gem - RubyGems¶
Simplest invocation¶
Here’s a command that will fetch the latest json gem and convert it to a .deb package:
% cd /tmp
% fpm -s gem -t deb json
...
Created /tmp/rubygem-json-1.4.6-1.amd64.deb
This will download the latest ‘json’ rubygem from rubygems.org and convert it to a .deb. It will create a package named ‘rubygem-json-VERSION_ARCH.deb’ with appropriate version/arch in place.
Check the package:
% dpkg --info rubygem-json-1.4.6-1.amd64.deb
new debian package, version 2.0.
size 1004040 bytes: control archive= 335 bytes.
275 bytes, 10 lines control
5 bytes, 1 lines md5sums
Package: rubygem-json
Version: 1.4.6-1
Architecture: amd64
Maintainer: Florian Frank
Standards-Version: 3.9.1
Section: Languages/Development/Ruby
Priority: extra
Homepage: http://flori.github.com/json
Description: JSON Implementation for Ruby
JSON Implementation for Ruby
From the above, you can see that fpm automatically picked the package name, version, maintainer, section, homepage, and description all from the rubygem itself. Nothing for you to worry about :)
Specifying a version¶
You can ask for a specific version with ‘-v <VERSION>’. It will also handle dependencies. How about an older gem like rails 2.2.2:
% fpm -s gem -t deb -v 2.2.2 rails
Trying to download rails (version=2.2.2)
...
Created .../rubygem-rails-2.2.2-1.amd64.deb
Now observe the package created:
- % dpkg –info ./rubygem-rails-2.2.2-1.amd64.deb
new debian package, version 2.0. size 2452008 bytes: control archive= 445 bytes.
- 575 bytes, 11 lines control
- 6 bytes, 1 lines md5sums
Package: rubygem-rails Version: 2.2.2-1 Architecture: amd64 Maintainer: David Heinemeier Hansson Depends: rubygem-rake (>= 0.8.3), rubygem-activesupport (= 2.2.2),
rubygem-activerecord (= 2.2.2), rubygem-actionpack (= 2.2.2), rubygem-actionmailer (= 2.2.2), rubygem-activeresource (= 2.2.2)Standards-Version: 3.9.1 Section: Languages/Development/Ruby Priority: extra Homepage: http://www.rubyonrails.org Description: Web-application framework with template engine, control-flow layer, and ORM.
Web-application framework with template engine, control-flow layer, and ORM.
Noticei how the Depends entry for this debian package lists all the dependencies that rails has?
Let’s see what the package installs:
% dpkg -c ./rubygem-rails-2.2.2-1.amd64.deb
...
drwxr-xr-x root/root 0 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/
drwxr-xr-x root/root 0 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/
-rw-r--r-- root/root 3639 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/source_annotation_extractor.rb
-rw-r--r-- root/root 198 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/performance_test_help.rb
drwxr-xr-x root/root 0 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/tasks/
-rw-r--r-- root/root 204 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/tasks/log.rake
-rw-r--r-- root/root 2695 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/tasks/gems.rake
-rw-r--r-- root/root 4858 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/tasks/testing.rake
-rw-r--r-- root/root 17727 2011-01-20 17:00 ./usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/rails-2.2.2/lib/tasks/databases.rake
Packaging individual dependencies¶
A frequently-asked question is how to get a rubygem and all its dependencies converted. Let’s take a look.
First we’ll have to download the gem and its deps. The easiest way to do this is to stage the installation in a temporary directory, like this:
% mkdir /tmp/gems
% gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc --install-dir /tmp/gems cucumber
<output trimmed>
Successfully installed json-1.4.6
Successfully installed gherkin-2.3.3
Successfully installed term-ansicolor-1.0.5
Successfully installed builder-3.0.0
Successfully installed diff-lcs-1.1.2
Successfully installed cucumber-0.10.0
6 gems installed
Now you’ve got everything cucumber requires to run (just as a normal ‘gem install’ would.)
gem saves gems to the cache directory in the gem install dir, so check it out:
% ls /tmp/gems/cache
builder-3.0.0.gem diff-lcs-1.1.2.gem json-1.4.6.gem
cucumber-0.10.0.gem gherkin-2.3.3.gem term-ansicolor-1.0.5.gem
(by the way, under normal installation situations, gem would keep the cache in a location like /usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/cache, see ‘gem env | grep INSTALL’)
Let’s convert all these gems to debs (output trimmed for sanity):
% find /tmp/gems/cache -name '*.gem' | xargs -rn1 fpm -d ruby -d rubygems --prefix $(gem environment gemdir) -s gem -t deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-json-1.4.6-1.amd64.deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-builder-3.0.0-1.amd64.deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-gherkin-2.3.3-1.amd64.deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-diff-lcs-1.1.2-1.amd64.deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-term-ansicolor-1.0.5-1.amd64.deb
...
Created /tmp/gems/rubygem-cucumber-0.10.0-1.amd64.deb
% ls *.deb
rubygem-builder-3.0.0-1.amd64.deb rubygem-gherkin-2.3.3-1.amd64.deb
rubygem-cucumber-0.10.0-1.amd64.deb rubygem-json-1.4.6-1.amd64.deb
rubygem-diff-lcs-1.1.2-1.amd64.deb rubygem-term-ansicolor-1.0.5-1.amd64.deb
Nice, eh? Now, let’s show what happens after these packages are installed:
# Show it's not install yet:
% gem list cucumber
*** LOCAL GEMS ***
# Now install the .deb packages:
% sudo dpkg -i rubygem-builder-3.0.0-1.amd64.deb \
rubygem-cucumber-0.10.0-1.amd64.deb rubygem-diff-lcs-1.1.2-1.amd64.deb \
rubygem-gherkin-2.3.3-1.amd64.deb rubygem-json-1.4.6-1.amd64.deb \
rubygem-term-ansicolor-1.0.5-1.amd64.deb
...
Setting up rubygem-builder (3.0.0-1) ...
Setting up rubygem-diff-lcs (1.1.2-1) ...
Setting up rubygem-json (1.4.6-1) ...
Setting up rubygem-term-ansicolor (1.0.5-1) ...
Setting up rubygem-gherkin (2.3.3-1) ...
Setting up rubygem-cucumber (0.10.0-1) ...
# Is it installed?
% gem list cucumber
*** LOCAL GEMS ***
cucumber (0.10.0)
# Does it work?
% dpkg -L rubygem-cucumber | grep bin
/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/cucumber-0.10.0/bin
/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/cucumber-0.10.0/bin/cucumber
/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/bin
/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/bin/cucumber
% /usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/bin/cucumber --help
Usage: cucumber [options] [ [FILE|DIR|URL][:LINE[:LINE]*] ]+
...
You can put these .deb files in your apt repo (assuming you have a local apt repo, right?) and easily install them with ‘apt-get’ like: ‘apt-get install rubygem-cucumber’ and expect dependencies to work nicely.
Deterministic output¶
If convert a gem to a deb twice, you’ll get different output even though the inputs didn’t change:
% fpm -s gem -t deb json % mkdir run1; mv .deb run1 % sleep 1 % fpm -s gem -t deb json % mkdir run2; mv *.deb run2 % cmp run1/.deb run2/*.deb run1/rubygem-json_2.1.0_amd64.deb run2/rubygem-json_2.1.0_amd64.deb differ: byte 124, line 4
This can be a pain if you’re uploading packages to an apt repository which refuses reuploads that differ in content, or if you’re trying to verify that packages have not been infected. There are several sources of nondeterminism; use ‘diffoscope run1/.deb run2/.deb’ if you want the gory details. See http://reproducible-builds.org for the whole story.
To remove nondeterminism due to differing timestamps, use the option –source-date-epoch-from-changelog; that will use the timestamp from the gem’s changelog.
In case the gem doesn’t have a standard changelog (and most don’t, alas), use –source-date-epoch-default to set a default integer Unix timestamp. (This will also be read from the environment variable SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH if set.)
Gems that include native extensions may have nondeterministic output because of how the extensions get built (at least until fpm and compilers finish implementing the reproducible-builds.org recommendations). If this happens, use the option –gem-stagingdir=/tmp/foo.
For instance, picking the timestamp 1234 seconds after the Unix epoch:
% fpm -s gem -t deb –source-date-epoch-default=1234 –gem-stagingdir=/tmp/foo json % mkdir run1; mv .deb run1 % sleep 1 % fpm -s gem -t deb –source-date-epoch-default=1234 –gem-stagingdir=/tmp/foo json % mkdir run2; mv *.deb run2 % cmp run1/.deb run2/.deb % dpkg-deb -c run1/.deb … -rw-rw-r– 0/0 17572 1969-12-31 16:20 ./var/lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/json-2.1.0/CHANGES.md % date –date @1234 Wed Dec 31 16:20:34 PST 1969
If after using those three options, the files are still different, you may have found a bug; we might not have plugged all the sources of nondeterminism yet. As of this writing, these options are only implemented for reading gems and writing debs, and only verified to produce identical output when run twice on the same Linux system.