Do I have to install Rails on every new project? - ruby-on-rails

This is a beginner-level question.
I'm using Ubuntu 12.04
I copied a project (created on Rails 4 using the rails new command) from Dropbox to my local environment, where I have previously install Rails 4 and up-to-date Ruby and RVM, went to project's directory, typed rails server and got
The program 'rails' is currently not installed. You can install it by typing:
sudo apt-get install rails
I ran gem install rails instead.
Will I have to run gem install rails on every project's directory? I thought the Rails install was a general and accessible on my whole environment.
The project was created using the same Ruby version, but on a MacOS X system.
The project is a static web brochure and has no database configuration.
Thank you in advance.

Make sure you're using the correct version of Ruby - the same version that you'd installed Rails into - with rvm list.
You likely have two of them (since you have such an issue) - the system Ruby and the RVM-installed Ruby. And likely RVM didn't engage and hook up the correct path to the rails executable, thus the error.
This should fix the issue:
rvm use whatever-ruby-you-had-installed-rails-into
Where whatever-ruby-you-had-installed-rails-into is a string like ruby-2.1.0-p0 taken from the rvm list output.
To make RVM retain Ruby version for the project.
echo whatever-ruby-you-had-installed-into >.ruby-version
in your project's path.

So after a few hours of testing, reproducing the problem, and reading (the other answers inclusive) I got the solution as follows:
Short answer: No. Rails needs to be installed only once.
Long answer: This problem occurred because of a default setting on Terminal that prevents the system from using RVM installations of ruby and rails. The solution is to integrate RVM with gnome-terminal as described in the RVM website.
With terminal window active, go to the menu at the top bar
Edit > Profile Preferences > Title and Command tab
Check the Run command as a login shell box
Restart Terminal and make sure your gemset and ruby version are set
rails server should now work as expected (you might be prompted to run bundle install before Rails can actually run fine, follow the promtp).
I am still learning to work with Ruby on Rails, so any inputs, clarifications, or additional information on the issue is more than welcome.

You don't have to install Rails on every project, but the gems that you need for that project.
With bundle install you install all the gems that you specify in Gemfile.
If you want to avoid reinstall the gems every time you change project, I suggest you to have a better look to RVM: it has got an opt called gemset (https://rvm.io/gemsets), if you use it you just need to switch your gemset:
rvm gemset use yourgemset
I hope it can help you.

Related

I get a bash error message when I run "bundle install" after re-installing ruby

I removed the previous version of ruby I installed, ruby 1.9.1 to be precise, on my Ubuntu, and installed version 2.2.3. When I try to run bundle install on my terminal, I get this error
bash: /usr/local/bin/bundle: /usr/bin/ruby1.9.1: bad interpreter: No such file or directory.
Can anyone advice on how to fix it?
How did you remove the old version of Ruby?
It looks like it left the binary executable for bundler, so I'm guessing you just straight up deleted the usr/bin/ruby folder? Ruby installations (and most installations) tend to create executable binaries in other folders that need to be deleted as well.
I would highly recommend that you use something like rvm or rbenv to manage multiple versions of ruby on your system. Those tools are designed to do that sort of thing and are basically industry standard at this point.
My personal recommendation is rvm, although either is really fine. If you choose to go with that, check out rvm.io for installation instructions.
It'll install rvm with the latest ruby version. In addition to that you are free to install any other version of ruby or patch that you prefer, and you can easily switch between the two using rvm use <ruby version>

After Setting Up Ruby Installer What Command line tools do you use?

I've installed Ruby on a Windows computer
After Setting Up Ruby Installer What Command line tools do you use?
http://railsinstaller.org/en
I've tried the command
rvm use 1.9.3
using the command prompt ruby and rails
I get the error message
rvm is not a recognised command
From RVM’s FAQ:
Does RVM work on windows? Will it in the future?
NO. If you would like to manage multiple versions of ruby on windows please use pik which is an excellent tool by Gordon Thiesfeld. You can find it on GitHub. There are plans to include windows support in RVM 2.0.
https://rvm.io/support/faq#does-rvm-work-on-windows-will-it-in-the-future
Doing Rails development on Windows is a little bit more of a challenge and you may run into some annoyances, but it's definitely possible.
Uru worked well for me as a nice alternative to RVM, which doesn't run on Windows. However, if you just want to have one version of Ruby installed on your computer and work with it, you don't even need to bother with Uru.
Windows is not the best environment to develop with Ruby ...
RVM doesn't work and PIK hasn't updated for more than 2 years..
Github of Pik
This installer doesn't install RVM. It installs Ruby interpreter and Rails.
Since you've installed it, I assume you have your Ruby and libraries for it (called gems) rails and bundler. Execute gem list in your shell to verify (it should output a looong list).
Then you should create a new Rails project:
rails new project_name
...and then go into the folder that got created
cd project_name
bundle what you have:
bundle install
...and launch the server to see if it works:
rails server
or
rails s
You will likely run into issues with tzinfo gem if you're on 64-bit Windows, but that can be easily fixed by searching around StackOverflow, it's been discussed.
Gool luck to you. Developing Rails applications in Windows proved to be hard to me. Consider launching a virtual machine (using, for example, VirtualBox) with Linux aboard. That's what you could do in Linux:
install RVM as the site suggests:
curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable
install the latest MRI available - feel free to replace ruby with the version you need, like rvm install 2.0.0
rvm install ruby
select and set as default the Ruby you need, you've tried a similar line apparently with Ruby 1.9.3
rvm --default use ruby
another long process
gem install rails
rails new project_name
(same as described above)
cd project_name
bundle install
rails s
That should work, and that's what you've probably seen. Again, I highly recommend using Linux in VirtualBox (or anything similar) for Rails development. A native Linux installation could only be a better environment, but most people are not ready for this just yet.

Rails - Closed terminal and rebooted machine - now bash tells me rails isn't installed

Running OSX Mavericks, ruby 2.1.1p76 (2014-02-24 revision 45161) [x86_64-darwin13.0], rvm 1.25.23 (master), and rails-4.1.0 (allegedly)
I'm working through the railsapps.org book on learning rails and made it about 1/2 way through yesterday. When I stopped for the day, I closed out iTerm2 and shut off the Macbook Pro. Today, I powered up, opened iTerm, navigated to my working directory (~/rubyonrails/learn-ruby) and entered rails -v.
I see this:
`Rails is not currently installed on this system. To get the latest version, simply type:
$ sudo gem install rails
You can then rerun your "rails" command.`
So I run sudo gem install rails and it shows that it has installed rails-4.1.0. Now rails -v still gives me the same error message above.
I tried also running rvm use ruby-2.1.1#learn-rails first and I still get the error message.
So I'm a little stuck and I can't figure out what to do to get rails working. Also, how do I go about setting up the bash environment such that I don't have to go through this each time? It would be nice to nav to my working directory and just start work without having to do a bunch of re-installation and reconfiguration each time.
Regards,
Jeff
please type in your shell:
$ bash --login
and then repeat your commands.
rails -v
Also try to call it with the full path:
like:
/your/path/to/rails -v
I think that the shell just doesn't know where rvm/rails etc is located.
You can solve this by entering:
$ source ~/.rvm/scripts/rvm
When you switch to the ruby-2.1.1#learn-rails ruby/gemset combo, and do gem list, what do you see?
The way people usually use rvm is to have every project folder specify the ruby & gemset it uses (they don't all have to be different). This is done with files called .ruby-version and .ruby-gemset. These should contain, in your case, ruby-2.1.1 and learn-rails respectively.
Set these if you haven't already, then leave the folder and enter it again. Then do bundle install to install the gems for the project into the rvm/gemset combo.
Your problem is that you ran
sudo gem install rails
The error message telling you to do this comes from your system Ruby, which doesn't know that you want to use RVM.
RVM installs gems into your user-space directory. By using sudo, you're bypassing this and installing it into (effectively) the superuser space, i.e. globally.
If you instead just run
gem install rails
then you'll be using RVM's copy of the gem utility rather than the globally installed version.

Rails not working on Mac in new terminal window

I have been using RVM (Rails 2.0.0) for a project in the terminal doing commands etc. and have noticed that when I opened a new terminal page the rails command didn't work it just shot back the error:
Rails is not currently installed on this system. To get the latest version, simply type:
$ sudo gem install rails
But I had it installed and have even built half an app using it so far... what happened all of a sudden and how do I fix it to keep going with my project.
I was having the same problem on with the Rails tutorial. It looks like rvm is using the gemset defined in the Gemfile to override the default gemset. You should see this if you execute:
rvm gemset list_all
What I saw was this:
(default)
global
=> railstutorial_rails_4_0
So rails is fully installed in rvm's default gemset, but not in the new one ("railstutorial_rails_4_0" in this case). I solved this with the following commands:
bundle install --without production
bundle update
bundle install
This solution appears to have persisted across terminal sessions.
Okay so I got it to work by simple removing the code in the Gemfile that states the version of Ruby the app is to use and then it worked fine. Must of been some conflict with RVM installed on my machine and the Gemfile.

Rails Server Command

I am new to Ruby on Rails and am following a tutorial to create a class project.
I can generate a new rails project with
$ rails project
The problem Im having is when I try to start my server, It will generate a project called server:
$ rails server
or
$ rails s
I figured out that I need to install/update rails to 3.0.3 to use this command every time I open terminal. I find myself having to install gems(bundle, etc) every time I need to work on my project.
Is there anyway to save this terminal session or profile for later use?
Is it user error?
Im new to Rails and about the same with terminal.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I have resorted to leaving my computer and terminal open for about a week...
Welcome on board! - You'll have fun, I found setting up the environment the most difficult thing.
in rails 2 you start the server with ruby script/server.
to upgrade to rails 3 try gem install rails -v=3.0.4
I put the version but it's not a mandatory option.
To uninstall a gem (as rails is) is gem uninstall gemname -v=x.x.x. -
gem list will tell you the version of each gem.
I hope you've got rvm, if not I strongly sugget you to install it, this will allow you not only to use different versions of ruby but also to set different gemsets, therefor one each project, you'll find it useful.
Once in rails 3 you can use bundler, have a look at this episode of railscasts, by the way this is a very good site, but you may know it already.
another edit...
I don't know the behavior you're describing, looks like something is wrong with your environment, but I need to know if you have rvm to solve this, if so try rvm list and rvm gemset, With the first you get the list of installed ruby, you can switch between them with rvm 1.9.2 i.e. and rvm 1.9.2#gemdirname with the gemdir coming from the second list. You should find your configuration in one of those list.
Hi if you are using rails 2.8 or lesser use this to start the server
ruby script/server
rails new project is for new rails project n rails s is for starting server

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