BUNDLE-INSTALL(1) | BUNDLE-INSTALL(1) |
bundle-install - Install the dependencies specified in your Gemfile
bundle install [--binstubs[=DIRECTORY]] [--clean] [--deployment] [--frozen] [--full-index] [--gemfile=GEMFILE] [--jobs=NUMBER] [--local] [--no-cache] [--no-prune] [--path PATH] [--quiet] [--redownload] [--retry=NUMBER] [--shebang] [--standalone[=GROUP[ GROUP...]]] [--system] [--trust-policy=POLICY] [--with=GROUP[ GROUP...]] [--without=GROUP[ GROUP...]]
Install the gems specified in your Gemfile(5). If this is the first time you run bundle install (and a Gemfile.lock does not exist), Bundler will fetch all remote sources, resolve dependencies and install all needed gems.
If a Gemfile.lock does exist, and you have not updated your Gemfile(5), Bundler will fetch all remote sources, but use the dependencies specified in the Gemfile.lock instead of resolving dependencies.
If a Gemfile.lock does exist, and you have updated your Gemfile(5), Bundler will use the dependencies in the Gemfile.lock for all gems that you did not update, but will re-resolve the dependencies of gems that you did update. You can find more information about this update process below under CONSERVATIVE UPDATING.
The --clean, --deployment, --frozen, --no-prune, --path, --shebang, --system, --without and --with options are deprecated because they only make sense if they are applied to every subsequent bundle install run automatically and that requires bundler to silently remember them. Since bundler will no longer remember CLI flags in future versions, bundle config (see bundle-config(1)) should be used to apply them permanently.
Bundler´s defaults are optimized for development. To switch to defaults optimized for deployment and for CI, use the --deployment flag. Do not activate deployment mode on development machines, as it will cause an error when the Gemfile(5) is modified.
By default, Bundler installs gems to the same location as gem install.
In some cases, that location may not be writable by your Unix user. In that case, Bundler will stage everything in a temporary directory, then ask you for your sudo password in order to copy the gems into their system location.
From your perspective, this is identical to installing the gems directly into the system.
You should never use sudo bundle install. This is because several other steps in bundle install must be performed as the current user:
Of these three, the first two could theoretically be performed by chowning the resulting files to $SUDO_USER. The third, however, can only be performed by invoking the git command as the current user. Therefore, git gems are downloaded and installed into ~/.bundle rather than $GEM_HOME or $BUNDLE_PATH.
As a result, you should run bundle install as the current user, and Bundler will ask for your password if it is needed to put the gems into their final location.
By default, bundle install will install all gems in all groups in your Gemfile(5), except those declared for a different platform.
However, you can explicitly tell Bundler to skip installing certain groups with the --without option. This option takes a space-separated list of groups.
While the --without option will skip installing the gems in the specified groups, it will still download those gems and use them to resolve the dependencies of every gem in your Gemfile(5).
This is so that installing a different set of groups on another machine (such as a production server) will not change the gems and versions that you have already developed and tested against.
Bundler offers a rock-solid guarantee that the third-party code you are running in development and testing is also the third-party code you are running in production. You can choose to exclude some of that code in different environments, but you will never be caught flat-footed by different versions of third-party code being used in different environments.
For a simple illustration, consider the following Gemfile(5):
source ´https://rubygems.org´ gem ´sinatra´ group :production do
gem ´rack-perftools-profiler´ end
In this case, sinatra depends on any version of Rack (>= 1.0), while rack-perftools-profiler depends on 1.x (~> 1.0).
When you run bundle install --without production in development, we look at the dependencies of rack-perftools-profiler as well. That way, you do not spend all your time developing against Rack 2.0, using new APIs unavailable in Rack 1.x, only to have Bundler switch to Rack 1.2 when the production group is used.
This should not cause any problems in practice, because we do not attempt to install the gems in the excluded groups, and only evaluate as part of the dependency resolution process.
This also means that you cannot include different versions of the same gem in different groups, because doing so would result in different sets of dependencies used in development and production. Because of the vagaries of the dependency resolution process, this usually affects more than the gems you list in your Gemfile(5), and can (surprisingly) radically change the gems you are using.
When you run bundle install, Bundler will persist the full names and versions of all gems that you used (including dependencies of the gems specified in the Gemfile(5)) into a file called Gemfile.lock.
Bundler uses this file in all subsequent calls to bundle install, which guarantees that you always use the same exact code, even as your application moves across machines.
Because of the way dependency resolution works, even a seemingly small change (for instance, an update to a point-release of a dependency of a gem in your Gemfile(5)) can result in radically different gems being needed to satisfy all dependencies.
As a result, you SHOULD check your Gemfile.lock into version control, in both applications and gems. If you do not, every machine that checks out your repository (including your production server) will resolve all dependencies again, which will result in different versions of third-party code being used if any of the gems in the Gemfile(5) or any of their dependencies have been updated.
When Bundler first shipped, the Gemfile.lock was included in the .gitignore file included with generated gems. Over time, however, it became clear that this practice forces the pain of broken dependencies onto new contributors, while leaving existing contributors potentially unaware of the problem. Since bundle install is usually the first step towards a contribution, the pain of broken dependencies would discourage new contributors from contributing. As a result, we have revised our guidance for gem authors to now recommend checking in the lock for gems.
When you make a change to the Gemfile(5) and then run bundle install, Bundler will update only the gems that you modified.
In other words, if a gem that you did not modify worked before you called bundle install, it will continue to use the exact same versions of all dependencies as it used before the update.
Let´s take a look at an example. Here´s your original Gemfile(5):
source ´https://rubygems.org´ gem ´actionpack´, ´2.3.8´ gem ´activemerchant´
In this case, both actionpack and activemerchant depend on activesupport. The actionpack gem depends on activesupport 2.3.8 and rack ~> 1.1.0, while the activemerchant gem depends on activesupport >= 2.3.2, braintree >= 2.0.0, and builder >= 2.0.0.
When the dependencies are first resolved, Bundler will select activesupport 2.3.8, which satisfies the requirements of both gems in your Gemfile(5).
Next, you modify your Gemfile(5) to:
source ´https://rubygems.org´ gem ´actionpack´, ´3.0.0.rc´ gem ´activemerchant´
The actionpack 3.0.0.rc gem has a number of new dependencies, and updates the activesupport dependency to = 3.0.0.rc and the rack dependency to ~> 1.2.1.
When you run bundle install, Bundler notices that you changed the actionpack gem, but not the activemerchant gem. It evaluates the gems currently being used to satisfy its requirements:
Because you did not explicitly ask to update activemerchant, you would not expect it to suddenly stop working after updating actionpack. However, satisfying the new activesupport 3.0.0.rc dependency of actionpack requires updating one of its dependencies.
Even though activemerchant declares a very loose dependency that theoretically matches activesupport 3.0.0.rc, Bundler treats gems in your Gemfile(5) that have not changed as an atomic unit together with their dependencies. In this case, the activemerchant dependency is treated as activemerchant 1.7.1 + activesupport 2.3.8, so bundle install will report that it cannot update actionpack.
To explicitly update actionpack, including its dependencies which other gems in the Gemfile(5) still depend on, run bundle update actionpack (see bundle update(1)).
Summary: In general, after making a change to the Gemfile(5) , you should first try to run bundle install, which will guarantee that no other gem in the Gemfile(5) is impacted by the change. If that does not work, run bundle update(1) bundle-update.1.html.
November 2020 |