관리-도구
편집 파일: ruby.rb
# encoding: binary # Phusion Passenger - https://www.phusionpassenger.com/ # Copyright (c) 2010-2018 Phusion Holding B.V. # # "Passenger", "Phusion Passenger" and "Union Station" are registered # trademarks of Phusion Holding B.V. # # Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy # of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal # in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights # to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell # copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is # furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: # # The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in # all copies or substantial portions of the Software. # # THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR # IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE # AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER # LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, # OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN # THE SOFTWARE. require 'rbconfig' require 'etc' PhusionPassenger.require_passenger_lib 'platform_info' PhusionPassenger.require_passenger_lib 'platform_info/operating_system' module PhusionPassenger module PlatformInfo # Store original $GEM_HOME value so that even if the app customizes # $GEM_HOME we can still work with the original value. gem_home = ENV['GEM_HOME'] if gem_home gem_home = gem_home.strip.freeze gem_home = nil if gem_home.empty? end GEM_HOME = gem_home # Ditto for $GEM_PATH gem_path = ENV['GEM_PATH'] if gem_path gem_path = gem_path.strip.freeze gem_path = nil if gem_path.empty? end GEM_PATH = gem_path # 'bundle exec' modifies $GEM_HOME and $GEM_PATH so let's # store the values that we had before Bundler's modifications. gem_home = ENV['BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_HOME'] if gem_home gem_home = gem_home.strip.freeze gem_home = nil if gem_home.empty? end BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_HOME = gem_home gem_path = ENV['BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_PATH'] if gem_path gem_path = gem_path.strip.freeze gem_path = nil if gem_path.empty? end BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_PATH = gem_path if defined?(::RUBY_ENGINE) RUBY_ENGINE = ::RUBY_ENGINE else RUBY_ENGINE = "ruby" end # Returns correct command for invoking the current Ruby interpreter. # In case of RVM this function will return the path to the RVM wrapper script # that executes the current Ruby interpreter in the currently active gem set. def self.ruby_command # Detect usage of gem-wrappers: https://github.com/rvm/gem-wrappers # This is currently used by RVM >= 1.25, although it's not exclusive to RVM. if GEM_HOME && File.exist?("#{GEM_HOME}/wrappers/ruby") return "#{GEM_HOME}/wrappers/ruby" end if in_rvm? # Detect old-school RVM wrapper script location. name = rvm_ruby_string dirs = rvm_paths if name && dirs dirs.each do |dir| filename = "#{dir}/wrappers/#{name}/ruby" if File.exist?(filename) contents = File.open(filename, 'rb') do |f| f.read end # Old wrapper scripts reference $HOME which causes # things to blow up when run by a different user. if contents.include?("$HOME") filename = nil end else filename = nil end if filename return filename end end # Correctness of these commands are confirmed by mpapis. # If we ever encounter a case for which this logic is not sufficient, # try mpapis' pseudo code: # # rvm_update_prefix = write_to rvm_path ? "" : "rvmsudo" # rvm_gemhome_prefix = write_to GEM_HOME ? "" : "rvmsudo" # repair_command = "#{rvm_update_prefix} rvm get stable && rvm reload && #{rvm_gemhome_prefix} rvm repair all" # wrapper_command = "#{rvm_gemhome_prefix} rvm wrapper #{rvm_ruby_string} --no-prefix --all" case rvm_installation_mode when :single repair_command = "rvm get stable && rvm reload && rvm repair all" wrapper_command = "rvm wrapper #{rvm_ruby_string} --no-prefix --all" when :multi repair_command = "rvmsudo rvm get stable && rvm reload && rvmsudo rvm repair all" wrapper_command = "rvmsudo rvm wrapper #{rvm_ruby_string} --no-prefix --all" when :mixed repair_command = "rvmsudo rvm get stable && rvm reload && rvm repair all" wrapper_command = "rvm wrapper #{rvm_ruby_string} --no-prefix --all" end STDERR.puts "Your RVM wrapper scripts are too old, or some " + "wrapper scripts are missing. Please update/regenerate " + "them first by running:\n\n" + " #{repair_command}\n\n" + "If that doesn't seem to work, please run:\n\n" + " #{wrapper_command}" exit 1 else # Something's wrong with the user's RVM installation. # Raise an error so that the user knows this instead of # having things fail randomly later on. # 'name' is guaranteed to be non-nil because rvm_ruby_string # already raises an exception on error. STDERR.puts "Your RVM installation appears to be broken: the RVM " + "path cannot be found. Please fix your RVM installation " + "or contact the RVM developers for support." exit 1 end else return ruby_executable end end memoize :ruby_command # Returns the full path to the current Ruby interpreter's executable file. # This might not be the actual correct command to use for invoking the Ruby # interpreter; use ruby_command instead. def self.ruby_executable @@ruby_executable ||= rb_config['bindir'] + '/' + rb_config['RUBY_INSTALL_NAME'] + rb_config['EXEEXT'] end # Returns whether the Ruby interpreter supports process forking. def self.ruby_supports_fork? # MRI >= 1.9.2's respond_to? returns false for methods # that are not implemented. return Process.respond_to?(:fork) && RUBY_ENGINE != "jruby" && RUBY_ENGINE != "macruby" && rb_config['target_os'] !~ /mswin|windows|mingw/ end # Returns whether Phusion Passenger needs Ruby development headers to # be available for the current Ruby implementation. def self.passenger_needs_ruby_dev_header? # Too much of a trouble for JRuby. We can do without it. return RUBY_ENGINE != "jruby" end # Returns the correct 'gem' command for this Ruby interpreter. # If `:sudo => true` is given, then the gem command is prefixed by a # sudo command if filesystem permissions require this. def self.gem_command(options = {}) command = ruby_tool_command('gem') if options[:sudo] && gem_install_requires_sudo? command = "#{ruby_sudo_command} #{command}" end return command end memoize :gem_command # Returns whether running 'gem install' as the current user requires sudo. def self.gem_install_requires_sudo? `#{gem_command} env` =~ /INSTALLATION DIRECTORY: (.+)/ if install_dir = $1 return !File.writable?(install_dir) else return nil end end memoize :gem_install_requires_sudo? # Returns the absolute path to the Rake executable that # belongs to the current Ruby interpreter. Returns nil if it # doesn't exist. # # The return value may not be the actual correct invocation # for Rake. Use `rake_command` for that. def self.rake return locate_ruby_tool('rake') end memoize :rake # Returns the correct command string for invoking the Rake executable # that belongs to the current Ruby interpreter. Returns nil if Rake is # not found. def self.rake_command ruby_tool_command('rake') end memoize :rake_command # Returns the absolute path to the RSpec runner program that # belongs to the current Ruby interpreter. Returns nil if it # doesn't exist. def self.rspec return locate_ruby_tool('rspec') end memoize :rspec # Returns whether the current Ruby interpreter is managed by RVM. def self.in_rvm? bindir = rb_config['bindir'] return bindir.include?('/.rvm/') || bindir.include?('/rvm/') end # If the current Ruby interpreter is managed by RVM, returns all # directories in which RVM places its working files. This is usually # ~/.rvm or /usr/local/rvm, but in mixed-mode installations there # can be multiple such paths. # # Otherwise returns nil. def self.rvm_paths if in_rvm? result = [] [ENV['rvm_path'], "#{PhusionPassenger.home_dir}/.rvm", "/usr/local/rvm"].each do |path| next if path.nil? rubies_path = File.join(path, 'rubies') wrappers_path = File.join(path, 'wrappers') gems_path = File.join(path, 'gems') if File.directory?(path) && (File.directory?(rubies_path) || File.directory?(wrappers_path) || File.directory?(gems_path)) result << path end end if result.empty? # Failure to locate the RVM path is probably caused by the # user customizing $rvm_path. Older RVM versions don't # export $rvm_path, making us unable to detect its value. STDERR.puts "Unable to locate the RVM path. Your RVM installation " + "is probably too old. Please update it with " + "'rvm get head && rvm reload && rvm repair all'." exit 1 else return result end else return nil end end memoize :rvm_paths # If the current Ruby interpreter is managed by RVM, returns the # RVM name which identifies the current Ruby interpreter plus the # currently active gemset, e.g. something like this: # "ruby-1.9.2-p0@mygemset" # # Returns nil otherwise. def self.rvm_ruby_string if in_rvm? # Getting the RVM name of the Ruby interpreter ("ruby-1.9.2") # isn't so hard, we can extract it from the #ruby_executable # string. Getting the gemset name is a bit harder, so let's # try various strategies... # $GEM_HOME usually contains the gem set name. # It may be something like: # /Users/hongli/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p392 # But also: # /home/bitnami/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p385-perf@njist325/ruby/1.9.1 # # Caveat when we're executed through 'bundle exec': # if `bundle install` was run with `--path=`, then `bundle exec` # will modify $GEM_HOME to the --path directory. That's # why we need to parse the version of $GEM_HOME *before* # `bundle exec` had modified it. [GEM_HOME, BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_HOME].each do |gem_home| if gem_home && gem_home =~ %r{rvm/gems/(.+)} return $1.sub(/\/.*/, '') end end # User might have explicitly set GEM_HOME to a custom directory, # or might have nuked $GEM_HOME. Extract info from $GEM_PATH. [GEM_PATH, BUNDLER_ORIG_GEM_PATH].each do |gem_path| if gem_path gem_path.split(':').each do |gem_path_part| if gem_path_part =~ %r{rvm/gems/(.+)} return $1.sub(/\/.*/, '') end end end end # That failed too. Try extracting info from from $LOAD_PATH. matching_path = $LOAD_PATH.find_all do |item| item.include?("rvm/gems/") || item.include?("rvm/rubies/") end if matching_path && !matching_path.empty? subpath = matching_path.to_s.gsub(/^.*rvm\/(gems|rubies)\//, '') result = subpath.split('/').first return result if result end # On Ruby 1.9, $LOAD_PATH does not contain any gem paths until # at least one gem has been required so the above can fail. # We're out of options now, we can't detect the gem set. # Raise an exception so that the user knows what's going on # instead of having things fail in obscure ways later. STDERR.puts "Unable to autodetect the currently active RVM gem " + "set name. This could happen if you ran this program using 'sudo' " + "instead of 'rvmsudo'. When using RVM, you're always supposed to " + "use 'rvmsudo' instead of 'sudo!'.\n\n" + "Please try rerunning this program using 'rvmsudo'. If that " + "doesn't help, please contact this program's author for support." exit 1 end return nil end memoize :rvm_ruby_string # Returns the RVM installation mode: # :single - RVM is installed in single-user mode. # :multi - RVM is installed in multi-user mode. # :mixed - RVM is in a mixed-mode installation. # nil - The current Ruby interpreter is not using RVM. def self.rvm_installation_mode if in_rvm? if ENV['rvm_path'] =~ /\.rvm/ return :single else if GEM_HOME =~ /\.rvm/ return :mixed else return :multi end end else return nil end end # Returns either 'sudo' or 'rvmsudo' depending on whether the current # Ruby interpreter is managed by RVM. def self.ruby_sudo_command if in_rvm? return "rvmsudo" else return "sudo" end end # Returns a `sudo` or `rvmsudo` command that spawns a shell, depending # on whether the current Ruby interpreter is managed by RVM. def self.ruby_sudo_shell_command(args = nil) if in_rvm? shell = ENV['SHELL'].to_s if shell.empty? begin user = Etc.getpwuid(0) rescue ArgumentError user = nil end shell = user.shell if user shell = "bash" if !shell || shell.empty? end result = "rvmsudo " result << "#{args} " if args result << shell return result else return "sudo -s #{args}".strip end end # Locates a Ruby tool, e.g. 'gem', 'rake', 'bundle', etc. Instead of # naively looking in $PATH, this function uses a variety of search heuristics # to find the tool that's really associated with the current Ruby interpreter. # It should never locate a tool that's actually associated with a different # Ruby interpreter. # Returns nil when nothing's found. # # This method only returns the path to the tool script. Running this script # directly does not necessarily mean that it's run under the correct Ruby # interpreter. You may have to prepend it with the Ruby command. Use # `ruby_tool_command` if you want to get a command that you can execute. def self.locate_ruby_tool(name) result = locate_ruby_tool_by_basename(name) if !result exeext = rb_config['EXEEXT'] exeext = nil if exeext.empty? if exeext result = locate_ruby_tool_by_basename("#{name}#{exeext}") end if !result result = locate_ruby_tool_by_basename(transform_according_to_ruby_exec_format(name)) end if !result && exeext result = locate_ruby_tool_by_basename(transform_according_to_ruby_exec_format(name) + exeext) end end return result end # Locates a Ruby tool command, e.g. 'gem', 'rake', 'bundle', etc. Instead of # naively looking in $PATH, this function uses a variety of search heuristics # to find the command that's really associated with the current Ruby interpreter. # It should never locate a command that's actually associated with a different # Ruby interpreter. # Returns nil when nothing's found. # # Unlike `locate_ruby_tool`, which only returns the path to the tool script, # this method returns a full command that you can execute. The returned command # guarantees that the tool is run under the correct Ruby interpreter. def self.ruby_tool_command(name) path = locate_ruby_tool(name) if path if is_ruby_program?(path) "#{ruby_command} #{path}" else # The found tool is a wrapper script, e.g. in RVM's ~/.rvm/wrappers. # In this case, don't include the Ruby command in the result. path end else nil end end private def self.locate_ruby_tool_by_basename(name) if os_name_simple == "macosx" && ruby_command =~ %r(\A/System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/.*?/usr/bin/ruby\Z) # On OS X we must look for Ruby binaries in /usr/bin. # RubyGems puts executables (e.g. 'rake') in there, not in # /System/Libraries/(...)/bin. filename = "/usr/bin/#{name}" else filename = File.dirname(ruby_command) + "/#{name}" end if !File.file?(filename) || !File.executable?(filename) # RubyGems might put binaries in a directory other # than Ruby's bindir. Debian packaged RubyGems and # DebGem packaged RubyGems are the prime examples. begin require 'rubygems' unless defined?(Gem) filename = Gem.bindir + "/#{name}" rescue LoadError filename = nil end end if !filename || !File.file?(filename) || !File.executable?(filename) # Looks like it's not in the RubyGems bindir. Search in $PATH, but # be very careful about this because whatever we find might belong # to a different Ruby interpreter than the current one. ENV['PATH'].split(':').each do |dir| filename = "#{dir}/#{name}" if File.file?(filename) && File.executable?(filename) shebang = File.open(filename, 'rb') do |f| f.readline.strip end if shebang == "#!#{ruby_command}" # Looks good. break end end # Not found. Try next path. filename = nil end end filename end private_class_method :locate_ruby_tool_by_basename def self.is_ruby_program?(filename) File.open(filename, 'rb') do |f| return f.readline =~ /ruby/ end rescue EOFError return false end private_class_method :is_ruby_program? # Deduce Ruby's --program-prefix and --program-suffix from its install name # and transforms the given input name accordingly. # # transform_according_to_ruby_exec_format("rake") => "jrake", "rake1.8", etc def self.transform_according_to_ruby_exec_format(name) install_name = rb_config['RUBY_INSTALL_NAME'] if install_name.include?('ruby') format = install_name.sub('ruby', '%s') return sprintf(format, name) else return name end end private_class_method :transform_according_to_ruby_exec_format end end # module PhusionPassenger