 --disable-binary
grep configure_args .rvm/src/ruby-1.9.3-p194/config.log # to confirm LDFLAG
$ diff -c .rvm/{src/rvm/,}scripts/functions/manage/ruby
*** .rvm/src/rvm/scripts/functions/manage/ruby 2012-11-10 06:28:14.000000000 +0000
--- .rvm/scripts/functions/manage/ruby 2013-01-25 17:18:00.000000000 +0000
***************
*** 106,123 ****
# when relative is in effect libyaml is installed in ruby itself so it will be moved with ruby
prefix_path="${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}" libyaml
! __rvm_update_configure_env CFLAGS="-I${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/include"
! __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib"
if [[ -d "${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib64" ]]
! then __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib64"
fi
else
libyaml_installed || libyaml # Installs libyaml
! __rvm_update_configure_env CFLAGS="-I${rvm_path}/usr/include"
! __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_path}/usr/lib"
if [[ -d "${rvm_path}/usr/lib64" ]]
! then __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_path}/usr/lib64"
fi
fi
--- 106,123 ----
# when relative is in effect libyaml is installed in ruby itself so it will be moved with ruby
prefix_path="${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}" libyaml
! __rvm_update_configure_env CFLAGS="-I${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/include ${CFLAGS}"
! __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib ${LDFLAGS}"
if [[ -d "${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib64" ]]
! then __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_rubies_path}/${rvm_ruby_string}/lib64 ${LDFLAGS}"
fi
else
libyaml_installed || libyaml # Installs libyaml
! __rvm_update_configure_env CFLAGS="-I${rvm_path}/usr/include ${CFLAGS}"
! __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_path}/usr/lib ${LDFLAGS}"
if [[ -d "${rvm_path}/usr/lib64" ]]
! then __rvm_update_configure_env LDFLAGS="-L${rvm_path}/usr/lib64 ${LDFLAGS}"
fi
fi
I also struggled with the same failures with rvm install ruby-2.0.0 for many, MANY hours. I had tried all the different methods to install libyaml; wget source, yum and rvm. I also tried all of the different approaches listed in similar threads. Because I tried all the different methods, I had multiple installations and locations of libyaml.
RVM is perfectly capable of installing the necessary dependencies in ~/.rvm. Simply removing the libyaml files from non-RVM install fixed this issue for me:
sudo rm /usr/local/lib/libyaml*.*
rvm reinstall ruby-2.0.0-p0
Works!
NON-RVM ruby install method.
% uname -a
Linux localhost.localdomain 2.6.32-358.el6.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Feb 22 00:31:26 UTC 2013 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
% cat /etc/redhat-release
CentOS release 6.4 (Final)
% wget http://apt.sw.be/redhat/el5/en/x86_64/dag/RPMS/rpmforge-release-0.3.6-1.el5.rf.x86_64.rpm
% sudo rpm -K rpmforge-release-0.3.6-1.el5.rf.*.rpm"
% sudo rpm -ivh rpmforge-release-0.3.6-1.el5.rf.*.rpm"
DISABLE rpmforge by editing this file and set enabled=0
% sudo vi /etc/yum.repos.d/rpmforge.repo
% grep rpmforge ~/.aliases
alias rpmforge "sudo yum --disablerepo='*' --enablerepo='rpmforge'"
% rpmforge install libyaml libyaml-devel
% sudo yum list installed | grep libyaml
libyaml.x86_64 0.1.4-1.el5.rf #rpmforge
libyaml-devel.x86_64 0.1.4-1.el5.rf #rpmforge
The libyaml-devel is the key.
% tar zxvf ruby-1.9.3-p448.tar.gz
% cd ruby-1.9.3-p448
% ./configure -prefix=$HOME/ruby-1.9.3-p448
% make ; make install
% cd $HOME; ln -s ./ruby-1.9.3-p448 ruby
Update your path and source .cshrc
% echo $PATH
/home/francis/ruby/bin:/usr/sbin:/home/francis/bin:/home/francis/jdk1.7.0_25/bin:/usr/lib64/qt-3.3/bin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
% which ruby
/home/francis/ruby/bin/ruby
% gem update --system
Set your GEM_HOME in .cshrc and source
% echo $GEM_HOME
% /home/francis/ruby/lib/ruby/gems
% gem install mysql2 pg ruby-debug-ide rails capistrano capistrano-ext passenger
If you are building ruby from source (I built 1.9.3 on Fedora 20), you will need this before you do the configure/make to build ruby:
yum install libyaml-devel
(in addition to yum install libyaml.) Similar to Francis's answer using rpmforge above.
I was having this error and noticed I had different versions of Ruby installed with HomeBrew, along with many gems that I no longer used. So did a full clean up like this:
$ brew remove --force ruby # remove all versions installed
$ sudo rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby # remove all gems and leftover files
$ brew install ruby
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
If you don't use a Gemfile, make sure you know which gems to reinstall.
In my case all I needed to do was
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/2.4.0/gems/psych-2.2.4
rm -rf /usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/2.4.0/extensions/x86_64-darwin-16/2.4.0/psych-2.2.4
Now, FWIW, gem list includes
psych (2.2.4, default: 2.2.2)
Ubuntu
Using RVM
Reason: Conflicting Psych gem versions between ruby 2.4.4 and ruby 2.5.1
I spent a few hours trying to get my error to go away and none of the replies here suited my case, so I thought I would post how I solved it...
In my case when I ran gem list | grep psych, I had the following output: psych(default: 3.1.0, default: 3.0.2).
Apparently since version 2.5.0, ruby depends on the newer version of psych (3.1.0) and having both set as default was messing up everything. Notice that I never ended up finding out why those were both set as default - I completely wiped out rvm and ruby versions from my computer due to this.
So in order to remove the older version (3.0.2) from being set as default, head to ~/.rvm/gems/ruby-x.x.x#global/specifications/default. If you run ls | grep psych it will return both versions of the gem here. If you want to maintain 3.1.0 as default just run mv psych-3.0.2.gemspec ../ and then try running gemlist to make sure it is listing only one version as default now...
tl;dr
cd /.rvm/gems/ruby-x.x.x#global/specifications/default
mv psych-3.0.2 ../
Hope this helps someone!
On Snow Leopard, the solution by Catharz did not work for me. This solution, however, did:
brew install libyaml
rvm get head
rvm reinstall 1.9.3 --with-gcc=clang
(The rvm reinstall gave me a warning about clang not having the option "--with-libyaml" but it solved the error message regardless.)
This worked for me at least on Ubuntu 10.04
$ sudo apt-get install libtool
$ rvm reinstall 1.9.3
On Solaris:
# sudo crle -64 -l /usr/local/lib
to add /usr/local/lib to the shared library search path
(see man crle)
When I switch from 64 bit to 32 bit on Snow Leopard 10.6.8, I had reinstalled ruby (used rvm) to run on 32bit and met the same problem. So I just 'cleanup' all thing that cached by rvm before and problems solved. Hope this tip can help someone.
rvm cleanup all
rvm install ruby_version_here //(This way, rvm will also re-download newest yaml).
BTW, if you still meet this problem, I think you can try:
gem install psych

Problem installing passenger with Nginx with rvm on linux

Tried to install Passenger with Nginx (on EC2 Linux). I'm using ec2-user (instead of Root). Ruby 1.9.2 with RVM.
Passenger gem installs correctly.
But when I try:
passenger-install-nginx-module
I get:
Checking for required software...
* GNU C++ compiler... not found
* The 'make' tool... found at /usr/bin/make
* A download tool like 'wget' or 'curl'... found at /usr/bin/wget
* Ruby development headers... found
* OpenSSL support for Ruby... not found
* RubyGems... found
* Rake... found at /home/ec2-user/.rvm/wrappers/ruby-1.9.2-p180/rake
* rack... found
* Curl development headers with SSL support... not found
* OpenSSL development headers... not found
* Zlib development headers... not found
Although the above exist. for instance if I type:
$> gcc
$> gcc: no input files
Saw somewhere online that I can try using:
rvmsudo passenger-install-nginx-module
but I get a problem:
--------------------------------------------
Checking for required software...
* GNU C++ compiler... not found
* The 'make' tool... found at /usr/bin/make
* A download tool like 'wget' or 'curl'... found at /usr/bin/wget
* Ruby development headers... found
* OpenSSL support for Ruby... not found
* RubyGems... found
Unable to locate the RVM path. Your RVM installation is probably too old. Please update it with 'rvm update --head && rvm reload && rvm repair all'.
Any ideas?
you have to do this:
rvm remove 1.9.2
rvm pkg install openssl
rvm install 1.9.2 --with-openssl-dir=$HOME/.rvm/usr
Be sure that a compiler and all dependency libraries are present on the system before attempting to install Rubies and/or Passenger. You can obtain a list of recommended base dependencies for Ruby based applications by running the following command.
user$ rvm requirements
Install all dependencies listed for 'ruby' before attempting to install the interpreter?
The list varies by OS.
More information can be found on the RVM basics documentation page, https://rvm.io/rvm/basics/
~Wayne
Unable to locate the RVM path.
That could be a symptom of not adding:
[[ -s "/usr/local/rvm/scripts/rvm" ]] && source "/usr/local/rvm/scripts/rvm"
to your .bashrc (or profile or whatever). That can cause all kinds of weird problems.
Am using ruby-1.9.2-p180 with rvm.
cd ~/.rvm/src/ruby-1.9.2-p180/ext/openssl/
ruby extconf.rb
make
make install
passenger-install-gninx-module
gcc is the wrong executable, Passenger is looking for g++ . Install it with this:
sudo yum install gcc-c++
and passenger-install-nginx-module should stop complaining about gcc missing

Install RoR on debian Squeeze

is there any way to install Ruby 1.9.2 or 1.8.7 + Rails 3 on my debian squeeze?
You probably don't want to use RVM on a production machine. Its $PATH magic will break in non-obvious places (e.g. cron jobs), and you'll be up a creek.
You could simply build from sources and use checkinstall to create a .deb for yourself. Here's a tutorial for Ubuntu that should translate pretty well into debian.
First install rubygems, I think it's the only Debian package. Then (as Ruby gems):
rvm (install with it ruby 1.9.2, or Ruby version you want)
bundler
rails
And then you can manage application gems with Bundler.
Have you looked at railsready-debian-lenny (it is claimed to work on Squeeze too)? Don't forget to install dependencies pointed in readme.md
The steps below outlines installing Ruby On Rails as a normal user.
Check first if the user has sudo rights. To do this try executing a simple command
$sudo ls -a
[sudo] password for unlimit:
unlimit is not in the sudoers file. This incident will be reported.
If you see a message like above, you will need to add the user to the sudoer file, this can be done by
$echo 'unlimit ALL=(ALL) ALL' >> /etc/sudoers
Check if you have ruby installed. Execute the command below
$ruby -v
-[bash]: ruby:command not found
If you see something like this, this means ruby is not installed. Install it
$sudo apt-get install ruby
Install additional libraries
$sudo apt-get install build-essential
$sudo apt-get install curl
$sudo apt-get install libssl-dev
Install rvm
$curl -L get.rvm.io | bash -s stable
Set the rvm path
$source $HOME/.rvm/scripts/rvm
You should add this to the .bashrc file.
Fetch the latest rvm and reload it
$rvm get head && rvm reload
Install ruby 1.9.3
$rvm install 1.9.3 --with-openssl-dir=$HOME/.rvm.usr
I needed to install the readline lib
$sudo apt-get install libreadline-dev
Get the rails gem
$gem install rails -v 3.2.3
Check if you have rails
$rails -v
Rails 3.2.3
Get the readline package
$rvm pkg install readline
Get sqlite3
$sudo apt-get install sqlite3 libsqlite3-dev
You are all set to create your first rails app
$rails new app HelloWorld
You can find more info http://unlimit.in/installing-ruby-on-rails-on-debian.html
The best way to install Ruby and any Gems you like is with RVM. It will compile the latest version of Ruby for you and give you tools to manage gemsets.
Relying on the distribution's packages is usually a bad idea, because they are typically out-of-date.

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