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07b87cd239
* test/rubygems: ditto. git-svn-id: svn+ssh://ci.ruby-lang.org/ruby/trunk@49195 b2dd03c8-39d4-4d8f-98ff-823fe69b080e
384 lines
10 KiB
Ruby
384 lines
10 KiB
Ruby
require 'rubygems/command'
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class Gem::Commands::HelpCommand < Gem::Command
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# :stopdoc:
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EXAMPLES = <<-EOF
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Some examples of 'gem' usage.
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* Install 'rake', either from local directory or remote server:
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gem install rake
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* Install 'rake', only from remote server:
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gem install rake --remote
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* Install 'rake', but only version 0.3.1, even if dependencies
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are not met, and into a user-specific directory:
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gem install rake --version 0.3.1 --force --user-install
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* List local gems whose name begins with 'D':
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gem list D
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* List local and remote gems whose name contains 'log':
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gem search log --both
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* List only remote gems whose name contains 'log':
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gem search log --remote
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* Uninstall 'rake':
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gem uninstall rake
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* Create a gem:
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See http://guides.rubygems.org/make-your-own-gem/
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* See information about RubyGems:
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gem environment
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* Update all gems on your system:
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gem update
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* Update your local version of RubyGems
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gem update --system
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EOF
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GEM_DEPENDENCIES = <<-EOF
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A gem dependencies file allows installation of a consistent set of gems across
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multiple environments. The RubyGems implementation is designed to be
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compatible with Bundler's Gemfile format. You can see additional
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documentation on the format at:
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http://bundler.io
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RubyGems automatically looks for these gem dependencies files:
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* gem.deps.rb
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* Gemfile
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* Isolate
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These files are looked up automatically using `gem install -g`, or you can
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specify a custom file.
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When the RUBYGEMS_GEMDEPS environment variable is set to a gem dependencies
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file the gems from that file will be activated at startup time. Set it to a
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specific filename or to "-" to have RubyGems automatically discover the gem
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dependencies file by walking up from the current directory.
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You can also activate gem dependencies at program startup using
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Gem.use_gemdeps.
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NOTE: Enabling automatic discovery on multiuser systems can lead to execution
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of arbitrary code when used from directories outside your control.
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Gem Dependencies
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================
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Use #gem to declare which gems you directly depend upon:
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gem 'rake'
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To depend on a specific set of versions:
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gem 'rake', '~> 10.3', '>= 10.3.2'
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RubyGems will require the gem name when activating the gem using
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the RUBYGEMS_GEMDEPS environment variable or Gem::use_gemdeps. Use the
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require: option to override this behavior if the gem does not have a file of
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that name or you don't want to require those files:
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gem 'my_gem', require: 'other_file'
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To prevent RubyGems from requiring any files use:
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gem 'my_gem', require: false
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To load dependencies from a .gemspec file:
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gemspec
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RubyGems looks for the first .gemspec file in the current directory. To
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override this use the name: option:
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gemspec name: 'specific_gem'
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To look in a different directory use the path: option:
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gemspec name: 'specific_gem', path: 'gemspecs'
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To depend on a gem unpacked into a local directory:
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gem 'modified_gem', path: 'vendor/modified_gem'
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To depend on a gem from git:
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gem 'private_gem', git: 'git@my.company.example:private_gem.git'
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To depend on a gem from github:
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gem 'private_gem', github: 'my_company/private_gem'
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To depend on a gem from a github gist:
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gem 'bang', gist: '1232884'
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Git, github and gist support the ref:, branch: and tag: options to specify a
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commit reference or hash, branch or tag respectively to use for the gem.
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Setting the submodules: option to true for git, github and gist dependencies
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causes fetching of submodules when fetching the repository.
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You can depend on multiple gems from a single repository with the git method:
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git 'https://github.com/rails/rails.git' do
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gem 'activesupport'
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gem 'activerecord'
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end
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Gem Sources
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===========
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RubyGems uses the default sources for regular `gem install` for gem
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dependencies files. Unlike bundler, you do need to specify a source.
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You can override the sources used for downloading gems with:
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source 'https://gem_server.example'
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You may specify multiple sources. Unlike bundler the prepend: option is not
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supported. Sources are used in-order, to prepend a source place it at the
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front of the list.
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Gem Platform
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============
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You can restrict gem dependencies to specific platforms with the #platform
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and #platforms methods:
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platform :ruby_21 do
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gem 'debugger'
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end
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See the bundler Gemfile manual page for a list of platforms supported in a gem
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dependencies file.:
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http://bundler.io/v1.6/man/gemfile.5.html
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Ruby Version and Engine Dependency
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==================================
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You can specify the version, engine and engine version of ruby to use with
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your gem dependencies file. If you are not running the specified version
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RubyGems will raise an exception.
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To depend on a specific version of ruby:
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ruby '2.1.2'
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To depend on a specific ruby engine:
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ruby '1.9.3', engine: 'jruby'
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To depend on a specific ruby engine version:
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ruby '1.9.3', engine: 'jruby', engine_version: '1.7.11'
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Grouping Dependencies
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=====================
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Gem dependencies may be placed in groups that can be excluded from install.
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Dependencies required for development or testing of your code may be excluded
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when installed in a production environment.
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A #gem dependency may be placed in a group using the group: option:
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gem 'minitest', group: :test
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To install dependencies from a gemfile without specific groups use the
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`--without` option for `gem install -g`:
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$ gem install -g --without test
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The group: option also accepts multiple groups if the gem fits in multiple
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categories.
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Multiple groups may be excluded during install by comma-separating the groups for `--without` or by specifying `--without` multiple times.
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The #group method can also be used to place gems in groups:
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group :test do
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gem 'minitest'
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gem 'minitest-emoji'
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end
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The #group method allows multiple groups.
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The #gemspec development dependencies are placed in the :development group by
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default. This may be overridden with the :development_group option:
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gemspec development_group: :other
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EOF
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PLATFORMS = <<-'EOF'
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RubyGems platforms are composed of three parts, a CPU, an OS, and a
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version. These values are taken from values in rbconfig.rb. You can view
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your current platform by running `gem environment`.
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RubyGems matches platforms as follows:
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* The CPU must match exactly unless one of the platforms has
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"universal" as the CPU or the local CPU starts with "arm" and the gem's
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CPU is exactly "arm" (for gems that support generic ARM architecture).
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* The OS must match exactly.
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* The versions must match exactly unless one of the versions is nil.
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For commands that install, uninstall and list gems, you can override what
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RubyGems thinks your platform is with the --platform option. The platform
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you pass must match "#{cpu}-#{os}" or "#{cpu}-#{os}-#{version}". On mswin
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platforms, the version is the compiler version, not the OS version. (Ruby
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compiled with VC6 uses "60" as the compiler version, VC8 uses "80".)
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For the ARM architecture, gems with a platform of "arm-linux" should run on a
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reasonable set of ARM CPUs and not depend on instructions present on a limited
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subset of the architecture. For example, the binary should run on platforms
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armv5, armv6hf, armv6l, armv7, etc. If you use the "arm-linux" platform
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please test your gem on a variety of ARM hardware before release to ensure it
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functions correctly.
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Example platforms:
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x86-freebsd # Any FreeBSD version on an x86 CPU
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universal-darwin-8 # Darwin 8 only gems that run on any CPU
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x86-mswin32-80 # Windows gems compiled with VC8
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armv7-linux # Gem complied for an ARMv7 CPU running linux
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arm-linux # Gem compiled for any ARM CPU running linux
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When building platform gems, set the platform in the gem specification to
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Gem::Platform::CURRENT. This will correctly mark the gem with your ruby's
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platform.
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EOF
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# NOTE when updating also update Gem::Command::HELP
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SUBCOMMANDS = [
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["commands", :show_commands],
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["options", Gem::Command::HELP],
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["examples", EXAMPLES],
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["gem_dependencies", GEM_DEPENDENCIES],
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["platforms", PLATFORMS],
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]
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# :startdoc:
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def initialize
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super 'help', "Provide help on the 'gem' command"
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@command_manager = Gem::CommandManager.instance
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end
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def usage # :nodoc:
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"#{program_name} ARGUMENT"
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end
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def execute
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arg = options[:args][0]
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_, help = SUBCOMMANDS.find do |command,|
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begins? command, arg
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end
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if help then
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if Symbol === help then
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send help
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else
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say help
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end
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return
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end
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if options[:help] then
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show_help
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elsif arg then
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show_command_help arg
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else
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say Gem::Command::HELP
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end
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end
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def show_commands # :nodoc:
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out = []
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out << "GEM commands are:"
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out << nil
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margin_width = 4
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desc_width = @command_manager.command_names.map { |n| n.size }.max + 4
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summary_width = 80 - margin_width - desc_width
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wrap_indent = ' ' * (margin_width + desc_width)
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format = "#{' ' * margin_width}%-#{desc_width}s%s"
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@command_manager.command_names.each do |cmd_name|
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command = @command_manager[cmd_name]
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summary =
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if command then
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command.summary
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else
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"[No command found for #{cmd_name}]"
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end
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summary = wrap(summary, summary_width).split "\n"
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out << sprintf(format, cmd_name, summary.shift)
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until summary.empty? do
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out << "#{wrap_indent}#{summary.shift}"
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end
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end
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out << nil
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out << "For help on a particular command, use 'gem help COMMAND'."
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out << nil
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out << "Commands may be abbreviated, so long as they are unambiguous."
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out << "e.g. 'gem i rake' is short for 'gem install rake'."
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say out.join("\n")
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end
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def show_command_help command_name # :nodoc:
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command_name = command_name.downcase
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possibilities = @command_manager.find_command_possibilities command_name
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if possibilities.size == 1 then
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command = @command_manager[possibilities.first]
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command.invoke("--help")
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elsif possibilities.size > 1 then
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alert_warning "Ambiguous command #{command_name} (#{possibilities.join(', ')})"
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else
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alert_warning "Unknown command #{command_name}. Try: gem help commands"
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end
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end
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def show_help # :nodoc:
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command = @command_manager[options[:help]]
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if command then
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# help with provided command
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command.invoke("--help")
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else
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alert_error "Unknown command #{options[:help]}. Try 'gem help commands'"
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end
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end
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end
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