If I download a .gem file to a folder in my computer, can I install it later using gem install
?
9 Answers
Yup, when you do gem install
, it will search the current directory first, so if your .gem file is there, it will pick it up. I found it on the gem reference, which you may find handy as well:
gem install will install the named gem. It will attempt a local installation (i.e. a .gem file in the current directory), and if that fails, it will attempt to download and install the most recent version of the gem you want.
If you want to work on a locally modified fork of a gem, the best way to do so is
gem 'pry', path: './pry'
in a Gemfile.
... where ./pry
would be the clone of your repository. Simply run bundle install
once, and any changes in the gem sources you make are immediately reflected. With gem install pry/pry.gem
, the sources are still moved into GEM_PATH
and you'll always have to run both bundle gem pry
and gem update
to test.
Well, it's this my DRY installation:
- Look into a computer with already installed gems needed in the cache directory (by default:
[Ruby Installation version]/lib/ruby/gems/[Ruby version]/cache
) - Copy all "
*.gems
files" to a computer without gems in own gem cache place (by default the same patron path of first step:[Ruby Installation version]/lib/ruby/gems/[Ruby version]/cache
) - In the console be located in the gems cache (cd
[Ruby Installation version]/lib/ruby/gems/[Ruby version]/cache
) and fire thegem install anygemwithdependencieshere
(by examplecucumber-2.99.0
)
It's DRY because after install any gem, by default rubygems put the gem file in the cache gem directory and not make sense duplicate thats files, it's more easy if you want both computer has the same versions (or bloqued by paranoic security rules :v)
Edit: In some versions of ruby or rubygems, it don't work and fire alerts or error, you can put gems in other place but not get DRY, other alternative is using launch integrated command
gem server
and add the localhost url in gem sources, more information in: https://guides.rubygems.org/run-your-own-gem-server/
You can download gems from https://rubygems.org/gems/ or build you local gem via bundle and rack.
eg:
- bundle gem yourGemName
- rake install
Take care of installing dependencies before installing actual gems.
- gem install --local /pathToFolder/xxx-2.6.1.gem
Note: If using fluentd td-agent and ruby on same machine. Please make sure to use td-agent's td-agent-gem command. td-agent has own Ruby.