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.
If set by the user's environment, `git config --global` writes will go
to that destination instead of temporary $HOME. We definitely don't want
that.
Fixes#742
It's not that this is a preferred way to set a global version (one
should use `rbenv global <version>` instead), but this fixes the
function purely for correctness: all parent directories should be
scanned, even the root directory.
Fixes#745
When we started to support reading `.ruby-version` files, we made a
commitment to not support fuzzy version matching. Treating "ruby-2.1.5"
as "2.1.5" is a sort of fuzzy matching, so we put in place a warning
telling you to remove the extraneous "ruby-" prefix popularly used by
other Ruby version managers to denote MRI. (Their logic is that MRI is
"ruby" and other rubies are not "ruby", apparently.)
However, people are often not able to remove the prefix in their
projects because they want to support other coworkers and tools that
sadly still require the prefix, like RubyMine.
So to restore sanity for a big portion of our users, the warning is gone.
Since communal-gems is maintainer-approved, thought it would be useful to include the directory it uses in the ignore list.
(This also helps me, since I install rbenv as submodule and without this entry, the submodule is perpetually marked dirty.)
In the event that `eval "$(rbenv init -)"` is called from a function named
rbenv (which I do to get rbenv to load lazily in my shell), evaluating the
phrase `rbenv rehash` will cause the outer function to run again (causing an
infinite loop).
This change makes it clear you want the command named rbenv and not a function
which may exist in the environment.
As it seems, JRuby 1.7 complains on stderr every time you invoke `system`:
warning: executable? does not in this environment and will return a dummy value
It doesn't seem to complain when backtics are used. It's safe to use
backticks here because `rbenv rehash` doesn't output anything on stdout,
and the exit status of the command is irrelevant.
This bakes in the functionality of rbenv-gem-rehash plugin.
The Rubygems hook is improved:
- It will not rehash for gems installed in locations that rbenv otherwise
doesn't search for binstubs; for instance in case of
`bundle --path vendor/bundle`.
- It rescues exceptions and makes them non-lethal by warning on stderr.
It doesn't need to be a bash array and we don't need a separate index of
shims registered. Simply keep everything in a space-separated string and
use that as an index as well.
This assumes that executable names *never* have spaces in them.
On my system that has 25 versions under rbenv, this speeds up rehash
almost 3-fold:
- before: 391 ms
- after: 134 ms
This is achieved by removing duplicate names of executables before
registering them as shims. Since most Rubies will share a lot of the
same executable names ("ruby", "rake", "bundle", ...), this is a
considerable reduction in number of shims registered.
Too many of our users have a shell initialization set up that
inadvertently duplicates some or most of the entries in their PATH,
bringing the system paths again in front of rbenv's shims. If this was a
nested shell (a typical scenario when starting up tmux), `rbenv init`
would get eval'd again but this time, shims won't get added to the front
of the PATH and would only stay and the end of the path, effectively
rendering them useless.
I tried to argue that this is a user problem rather than rbenv's, but I
can't fix everybody shell init when they report bugs. Instead, let's
revert to simpler times in rbenv where we just roll along with the
duplication and don't ask any questions.
This reverts commit 03fa148e81.
Fixes#369