The literal tilde in a PATH entry (e.g. `~/.rbenv/shims`) doesn't seem
to be supported by system `which` utility, but *does* seem to be
supported by `command -v` (used in `rbenv-which`) and `type -p`.
Therefore, we must strip away `~/.rbenv/shims` from PATH when looking up
executables for system Ruby, lest we risk infinite loop. We do so by
substituting any occurence of `~` in PATH with the value of `HOME`.
`rbenv shell -` allows you to switch to the previously activated ruby
version. Similar to `cd -` or `git checkout -`.
This tries to implement `rbenv shell -` as proposed in #854. However,
adding support seemed to break the "shell change version" test. I'm not
very good at Bash programming, can someone tell me what is wrong with
what I'm doing? I'd like to add a bit more functionality to this, but
I'm really just cargo cult programming Bash.
Thank you!
fix tests
`default` was made legacy back in 2011 with
5be66da9f4 (the command was renamed from
`rbenv-default` to `rbenv-global`, and so the global file was renamed
from `$RBENV_ROOT/default` to `$RBENV_ROOT/global` (the latter taking
precedence)
`global` was then made legacy about a month later in Sep 2011 when the
preferred filename was changed to `$RBENV_ROOT/version`.
When invoked from a shell script, `$(rbenv init -)` did not get the
shell name correct.
It needs to look at the `args` value from `ps`.
Ref: https://github.com/yyuu/pyenv/issues/373
The `../libexec` dance isn't necessary here. It was only necessary in
main `rbenv` command because that one might have been pointed to
directly via a symlink.
It doesn't try to chdir into RBENV_ROOT anymore because that might be
a location of an unrelated rbenv install that might have a different
version than the current one that is installed e.g. via a package
manager such as Homebrew.
Now just tries the repo where the source files (`libexec/*`) are
located, and if that isn't a valid rbenv repo, bail out early.
Expose a `version-origin` hook.
It is invoked *before* the traditional `rbenv-version-file` lookup. Because `version-origin` is traditionally run immediately after `version-name`, then any plugin hooks that alter `version-name` would have done so. Thus, running `version-origin` prior to printing the origin gives those plugins a chance to alter the `version-origin` to match.
If any of the hooks set `$RBENV_VERSION_ORIGIN`, then it is used as the return value. Otherwise, the existing logic continues to return "environment variable" or "filename" as appropriate.
This change, in conjunction with the `version-name` hook, makes a clean seam by which plugins can inject their own ruby version setting logic. Using this seam, as opposed to altering `$RBENV_COMMAND_PATH` from the `which` hook, means that the version name and origin are set more reliably and so `version`, `version-name`, `version-origin` and `which` all work as expected. Indeed, even PS1 works now.
Expose a `version-name` hook.
It is invoked *after* the traditional `RBENV_VERSION` lookup. Which means hook scripts can interrogate `$RBENV_VERSION_FILE` and/or `$RBENV_VERSION` (or use the executables).
The hooks are then run, giving plugins a chance to alter `RBENV_VERSION`. Once the hooks have run, we now have (in `$RBENV_VERSION`) the actual version we want to use (or it's empty which defaults to `system` per normal). Lastly, the same logic remains for checking if the version exists, or trimming the `ruby-` prefix.
Prime example: the ruby-bundler-ruby-version plugin can select a ruby by using the `ruby` directive from the `Gemfile` if a local `.ruby-version` doesn't exist.
Can be used for `.ruby-version` file lookup in the ancestry of a
specific directory. In this mode of operation, global version files
aren't taken into consideration, and the command fails unless a local
version file was found.
If subcommand is provided (and exists) and its first arg is -h/--help,
go ahead and intercept the call; redirecting to rbenv-help <subcommand>
This means subcommands and plugins need not handle --help flag
themselves
- Explicitly asking for help with `-h` or `--help` exits with 0 status
and displays help on stdout.
- Not providing any arguments to rbenv results in failure status and
displays version and help on stderr.
If `foo` didn't exist and `RBENV_VERSION=system rbenv which foo` was
called, the error message used to be misleading:
rbenv: version `system' is not installed
Instead, have the error message simply say that the command was not found.
Fixes#770
Useful in combination with `--bare` to list just the unique version
numbers without the extra directory entries that are symlinks to other
version numbers in the same directory.
This is for Linux desktop platforms that have Terminal application
configured to start shells in interactive but not login mode. Creating a
`~/.bash_profile` would also cause `~/.profile` to not run, which might
be a problem on Ubuntu which ships with a default `~/.profile`.
When `rbenv --version` is called, this now happens:
1. It changes into the directory where `libexec/rbenv--version` resides
and checks if it's a checkout of the rbenv repo (as opposed to
Homebrew checkout or something else). Then it reads the git revision.
2. If that failed, change to `$RBENV_ROOT` directory and repeat step 1.
This is required for the shims to handle `#!/usr/bin/env python3` in a
shebang, just like `python` is handled currently: it will set
`PYENV_DIR` to the root of the invoked script, which is required for a
`.python-version` script to get picked up from there.
This was rejected for rbenv, where it does not make much sense
(https://github.com/sstephenson/rbenv/pull/735).
Ref: https://github.com/yyuu/pyenv/pull/368#issuecomment-102806837
It's not that this is a preferred way to set a global version (one
should use `rbenv global <version>` instead), but this fixes the
function purely for correctness: all parent directories should be
scanned, even the root directory.
Fixes#745