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ruby-build

ruby-build is an rbenv plugin that provides an rbenv install command to compile and install different versions of Ruby on UNIX-like systems.

You can also use ruby-build without rbenv in environments where you need precise control over Ruby version installation.

Installation

Installing as an rbenv plugin (recommended)

Installing ruby-build as an rbenv plugin will give you access to the rbenv install command.

git clone https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-build.git ~/.rbenv/plugins/ruby-build

This will install the latest development version of ruby-build into the ~/.rbenv/plugins/ruby-build directory. From that directory, you can check out a specific release tag. To update ruby-build, run git pull to download the latest changes.

Installing as a standalone program (advanced)

Installing ruby-build as a standalone program will give you access to the ruby-build command for precise control over Ruby version installation. If you have rbenv installed, you will also be able to use the rbenv install command.

git clone https://github.com/sstephenson/ruby-build.git
cd ruby-build
./install.sh

This will install ruby-build into /usr/local. If you do not have write permission to /usr/local, you will need to run sudo ./install.sh instead. You can install to a different prefix by setting the PREFIX environment variable.

To update ruby-build after it has been installed, run git pull in your cloned copy of the repository, then re-run the install script.

Installing with Homebrew (for OS X users)

Mac OS X users can install ruby-build with the Homebrew package manager. This will give you access to the ruby-build command. If you have rbenv installed, you will also be able to use the rbenv install command.

This is the recommended method of installation if you installed rbenv with Homebrew.

brew install ruby-build

Or, if you would like to install the latest development release:

brew install --HEAD ruby-build

Usage

Using rbenv install with rbenv

To install a Ruby version for use with rbenv, run rbenv install with the exact name of the version you want to install. For example,

rbenv install 1.9.3-p448

Ruby versions will be installed into a directory of the same name under ~/.rbenv/versions.

To see a list of all available Ruby versions, run rbenv install --list. You may also tab-complete available Ruby versions if your rbenv installation is properly configured.

Using ruby-build standalone

If you have installed ruby-build as a standalone program, you can use the ruby-build command to compile and install Ruby versions into specific locations.

Run the ruby-build command with the exact name of the version you want to install and the full path where you want to install it. For example,

ruby-build 1.9.3-p448 ~/local/ruby-1.9.3-p448

To see a list of all available Ruby versions, run ruby-build --definitions.

Pass the -v or --verbose flag to ruby-build as the first argument to see what's happening under the hood.

Custom definitions

Both rbenv install and ruby-build accept a path to a custom definition file in place of a version name. Custom definitions let you develop and install versions of Ruby that are not yet supported by ruby-build.

See the ruby-build built-in definitions as a starting point for custom definition files.

Special environment variables

You can set certain environment variables to control the build process.

  • TMPDIR sets the location where ruby-build stores temporary files.
  • RUBY_BUILD_BUILD_PATH sets the location in which sources are downloaded and built. By default, this is a subdirectory of TMPDIR.
  • RUBY_BUILD_CACHE_PATH, if set, specifies a directory to use for caching downloaded package files.
  • RUBY_BUILD_MIRROR_URL overrides the default mirror URL root to one of your choosing.
  • RUBY_BUILD_SKIP_MIRROR, if set, forces ruby-build to download packages from their original source URLs instead of using a mirror.
  • CC sets the path to the C compiler.
  • RUBY_CFLAGS lets you pass additional options to the default CFLAGS. Use this to override, for instance, the -O3 option.
  • CONFIGURE_OPTS lets you pass additional options to ./configure.
  • MAKE lets you override the command to use for make. Useful for specifying GNU make (gmake) on some systems.
  • MAKE_OPTS (or MAKEOPTS) lets you pass additional options to make.
  • RUBY_CONFIGURE_OPTS and RUBY_MAKE_OPTS allow you to specify configure and make options for buildling MRI. These variables will be passed to Ruby only, not any dependent packages (e.g. libyaml).

Checksum verification

If you have the md5, openssl, or md5sum tool installed, ruby-build will automatically verify the MD5 checksum of each downloaded package before installing it.

Checksums are optional and specified as anchors on the package URL in each definition. (All bundled definitions include checksums.)

Package download mirrors

ruby-build will first attempt to download package files from a mirror hosted on Amazon CloudFront. If a package is not available on the mirror, if the mirror is down, or if the download is corrupt, ruby-build will fall back to the official URL specified in the definition file.

You can point ruby-build to another mirror by specifying the RUBY_BUILD_MIRROR_URL environment variable--useful if you'd like to run your own local mirror, for example. Package mirror URLs are constructed by joining this variable with the MD5 checksum of the package file.

If you don't have an MD5 program installed, ruby-build will skip the download mirror and use official URLs instead. You can force ruby-build to bypass the mirror by setting the RUBY_BUILD_SKIP_MIRROR environment variable.

The official ruby-build download mirror is sponsored by 37signals.

Package download caching

You can instruct ruby-build to keep a local cache of downloaded package files by setting the RUBY_BUILD_CACHE_PATH environment variable. When set, package files will be kept in this directory after the first successful download and reused by subsequent invocations of ruby-build and rbenv install.

The rbenv install command defaults this path to ~/.rbenv/cache, so in most cases you can enable download caching simply by creating that directory.

Keeping the build directory after installation

Both ruby-build and rbenv install accept the -k or --keep flag, which tells ruby-build to keep the downloaded source after installation. This can be useful if you need to use gdb and memprof with Ruby.

Source code will be kept in a parallel directory tree ~/.rbenv/sources when using --keep with the rbenv install command. You should specify the location of the source code with the RUBY_BUILD_BUILD_PATH environment variable when using --keep with ruby-build.

Getting Help

Please see the ruby-build wiki for solutions to common problems.

If you can't find an answer on the wiki, open an issue on the issue tracker. Be sure to include the full build log for build failures.

License

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2012-2013 Sam Stephenson

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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