This is a plugin for rbenv that lets you set global and project-specific environment variables before spawning Ruby processes.
With Homebrew:
brew install rbenv-vars
Alternatively, with git:
git clone https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv-vars.git "$(rbenv root)"/plugins/rbenv-vars
Define environment variables in an .rbenv-vars
file in your project,
one variable per line, in the format VAR=value
. For example:
RUBY_GC_MALLOC_LIMIT=50000000
RUBY_HEAP_MIN_SLOTS=15000
RUBY_FREE_MIN=4096
You can perform variable substitution with the traditional $
syntax. For example, to append to GEM_PATH
:
GEM_PATH=$GEM_PATH:/u/shared/gems
You may also have conditional variable assignments, such that a variable will only be set if it is not already defined or is blank:
JAVA_OPTS?=-server -Xmx768m -Xms768m -Xmn128m -Xss20m
In the above case, JAVA_OPTS
will only be set if $JAVA_OPTS
is
currently empty (i.e., if [ -z "$JAVA_OPTS" ]
is true).
Spaces are allowed in values; quoting is not necessary. Expansion and
command substitution are not allowed. Lines beginning with #
or any
lines not in the format VAR=value will be ignored.
Variables specified in the $(rbenv root)/vars
file will be set
first. Then variables specified in .rbenv-vars
files in any parent
directories of the current directory will be set. Variables from the
.rbenv-vars
file in the current directory are set last.
Use the rbenv vars
command to print all environment variables in the
order they'll be set.
1.2.0 (January 9, 2013)
- Fixed a bug where source files without a trailing newline could concatenate improperly with other source files on systems with GNU sed.
- Changed the output of
rbenv vars
to include the source file path in a comment above its variables, and an empty line between each source file, for easier debugging. - Added support for
rbenv help vars
with rbenv 0.4.0.
1.1.0 (June 25, 2012)
- Added support for conditional variable assignments using
?=
. Thanks to Scott Gonyea for the patch.
1.0.0 (September 27, 2011)
- Initial public release.
© 2012 Sam Stephenson. Released under the MIT license. See
LICENSE
for details.