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DEPRECATED: Chef Cookbook for Managing Ruby from Packages

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ruby Cookbook

Build Status Cookbook Version

Installs Ruby and related packages.

DEPRECATION NOTICE

As the pace of Ruby development has increased and the era of Ruby 1.8 / 1.9 has come to an end, we see little need for this cookbook. It is officially considered deprecated, and we recommend against its use. We're open to a complete rethinking of the cookbook with a whole new codebase and functionality. If you're interested shoot us an e-mail at [email protected]

Requirements

Platform

Tested on Ubuntu 10.04. Debian and Gentoo should also work fully. CentOS, Red Hat, Fedora and Arch are partially supported.

Attributes

  • node[:languages][:ruby][:default_version] - The Ruby version to install
  • with the ruby recipe and create symlinks for with the symlinks
  • recipe.

Usage

Previous versions of this cookbook gave you no control over which version of Ruby would be installed. We are now in the middle of an awkward period where you are equally likely to want 1.8 or 1.9. You may even want both. This is now catered for. To install specific versions side-by-side, use the 1.8, 1.9 or 1.9.1 recipes. The ruby recipe will install the version specified by node[:languages][:ruby][:default_version]. If you want to do something other than install these packages, the ruby_packages definition is provided as a wrapper around the package resource. Just specify the version number.

For example, to use the default recipe in a role named "base", use 'ruby' in the run list and set the node[:languages[:ruby][:default_version] attribute:

{
  "name": "base",
  "description": "Base role is applied to all systems",
  "json_class": "Chef::Role",
  "default_attributes": {
  },
  "override_attributes": {
    "languages": {
      "ruby": {
        "default_version": "1.8"
      }
    }
  },
  "chef_type": "role",
  "run_list": [
    "recipe[ruby]"
  ]
}

Many scripts, including those provided by Rails, don't ask for a particular version of Ruby such as "ruby1.8" and simply look for "ruby" instead. Sometimes a symlink is provided and sometimes the executable is simply called "ruby" in the first place but generally speaking, it is difficult to predict this behaviour, especially when Ruby Gems is thrown into the mix. The symlinks recipe seeks to relieve you of this headache by creating symlinks for the common executables pointing to the Ruby version specified by node[:languages][:ruby][:default_version]. This is also available as a definition called +ruby_symlinks+, which is a wrapper around the link resource. As before, just specify the version number. Non-symlinks will not be overwritten unless you set force to true. You can also set a path other than /usr/bin if necessary.

IMPORTANT! Only Ubuntu, Debian and Gentoo support installing a specific Ruby version at all. yum-based distributions install 1.8 by default but require you to give the full package version otherwise. Maybe some magic could be added to Chef? Arch installs 1.9.2 by default but 1.8 is only available from AUR. Additionally, Ubuntu and Debian group 1.9.2 with 1.9.1 while Gentoo lumps all 1.9 releases together.

License and Author

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. ```

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