89
votes

When I include a gem that I made, thanks to Bundler (version 1.0.12), in a Gemfile and then I try to bundle or to rake just like that:

$ rake

I've got this error message:

Invalid gemspec in [/Users/zagzag/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p180@foobar/specifications/myplugin-1.0.0.gemspec]: invalid date format in specification: "2011-04-21 00:00:00.000000000Z"

I'm on the last Mac OS X (10.6.4), with:

$ ruby -v
ruby 1.9.2p180 (2011-02-18 revision 30909) [x86_64-darwin10.4.0]

and:

$ gem -v
Invalid gemspec in [/Users/zagzag/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p180@foobar/specifications/myplugin-1.0.0.gemspec]: invalid date format in specification: "2011-04-21 00:00:00.000000000Z"
1.7.2

I really don't see how to solve this issue. Thanks for any ideas.

15
I'm getting these errors constantly now!!! How did you fix? Two answers thus far aren't helpful...Meltemi
That one everyone suggested, is read only file. How can I change it?chhantyal

15 Answers

143
votes

Here is the way I fix the "invalid date format in specification" error:

1.) Go to the specifications folder located at:

/usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/specifications/

2.) Find the spec that is causing the problem.

3.) Change s.date = %q{2011-05-21 00:00:00.000000000Z} to s.date = %q{2011-05-21}

That's a WIN for me! Good Luck

60
votes

Here is the command to fix this for all your gems:

perl -p -i -e 's/ 00:00:00.000000000Z//' ~/gems/specifications/*.gemspec

It converts s.date = %q{2011-05-21 00:00:00.000000000Z} to s.date = %q{2011-05-21} and should fix your issue.

21
votes

Please notice the comment from Damian Nowak. These commands do possibly mess up your rubygems!

On Ubuntu 11.10 the following solved this error:

sudo gem install rubygems-update
sudo update_rubygems     

The following may work on some systems but not on Debian based:

sudo gem update --system
14
votes

You may upgraded your gem. To fix this you can edit the gemspecfile directly - from

2011-04-21 00:00:00.000000000Z

to

YYYY-MM-DD

Or upgrade your rails also

sudo gem update rails

It will fix the issue.

6
votes

Don't specify the time... just the date. 2011-04-21 should work fine.

4
votes

Had the same issue. It looks like a bug in rubygems. Here's the commit that fixed it: https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/commit/21cccd55b823848c5e941093a615b0fdd6cd8bc7

You need to update rubygems and bundler to the latest versions. If you are still having issues after that, then you may need to remove and then reinstall any gems that are giving you problems.

3
votes

This is more of a comment to ben hall's answer, but i dont have that privilege yet it seems

gem updates didn't seem to work, im thinking it can't even load the gem because of the bad date format. manually changing the dates was too frustrating to go one by one, so a grep:

grep -i *.gemspec -e '.*s\.date.*=.*%q{\(....-..-..\) \(.*Z\)}

And for sed:

sed -i -e 's/\(.*\)s\.date.*=.*%q{\(....-..-..\) \(.*Z\)}/\1s.date = %q\{\2}/p' ./*.gemspec

And at your own risks!! I'm still a sed newbie, but it worked for me ;)

2
votes

On my slicehost server the specifications folder was located in a different spot. Here is the path:

/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/specifications

The error provided should give the path to the specifications folder.

2
votes

The shotgun approach: Uninstall all gems and rerun bundler.

  1. gem list --no-version | xargs gem uninstall -aIx
  2. rm -i `rvm gemdir`/specifications/*.gemspec
  3. gem update --system
  4. gem install bundler
  5. bundle install
1
votes

(Until the bug fix gets into a stable release of Rubygems) I solved it by reinstalling the same version of any warning-generating gems using the --version switch of the gem command.

1
votes

As Ben Hall said, you must fix the gemspec file that may change for system to system. To know what file is see what file is tell in the error report, for example:

Invalid gemspec in [/var/lib/gems/1.8/specifications/svn2git-2.1.2.gemspec]: invalid date format in specification: "2011-12-28 00:00:00.000000000Z"

In this example you must edit "/var/lib/gems/1.8/specifications/svn2git-2.1.2.gemspec" file and change "2011-12-28 00:00:00.000000000Z" for "2011-12-28" in s.date option.

1
votes

Had this problem still now. Updating Rubygems solved it fine:

gem update --system
0
votes

This is my environment:

RubyGems Environment:
- RUBYGEMS VERSION: 1.8.10
- RUBY VERSION: 1.9.2 (2011-07-09 patchlevel 290) [x86_64-darwin11.1.0]
- INSTALLATION DIRECTORY: /Users/user/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p290@app
- RUBY EXECUTABLE: /Users/user/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.2-p290/bin/ruby
- EXECUTABLE DIRECTORY: /Users/user/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p290@app/bin
- RUBYGEMS PLATFORMS:
  - ruby
  - x86_64-darwin-11
- GEM PATHS:
   - /Users/user/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p290@app
   - /Users/user/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.2-p290@global
- GEM CONFIGURATION:
   - :update_sources => true
   - :verbose => true
   - :benchmark => false
   - :backtrace => false
   - :bulk_threshold => 1000
- REMOTE SOURCES:
   - http://rubygems.org/

I finally managed to find a cause / a way to prevent these errors on my system. I just revert to cucumber and cucumber-rails version 1.0.2. Using the latest versions was doing this...

0
votes

Even if you install the latest version of a gem with a valid date format, make sure to gem cleanup GEMNAME afterwards, since gem will still complain about the specifications for the older libraries.

0
votes

Reinstalling your gems can be the solution in many of these slightly different machine states.

In my case:

cd /Library/Ruby/Gems/1.8/specifications &&
sudo rm -rf *

In my case, the other more creative solutions failed.

My issue was getting Invalid gemspec when trying to use cocoapods. I ran gem install cocoapods again and everything was rosy.