I was having a problem with RVM, so I uninstalled and re-installed it.
The truth is I actually tried rbenv, but that didn’t work out for me so I am trying to get rvm up and running again – without having to install duplicate versions of Ruby.
I have at least 1 existing version of Ruby installed:
ruby --version
ruby 1.8.7 (2011-12-28 patchlevel 357) [universal-darwin11.0]
But when I do rvm list I get a blank list:
bash-3.2$ rvm list
rvm rubies
# Default ruby not set. Try 'rvm alias create default <ruby>'.
# => - current
# =* - current && default
# * - default
So my question has two parts:
- How do I see all the versions of Ruby on my system (given that rvm is not showing me any)?
- How do I associate the new RVM install with the existing versions of Ruby?
Or am I better off removing all existing versions of Ruby and re-installing everything? That seems like a pain in the ass though.
You can add an existing ruby to rvm using:
or:
but be careful as ruby installed in system might have hardcoded paths for gems – so gemsets would not work with it.
There is also new way of adding binary rubies (already compiled), for list of available builds for your platform run:
and you can install those rubies using:
This might be default way of installing ruby to avoid compilation in next stable release of RVM – but it will work only for ruby 1.9.3+.