1BUNDLE-INSTALL(1)                                            BUNDLE-INSTALL(1)
2
3
4

NAME

6       bundle-install - Install the dependencies specified in your Gemfile
7

SYNOPSIS

9       bundle   install   [--binstubs[=DIRECTORY]]   [--clean]  [--deployment]
10       [--frozen] [--full-index] [--gemfile=GEMFILE] [--jobs=NUMBER] [--local]
11       [--no-cache]   [--no-prune]   [--path  PATH]  [--quiet]  [--redownload]
12       [--retry=NUMBER] [--shebang] [--standalone[=GROUP[ GROUP...]]]  [--sys‐
13       tem]   [--trust-policy=POLICY]   [--with=GROUP[   GROUP...]]   [--with‐
14       out=GROUP[ GROUP...]]
15

DESCRIPTION

17       Install the gems specified in your Gemfile(5). If  this  is  the  first
18       time  you  run  bundle  install  (and  a  Gemfile.lock does not exist),
19       Bundler will fetch all remote sources, resolve dependencies and install
20       all needed gems.
21
22       If a Gemfile.lock does exist, and you have not updated your Gemfile(5),
23       Bundler will fetch all remote sources, but use the dependencies  speci‐
24       fied in the Gemfile.lock instead of resolving dependencies.
25
26       If  a  Gemfile.lock  does  exist, and you have updated your Gemfile(5),
27       Bundler will use the dependencies in the Gemfile.lock for all gems that
28       you  did  not update, but will re-resolve the dependencies of gems that
29       you did update. You can find more information about this update process
30       below under CONSERVATIVE UPDATING.
31

OPTIONS

33       The  --clean,  --deployment,  --frozen,  --no-prune, --path, --shebang,
34       --system, --without and --with options are deprecated because they only
35       make  sense  if they are applied to every subsequent bundle install run
36       automatically and that requires  bundler  to  silently  remember  them.
37       Since  bundler  will  no  longer remember CLI flags in future versions,
38       bundle config (see bundle-config(1)) should be used to apply them  per‐
39       manently.
40
41       --binstubs[=<directory>]
42              Binstubs  are scripts that wrap around executables. Bundler cre‐
43              ates a small Ruby file (a binstub) that loads Bundler, runs  the
44              command, and puts it in bin/. This lets you link the binstub in‐
45              side of an application to the exact gem version the  application
46              needs.
47
48              Creates  a directory (defaults to ~/bin) and places any executa‐
49              bles from the gem there. These executables run in Bundler´s con‐
50              text.  If  used,  you  might add this directory to your environ‐
51              ment´s PATH variable. For instance, if the rails gem comes  with
52              a rails executable, this flag will create a bin/rails executable
53              that ensures that all referred dependencies will be resolved us‐
54              ing the bundled gems.
55
56       --clean
57              On  finishing  the  installation  Bundler is going to remove any
58              gems not present in the current Gemfile(5).  Don´t  worry,  gems
59              currently in use will not be removed.
60
61              This option is deprecated in favor of the clean setting.
62
63       --deployment
64              In  deployment mode, Bundler will ´roll-out´ the bundle for pro‐
65              duction or CI use. Please check carefully if you  want  to  have
66              this option enabled in your development environment.
67
68              This option is deprecated in favor of the deployment setting.
69
70       --redownload
71              Force  download every gem, even if the required versions are al‐
72              ready available locally.
73
74       --frozen
75              Do not allow the Gemfile.lock to be updated after this  install.
76              Exits  non-zero  if  there  are  going to be changes to the Gem‐
77              file.lock.
78
79              This option is deprecated in favor of the frozen setting.
80
81       --full-index
82              Bundler will not call Rubygems´ API endpoint (default) but down‐
83              load and cache a (currently big) index file of all gems. Perfor‐
84              mance can be improved for large bundles that  seldom  change  by
85              enabling this option.
86
87       --gemfile=<gemfile>
88              The  location  of  the Gemfile(5) which Bundler should use. This
89              defaults to a Gemfile(5) in the current  working  directory.  In
90              general, Bundler will assume that the location of the Gemfile(5)
91              is also the project´s root and will try to find Gemfile.lock and
92              vendor/cache relative to this location.
93
94       --jobs=[<number>], -j[<number>]
95              The  maximum  number  of parallel download and install jobs. The
96              default is the number of available processors.
97
98       --local
99              Do not attempt to connect to rubygems.org. Instead, Bundler will
100              use  the  gems  already  present  in  Rubygems´ cache or in ven‐
101              dor/cache. Note that if an appropriate platform-specific gem ex‐
102              ists on rubygems.org it will not be found.
103
104       --prefer-local
105              Force  using  locally installed gems, or gems already present in
106              Rubygems´ cache or in  vendor/cache,  when  resolving,  even  if
107              newer  versions  are available remotely. Only attempt to connect
108              to rubygems.org for gems that are not present locally.
109
110       --no-cache
111              Do not update the cache in vendor/cache with the  newly  bundled
112              gems.  This  does not remove any gems in the cache but keeps the
113              newly bundled gems from being cached during the install.
114
115       --no-prune
116              Don´t remove stale gems from the  cache  when  the  installation
117              finishes.
118
119              This option is deprecated in favor of the no_prune setting.
120
121       --path=<path>
122              The  location to install the specified gems to. This defaults to
123              Rubygems´ setting. Bundler shares this location  with  Rubygems,
124              gem  install  ... will have gem installed there, too. Therefore,
125              gems installed without a --path ...  setting  will  show  up  by
126              calling gem list. Accordingly, gems installed to other locations
127              will not get listed.
128
129              This option is deprecated in favor of the path setting.
130
131       --quiet
132              Do not print progress information to the  standard  output.  In‐
133              stead, Bundler will exit using a status code ($?).
134
135       --retry=[<number>]
136              Retry failed network or git requests for number times.
137
138       --shebang=<ruby-executable>
139              Uses the specified ruby executable (usually ruby) to execute the
140              scripts created with --binstubs. In addition, if you use  --bin‐
141              stubs  together  with  --shebang jruby these executables will be
142              changed to execute jruby instead.
143
144              This option is deprecated in favor of the shebang setting.
145
146       --standalone[=<list>]
147              Makes a bundle that can work without depending  on  Rubygems  or
148              Bundler  at runtime. A space separated list of groups to install
149              has to be specified. Bundler creates a  directory  named  bundle
150              and  installs  the  bundle  there.  It  also  generates  a  bun‐
151              dle/bundler/setup.rb file to replace Bundler´s own setup in  the
152              manner  required.  Using this option implicitly sets path, which
153              is a [remembered option][REMEMBERED OPTIONS].
154
155       --system
156              Installs the gems  specified  in  the  bundle  to  the  system´s
157              Rubygems  location. This overrides any previous configuration of
158              --path.
159
160              This option is deprecated in favor of the system setting.
161
162       --trust-policy=[<policy>]
163              Apply the Rubygems security policy policy, where policy  is  one
164              of  HighSecurity, MediumSecurity, LowSecurity, AlmostNoSecurity,
165              or NoSecurity. For more details, please see the Rubygems signing
166              documentation linked below in SEE ALSO.
167
168       --with=<list>
169              A space-separated list of groups referencing gems to install. If
170              an optional group is given it is installed. If a group is  given
171              that  is in the remembered list of groups given to --without, it
172              is removed from that list.
173
174              This option is deprecated in favor of the with setting.
175
176       --without=<list>
177              A space-separated list of groups referencing gems to skip during
178              installation. If a group is given that is in the remembered list
179              of groups given to --with, it is removed from that list.
180
181              This option is deprecated in favor of the without setting.
182

DEPLOYMENT MODE

184       Bundler´s defaults are optimized for development. To switch to defaults
185       optimized  for deployment and for CI, use the --deployment flag. Do not
186       activate deployment mode on development machines, as it will  cause  an
187       error when the Gemfile(5) is modified.
188
189       1.  A Gemfile.lock is required.
190
191           To ensure that the same versions of the gems you developed with and
192           tested with are also used in deployments,  a  Gemfile.lock  is  re‐
193           quired.
194
195           This  is  mainly  to  ensure  that  you remember to check your Gem‐
196           file.lock into version control.
197
198       2.  The Gemfile.lock must be up to date
199
200           In development, you can modify your Gemfile(5)  and  re-run  bundle
201           install to conservatively update your Gemfile.lock snapshot.
202
203           In  deployment, your Gemfile.lock should be up-to-date with changes
204           made in your Gemfile(5).
205
206       3.  Gems are installed to vendor/bundle not your default  system  loca‐
207           tion
208
209           In  development, it´s convenient to share the gems used in your ap‐
210           plication with other applications and other scripts that run on the
211           system.
212
213           In  deployment, isolation is a more important default. In addition,
214           the user deploying the application may not have permission  to  in‐
215           stall gems to the system, or the web server may not have permission
216           to read them.
217
218           As a result, bundle install --deployment installs gems to the  ven‐
219           dor/bundle directory in the application. This may be overridden us‐
220           ing the --path option.
221
222
223

INSTALLING GROUPS

225       By default, bundle install will install all gems in all groups in  your
226       Gemfile(5), except those declared for a different platform.
227
228       However,  you  can  explicitly  tell Bundler to skip installing certain
229       groups with the --without option. This option takes  a  space-separated
230       list of groups.
231
232       While  the --without option will skip installing the gems in the speci‐
233       fied groups, it will still download those gems and use them to  resolve
234       the dependencies of every gem in your Gemfile(5).
235
236       This is so that installing a different set of groups on another machine
237       (such as a production server) will not change  the  gems  and  versions
238       that you have already developed and tested against.
239
240       Bundler offers a rock-solid guarantee that the third-party code you are
241       running in development and testing is also the third-party code you are
242       running  in  production. You can choose to exclude some of that code in
243       different environments, but you will never  be  caught  flat-footed  by
244       different versions of third-party code being used in different environ‐
245       ments.
246
247       For a simple illustration, consider the following Gemfile(5):
248
249
250
251           source ´https://rubygems.org´
252
253           gem ´sinatra´
254
255           group :production do
256             gem ´rack-perftools-profiler´
257           end
258
259
260
261       In this case, sinatra depends on any version of Rack  (>=  1.0),  while
262       rack-perftools-profiler depends on 1.x (~> 1.0).
263
264       When  you  run  bundle  install --without production in development, we
265       look at the dependencies of rack-perftools-profiler as well. That  way,
266       you  do  not spend all your time developing against Rack 2.0, using new
267       APIs unavailable in Rack 1.x, only to have Bundler switch to  Rack  1.2
268       when the production group is used.
269
270       This  should  not cause any problems in practice, because we do not at‐
271       tempt to install the gems in the excluded groups, and only evaluate  as
272       part of the dependency resolution process.
273
274       This  also means that you cannot include different versions of the same
275       gem in different groups, because doing so  would  result  in  different
276       sets of dependencies used in development and production. Because of the
277       vagaries of the dependency resolution  process,  this  usually  affects
278       more  than the gems you list in your Gemfile(5), and can (surprisingly)
279       radically change the gems you are using.
280

THE GEMFILE.LOCK

282       When you run bundle install, Bundler will persist the  full  names  and
283       versions  of all gems that you used (including dependencies of the gems
284       specified in the Gemfile(5)) into a file called Gemfile.lock.
285
286       Bundler uses this file in all subsequent calls to bundle install, which
287       guarantees that you always use the same exact code, even as your appli‐
288       cation moves across machines.
289
290       Because of the way dependency resolution works, even a seemingly  small
291       change (for instance, an update to a point-release of a dependency of a
292       gem in your Gemfile(5)) can result in radically  different  gems  being
293       needed to satisfy all dependencies.
294
295       As  a  result, you SHOULD check your Gemfile.lock into version control,
296       in both applications and gems. If you do not, every machine that checks
297       out your repository (including your production server) will resolve all
298       dependencies  again,  which  will  result  in  different  versions   of
299       third-party code being used if any of the gems in the Gemfile(5) or any
300       of their dependencies have been updated.
301
302       When Bundler first shipped, the Gemfile.lock was included in the  .git‐
303       ignore file included with generated gems. Over time, however, it became
304       clear that this practice forces the pain of  broken  dependencies  onto
305       new  contributors,  while leaving existing contributors potentially un‐
306       aware of the problem. Since bundle install is usually  the  first  step
307       towards  a contribution, the pain of broken dependencies would discour‐
308       age new contributors from contributing. As a result,  we  have  revised
309       our  guidance for gem authors to now recommend checking in the lock for
310       gems.
311

CONSERVATIVE UPDATING

313       When you make a change to the Gemfile(5) and then run  bundle  install,
314       Bundler will update only the gems that you modified.
315
316       In  other  words,  if  a  gem that you did not modify worked before you
317       called bundle install, it will continue to use the exact same  versions
318       of all dependencies as it used before the update.
319
320       Let´s take a look at an example. Here´s your original Gemfile(5):
321
322
323
324           source ´https://rubygems.org´
325
326           gem ´actionpack´, ´2.3.8´
327           gem ´activemerchant´
328
329
330
331       In  this  case, both actionpack and activemerchant depend on activesup‐
332       port. The actionpack gem depends on activesupport  2.3.8  and  rack  ~>
333       1.1.0,  while the activemerchant gem depends on activesupport >= 2.3.2,
334       braintree >= 2.0.0, and builder >= 2.0.0.
335
336       When the dependencies are  first  resolved,  Bundler  will  select  ac‐
337       tivesupport  2.3.8,  which  satisfies  the requirements of both gems in
338       your Gemfile(5).
339
340       Next, you modify your Gemfile(5) to:
341
342
343
344           source ´https://rubygems.org´
345
346           gem ´actionpack´, ´3.0.0.rc´
347           gem ´activemerchant´
348
349
350
351       The actionpack 3.0.0.rc gem has a number of new dependencies,  and  up‐
352       dates  the  activesupport  dependency to = 3.0.0.rc and the rack depen‐
353       dency to ~> 1.2.1.
354
355       When you run bundle install, Bundler notices that you changed  the  ac‐
356       tionpack  gem,  but  not  the activemerchant gem. It evaluates the gems
357       currently being used to satisfy its requirements:
358
359       activesupport 2.3.8
360              also used to satisfy a dependency in  activemerchant,  which  is
361              not being updated
362
363       rack ~> 1.1.0
364              not currently being used to satisfy another dependency
365
366       Because  you did not explicitly ask to update activemerchant, you would
367       not expect it to suddenly stop working after updating actionpack.  How‐
368       ever,  satisfying  the new activesupport 3.0.0.rc dependency of action‐
369       pack requires updating one of its dependencies.
370
371       Even though activemerchant declares a very loose dependency that  theo‐
372       retically  matches  activesupport 3.0.0.rc, Bundler treats gems in your
373       Gemfile(5) that have not changed as an atomic unit together with  their
374       dependencies. In this case, the activemerchant dependency is treated as
375       activemerchant 1.7.1 + activesupport 2.3.8, so bundle install will  re‐
376       port that it cannot update actionpack.
377
378       To explicitly update actionpack, including its dependencies which other
379       gems in the Gemfile(5) still depend on, run  bundle  update  actionpack
380       (see bundle update(1)).
381
382       Summary:  In  general,  after  making  a change to the Gemfile(5) , you
383       should first try to run bundle install, which will  guarantee  that  no
384       other gem in the Gemfile(5) is impacted by the change. If that does not
385       work, run bundle update(1) bundle-update.1.html.
386

SEE ALSO

388       •   Gem  install  docs  http://guides.rubygems.org/rubygems-basics/#in‐
389           stalling-gems
390
391       •   Rubygems signing docs http://guides.rubygems.org/security/
392
393
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398                                 February 2023               BUNDLE-INSTALL(1)
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