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Graham Ashton 3186fa39b5 Determine whether to run bundle exec when command executed. 15 年之前
.gitignore 8ff61345fd Initial import. 15 年之前
README.md 1e28e40aa6 Re-written to work with bundler 0.9.x. 15 年之前
bundler-bin.sh 3186fa39b5 Determine whether to run bundle exec when command executed. 15 年之前

README.md

bundler-bin

bundler is a great way to manage the gem dependencies in your Ruby project.

One of bundler's nifty features is the bundle exec command which allows you to run an executable (such as rake) in the context of your bundled gem dependencies. In other words, you'll only be able to access the gems that you've told bundler that you want to use.

To run a command in this way you need to prefix it with 'bundle exec', like so:

$ bundle exec rake my:task

It's something that you really ought to be doing whenever you run a ruby script within a bundled project, but, alas, it can become a chore. Let's be honest, it's a right pain in the rear.

bundler-bin works out whether you should have typed "bundle exec" infront of common ruby commands and runs them for you.

Usage

  1. Copy bundler-bin.sh to ~/.bundler-bin.sh.
  2. Source it from your ~/.bashrc file.

For example:

$ cp bundler-bin/bundler-bin.sh ~/.bundler-bin.sh
$ echo "[ -f ~/.bundler-bin.sh ] && source ~/.bundler-bin.sh" >> ~/.bashrc

Er, that's it...

You can get bundler by installing the gem:

$ gem install bundler

See http://github.com/carlhuda/bundler for more on bundler.