Class: Gem::Commands::HelpCommand

Inherits:
Gem::Command show all
Defined in:
lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb

Constant Summary collapse

EXAMPLES =

:stopdoc:

<<-EOF.freeze
Some examples of 'gem' usage.

* Install 'rake', either from local directory or remote server:

  gem install rake

* Install 'rake', only from remote server:

  gem install rake --remote

* Install 'rake', but only version 0.3.1, even if dependencies
are not met, and into a user-specific directory:

  gem install rake --version 0.3.1 --force --user-install

* List local gems whose name begins with 'D':

  gem list D

* List local and remote gems whose name contains 'log':

  gem search log --both

* List only remote gems whose name contains 'log':

  gem search log --remote

* Uninstall 'rake':

  gem uninstall rake

* Create a gem:

  See https://guides.rubygems.org/make-your-own-gem/

* See information about RubyGems:

  gem environment

* Update all gems on your system:

  gem update

* Update your local version of RubyGems

  gem update --system
EOF
GEM_DEPENDENCIES =
<<-EOF.freeze
A gem dependencies file allows installation of a consistent set of gems across
multiple environments.  The RubyGems implementation is designed to be
compatible with Bundler's Gemfile format.  You can see additional
documentation on the format at:

http://bundler.io

RubyGems automatically looks for these gem dependencies files:

* gem.deps.rb
* Gemfile
* Isolate

These files are looked up automatically using `gem install -g`, or you can
specify a custom file.

When the RUBYGEMS_GEMDEPS environment variable is set to a gem dependencies
file the gems from that file will be activated at startup time.  Set it to a
specific filename or to "-" to have RubyGems automatically discover the gem
dependencies file by walking up from the current directory.

You can also activate gem dependencies at program startup using
Gem.use_gemdeps.

NOTE: Enabling automatic discovery on multiuser systems can lead to execution
of arbitrary code when used from directories outside your control.

Gem Dependencies
================

Use #gem to declare which gems you directly depend upon:

gem 'rake'

To depend on a specific set of versions:

gem 'rake', '~> 10.3', '>= 10.3.2'

RubyGems will require the gem name when activating the gem using
the RUBYGEMS_GEMDEPS environment variable or Gem::use_gemdeps.  Use the
require: option to override this behavior if the gem does not have a file of
that name or you don't want to require those files:

gem 'my_gem', require: 'other_file'

To prevent RubyGems from requiring any files use:

gem 'my_gem', require: false

To load dependencies from a .gemspec file:

gemspec

RubyGems looks for the first .gemspec file in the current directory.  To
override this use the name: option:

gemspec name: 'specific_gem'

To look in a different directory use the path: option:

gemspec name: 'specific_gem', path: 'gemspecs'

To depend on a gem unpacked into a local directory:

gem 'modified_gem', path: 'vendor/modified_gem'

To depend on a gem from git:

gem 'private_gem', git: '[email protected]:private_gem.git'

To depend on a gem from github:

gem 'private_gem', github: 'my_company/private_gem'

To depend on a gem from a github gist:

gem 'bang', gist: '1232884'

Git, github and gist support the ref:, branch: and tag: options to specify a
commit reference or hash, branch or tag respectively to use for the gem.

Setting the submodules: option to true for git, github and gist dependencies
causes fetching of submodules when fetching the repository.

You can depend on multiple gems from a single repository with the git method:

git 'https://github.com/rails/rails.git' do
  gem 'activesupport'
  gem 'activerecord'
end

Gem Sources
===========

RubyGems uses the default sources for regular `gem install` for gem
dependencies files.  Unlike bundler, you do need to specify a source.

You can override the sources used for downloading gems with:

source 'https://gem_server.example'

You may specify multiple sources.  Unlike bundler the prepend: option is not
supported. Sources are used in-order, to prepend a source place it at the
front of the list.

Gem Platform
============

You can restrict gem dependencies to specific platforms with the #platform
and #platforms methods:

platform :ruby_21 do
  gem 'debugger'
end

See the bundler Gemfile manual page for a list of platforms supported in a gem
dependencies file.:

http://bundler.io/v1.6/man/gemfile.5.html

Ruby Version and Engine Dependency
==================================

You can specify the version, engine and engine version of ruby to use with
your gem dependencies file.  If you are not running the specified version
RubyGems will raise an exception.

To depend on a specific version of ruby:

ruby '2.1.2'

To depend on a specific ruby engine:

ruby '1.9.3', engine: 'jruby'

To depend on a specific ruby engine version:

ruby '1.9.3', engine: 'jruby', engine_version: '1.7.11'

Grouping Dependencies
=====================

Gem dependencies may be placed in groups that can be excluded from install.
Dependencies required for development or testing of your code may be excluded
when installed in a production environment.

A #gem dependency may be placed in a group using the group: option:

gem 'minitest', group: :test

To install dependencies from a gemfile without specific groups use the
`--without` option for `gem install -g`:

$ gem install -g --without test

The group: option also accepts multiple groups if the gem fits in multiple
categories.

Multiple groups may be excluded during install by comma-separating the groups for `--without` or by specifying `--without` multiple times.

The #group method can also be used to place gems in groups:

group :test do
  gem 'minitest'
  gem 'minitest-emoji'
end

The #group method allows multiple groups.

The #gemspec development dependencies are placed in the :development group by
default.  This may be overridden with the :development_group option:

gemspec development_group: :other

EOF
PLATFORMS =
<<-'EOF'.freeze
RubyGems platforms are composed of three parts, a CPU, an OS, and a
version.  These values are taken from values in rbconfig.rb.  You can view
your current platform by running `gem environment`.

RubyGems matches platforms as follows:

* The CPU must match exactly unless one of the platforms has
  "universal" as the CPU or the local CPU starts with "arm" and the gem's
  CPU is exactly "arm" (for gems that support generic ARM architecture).
* The OS must match exactly.
* The versions must match exactly unless one of the versions is nil.

For commands that install, uninstall and list gems, you can override what
RubyGems thinks your platform is with the --platform option.  The platform
you pass must match "#{cpu}-#{os}" or "#{cpu}-#{os}-#{version}".  On mswin
platforms, the version is the compiler version, not the OS version.  (Ruby
compiled with VC6 uses "60" as the compiler version, VC8 uses "80".)

For the ARM architecture, gems with a platform of "arm-linux" should run on a
reasonable set of ARM CPUs and not depend on instructions present on a limited
subset of the architecture.  For example, the binary should run on platforms
armv5, armv6hf, armv6l, armv7, etc.  If you use the "arm-linux" platform
please test your gem on a variety of ARM hardware before release to ensure it
functions correctly.

Example platforms:

x86-freebsd        # Any FreeBSD version on an x86 CPU
universal-darwin-8 # Darwin 8 only gems that run on any CPU
x86-mswin32-80     # Windows gems compiled with VC8
armv7-linux        # Gem complied for an ARMv7 CPU running linux
arm-linux          # Gem compiled for any ARM CPU running linux

When building platform gems, set the platform in the gem specification to
Gem::Platform::CURRENT.  This will correctly mark the gem with your ruby's
platform.
EOF
SUBCOMMANDS =

NOTE when updating also update Gem::Command::HELP

[
  ["commands",         :show_commands],
  ["options",          Gem::Command::HELP],
  ["examples",         EXAMPLES],
  ["gem_dependencies", GEM_DEPENDENCIES],
  ["platforms",        PLATFORMS],
].freeze

Instance Attribute Summary

Attributes inherited from Gem::Command

#command, #defaults, #options, #program_name, #summary

Instance Method Summary collapse

Methods inherited from Gem::Command

add_common_option, #add_extra_args, #add_option, add_specific_extra_args, #arguments, #begins?, build_args, build_args=, #check_deprecated_options, common_options, #defaults_str, #deprecate_option, #deprecated?, #description, extra_args, extra_args=, #get_all_gem_names, #get_all_gem_names_and_versions, #get_one_gem_name, #get_one_optional_argument, #handle_options, #handles?, #invoke, #invoke_with_build_args, #merge_options, #remove_option, #show_help, #show_lookup_failure, specific_extra_args, specific_extra_args_hash, specific_extra_args_hash=, #when_invoked

Methods included from UserInteraction

#alert, #alert_error, #alert_warning, #ask, #ask_for_password, #ask_yes_no, #choose_from_list, #say, #terminate_interaction, #verbose

Methods included from DefaultUserInteraction

ui, #ui, ui=, #ui=, use_ui, #use_ui

Methods included from Text

#clean_text, #format_text, #levenshtein_distance, #min3, #truncate_text

Constructor Details

#initializeHelpCommand

:startdoc:



282
283
284
285
286
# File 'lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb', line 282

def initialize
  super 'help', "Provide help on the 'gem' command"

  @command_manager = Gem::CommandManager.instance
end

Instance Method Details

#executeObject



292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
# File 'lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb', line 292

def execute
  arg = options[:args][0]

  _, help = SUBCOMMANDS.find do |command,|
    begins? command, arg
  end

  if help
    if Symbol === help
      send help
    else
      say help
    end
    return
  end

  if options[:help]
    show_help

  elsif arg
    show_command_help arg

  else
    say Gem::Command::HELP
  end
end

#show_command_help(command_name) ⇒ Object

:nodoc:



360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
# File 'lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb', line 360

def show_command_help(command_name) # :nodoc:
  command_name = command_name.downcase

  possibilities = @command_manager.find_command_possibilities command_name

  if possibilities.size == 1
    command = @command_manager[possibilities.first]
    command.invoke("--help")
  elsif possibilities.size > 1
    alert_warning "Ambiguous command #{command_name} (#{possibilities.join(', ')})"
  else
    alert_warning "Unknown command #{command_name}. Try: gem help commands"
  end
end

#show_commandsObject

:nodoc:



319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
# File 'lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb', line 319

def show_commands # :nodoc:
  out = []
  out << "GEM commands are:"
  out << nil

  margin_width = 4

  desc_width = @command_manager.command_names.map {|n| n.size }.max + 4

  summary_width = 80 - margin_width - desc_width
  wrap_indent = ' ' * (margin_width + desc_width)
  format = "#{' ' * margin_width}%-#{desc_width}s%s"

  @command_manager.command_names.each do |cmd_name|
    command = @command_manager[cmd_name]

    next if command.deprecated?

    summary =
      if command
        command.summary
      else
        "[No command found for #{cmd_name}]"
      end

    summary = wrap(summary, summary_width).split "\n"
    out << sprintf(format, cmd_name, summary.shift)
    until summary.empty? do
      out << "#{wrap_indent}#{summary.shift}"
    end
  end

  out << nil
  out << "For help on a particular command, use 'gem help COMMAND'."
  out << nil
  out << "Commands may be abbreviated, so long as they are unambiguous."
  out << "e.g. 'gem i rake' is short for 'gem install rake'."

  say out.join("\n")
end

#usageObject

:nodoc:



288
289
290
# File 'lib/rubygems/commands/help_command.rb', line 288

def usage # :nodoc:
  "#{program_name} ARGUMENT"
end