13 KiB
Ruby
Using Ruby
Several versions of Ruby interpreters are available on Nix, as well as over 250 gems and many applications written in Ruby. The attribute ruby
refers to the default Ruby interpreter, which is currently MRI 3.1. It's also possible to refer to specific versions, e.g. ruby_3_y
, jruby
, or mruby
.
In the Nixpkgs tree, Ruby packages can be found throughout, depending on what they do, and are called from the main package set. Ruby gems, however are separate sets, and there's one default set for each interpreter (currently MRI only).
There are two main approaches for using Ruby with gems. One is to use a specifically locked Gemfile
for an application that has very strict dependencies. The other is to depend on the common gems, which we'll explain further down, and rely on them being updated regularly.
The interpreters have common attributes, namely gems
, and withPackages
. So you can refer to ruby.gems.nokogiri
, or ruby_3_2.gems.nokogiri
to get the Nokogiri gem already compiled and ready to use.
Since not all gems have executables like nokogiri
, it's usually more convenient to use the withPackages
function like this: ruby.withPackages (p: with p; [ nokogiri ])
. This will also make sure that the Ruby in your environment will be able to find the gem and it can be used in your Ruby code (for example via ruby
or irb
executables) via require "nokogiri"
as usual.
Temporary Ruby environment with nix-shell
Rather than having a single Ruby environment shared by all Ruby development projects on a system, Nix allows you to create separate environments per project. nix-shell
gives you the possibility to temporarily load another environment akin to a combined chruby
or rvm
and bundle exec
.
There are two methods for loading a shell with Ruby packages. The first and recommended method is to create an environment with ruby.withPackages
and load that.
$ nix-shell -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri pry ])"
The other method, which is not recommended, is to create an environment and list all the packages directly.
$ nix-shell -p ruby.gems.nokogiri ruby.gems.pry
Again, it's possible to launch the interpreter from the shell. The Ruby interpreter has the attribute gems
which contains all Ruby gems for that specific interpreter.
Load Ruby environment from .nix
expression
As explained in the nix-shell
section of the Nix manual, nix-shell
can also load an expression from a .nix
file.
Say we want to have Ruby, nokogori
, and pry
. Consider a shell.nix
file with:
with import <nixpkgs> {};
ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri pry ])
What's happening here?
- We begin with importing the Nix Packages collections.
import <nixpkgs>
imports the<nixpkgs>
function,{}
calls it and thewith
statement brings all attributes ofnixpkgs
in the local scope. These attributes form the main package set. - Then we create a Ruby environment with the
withPackages
function. - The
withPackages
function expects us to provide a function as an argument that takes the set of all ruby gems and returns a list of packages to include in the environment. Here, we select the packagesnokogiri
andpry
from the package set.
Execute command with --run
A convenient flag for nix-shell
is --run
. It executes a command in the nix-shell
. We can e.g. directly open a pry
REPL:
$ nix-shell -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri pry ])" --run "pry"
Or immediately require nokogiri
in pry:
$ nix-shell -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri pry ])" --run "pry -rnokogiri"
Or run a script using this environment:
$ nix-shell -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri pry ])" --run "ruby example.rb"
Using nix-shell
as shebang
In fact, for the last case, there is a more convenient method. You can add a shebang to your script specifying which dependencies nix-shell
needs. With the following shebang, you can just execute ./example.rb
, and it will run with all dependencies.
#! /usr/bin/env nix-shell
#! nix-shell -i ruby -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ nokogiri rest-client ])"
require 'nokogiri'
require 'rest-client'
body = RestClient.get('http://example.com').body
puts Nokogiri::HTML(body).at('h1').text
Developing with Ruby
Using an existing Gemfile
In most cases, you'll already have a Gemfile.lock
listing all your dependencies. This can be used to generate a gemset.nix
which is used to fetch the gems and combine them into a single environment. The reason why you need to have a separate file for this, is that Nix requires you to have a checksum for each input to your build. Since the Gemfile.lock
that bundler
generates doesn't provide us with checksums, we have to first download each gem, calculate its SHA256, and store it in this separate file.
So the steps from having just a Gemfile
to a gemset.nix
are:
$ bundle lock
$ bundix
If you already have a Gemfile.lock
, you can run bundix
and it will work the same.
To update the gems in your Gemfile.lock
, you may use the bundix -l
flag, which will create a new Gemfile.lock
in case the Gemfile
has a more recent time of modification.
Once the gemset.nix
is generated, it can be used in a bundlerEnv
derivation. Here is an example you could use for your shell.nix
:
# ...
let
gems = bundlerEnv {
name = "gems-for-some-project";
gemdir = ./.;
};
in mkShell { packages = [ gems gems.wrappedRuby ]; }
With this file in your directory, you can run nix-shell
to build and use the gems. The important parts here are bundlerEnv
and wrappedRuby
.
The bundlerEnv
is a wrapper over all the gems in your gemset. This means that all the /lib
and /bin
directories will be available, and the executables of all gems (even of indirect dependencies) will end up in your $PATH
. The wrappedRuby
provides you with all executables that come with Ruby itself, but wrapped so they can easily find the gems in your gemset.
One common issue that you might have is that you have Ruby, but also bundler
in your gemset. That leads to a conflict for /bin/bundle
and /bin/bundler
. You can resolve this by wrapping either your Ruby or your gems in a lowPrio
call. So in order to give the bundler
from your gemset priority, it would be used like this:
# ...
mkShell { buildInputs = [ gems (lowPrio gems.wrappedRuby) ]; }
Sometimes a Gemfile references other files. Such as .ruby-version
or vendored gems. When copying the Gemfile to the nix store we need to copy those files alongside. This can be done using extraConfigPaths
. For example:
{
gems = bundlerEnv {
name = "gems-for-some-project";
gemdir = ./.;
extraConfigPaths = [ "${./.}/.ruby-version" ];
};
}
Gem-specific configurations and workarounds
In some cases, especially if the gem has native extensions, you might need to modify the way the gem is built.
This is done via a common configuration file that includes all of the workarounds for each gem.
This file lives at /pkgs/development/ruby-modules/gem-config/default.nix
, since it already contains a lot of entries, it should be pretty easy to add the modifications you need for your needs.
In the meanwhile, or if the modification is for a private gem, you can also add the configuration to only your own environment.
Two places that allow this modification are the ruby
derivation, or bundlerEnv
.
Here's the ruby
one:
{ pg_version ? "10", pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:
let
myRuby = pkgs.ruby.override {
defaultGemConfig = pkgs.defaultGemConfig // {
pg = attrs: {
buildFlags =
[ "--with-pg-config=${pkgs."postgresql_${pg_version}"}/bin/pg_config" ];
};
};
};
in myRuby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ pg ])
And an example with bundlerEnv
:
{ pg_version ? "10", pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> { } }:
let
gems = pkgs.bundlerEnv {
name = "gems-for-some-project";
gemdir = ./.;
gemConfig = pkgs.defaultGemConfig // {
pg = attrs: {
buildFlags =
[ "--with-pg-config=${pkgs."postgresql_${pg_version}"}/bin/pg_config" ];
};
};
};
in mkShell { buildInputs = [ gems gems.wrappedRuby ]; }
And finally via overlays:
{ pg_version ? "10" }:
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {
overlays = [
(self: super: {
defaultGemConfig = super.defaultGemConfig // {
pg = attrs: {
buildFlags = [
"--with-pg-config=${
pkgs."postgresql_${pg_version}"
}/bin/pg_config"
];
};
};
})
];
};
in pkgs.ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ pg ])
Then we can get whichever postgresql version we desire and the pg
gem will always reference it correctly:
$ nix-shell --argstr pg_version 9_4 --run 'ruby -rpg -e "puts PG.library_version"'
90421
$ nix-shell --run 'ruby -rpg -e "puts PG.library_version"'
100007
Of course for this use-case one could also use overlays since the configuration for pg
depends on the postgresql
alias, but for demonstration purposes this has to suffice.
Platform-specific gems
Right now, bundix has some issues with pre-built, platform-specific gems: bundix PR #68. Until this is solved, you can tell bundler to not use platform-specific gems and instead build them from source each time:
- globally (will be set in
~/.config/.bundle/config
):
$ bundle config set force_ruby_platform true
- locally (will be set in
<project-root>/.bundle/config
):
$ bundle config set --local force_ruby_platform true
Adding a gem to the default gemset
Now that you know how to get a working Ruby environment with Nix, it's time to go forward and start actually developing with Ruby. We will first have a look at how Ruby gems are packaged on Nix. Then, we will look at how you can use development mode with your code.
All gems in the standard set are automatically generated from a single Gemfile
. The dependency resolution is done with bundler
and makes it more likely that all gems are compatible to each other.
In order to add a new gem to nixpkgs, you can put it into the /pkgs/development/ruby-modules/with-packages/Gemfile
and run ./maintainers/scripts/update-ruby-packages
.
To test that it works, you can then try using the gem with:
NIX_PATH=nixpkgs=$PWD nix-shell -p "ruby.withPackages (ps: with ps; [ name-of-your-gem ])"
Packaging applications
A common task is to add a ruby executable to nixpkgs, popular examples would be chef
, jekyll
, or sass
. A good way to do that is to use the bundlerApp
function, that allows you to make a package that only exposes the listed executables, otherwise the package may cause conflicts through common paths like bin/rake
or bin/bundler
that aren't meant to be used.
The absolute easiest way to do that is to write a Gemfile
along these lines:
source 'https://rubygems.org' do
gem 'mdl'
end
If you want to package a specific version, you can use the standard Gemfile syntax for that, e.g. gem 'mdl', '0.5.0'
, but if you want the latest stable version anyway, it's easier to update by running the bundle lock
and bundix
steps again.
Now you can also make a default.nix
that looks like this:
{ bundlerApp }:
bundlerApp {
pname = "mdl";
gemdir = ./.;
exes = [ "mdl" ];
}
All that's left to do is to generate the corresponding Gemfile.lock
and gemset.nix
as described above in the Using an existing Gemfile
section.
Packaging executables that require wrapping
Sometimes your app will depend on other executables at runtime, and tries to find it through the PATH
environment variable.
In this case, you can provide a postBuild
hook to bundlerApp
that wraps the gem in another script that prefixes the PATH
.
Of course you could also make a custom gemConfig
if you know exactly how to patch it, but it's usually much easier to maintain with a simple wrapper so the patch doesn't have to be adjusted for each version.
Here's another example:
{ lib, bundlerApp, makeWrapper, git, gnutar, gzip }:
bundlerApp {
pname = "r10k";
gemdir = ./.;
exes = [ "r10k" ];
nativeBuildInputs = [ makeWrapper ];
postBuild = ''
wrapProgram $out/bin/r10k --prefix PATH : ${lib.makeBinPath [ git gnutar gzip ]}
'';
}