Docs header transparent bg

Sharing your code

Checking Your Code into Version Control

After developing your application for a while, check in the application together with the Gemfile and Gemfile.lock snapshot. Now, your repository has a record of the exact versions of all of the gems that you used the last time you know for sure that the application worked. Keep in mind that while your Gemfile lists only three gems (with varying degrees of version strictness), your application depends on dozens of gems, once you take into consideration all of the implicit requirements of the gems you depend on.

This is important: the Gemfile.lock makes your application a single package of both your own code and the third-party code it ran the last time you know for sure that everything worked. Specifying exact versions of the third-party code you depend on in your Gemfile would not provide the same guarantee, because gems usually declare a range of versions for their dependencies.

The next time you run bundle install on the same machine, bundler will see that it already has all of the dependencies you need, and skip the installation process.

Do not check in the .bundle directory, or any of the files inside it. Those files are specific to each particular machine, and are used to persist installation options between runs of the bundle install command.

If you have run bundle pack, the gems (although not the git gems) required by your bundle will be downloaded into vendor/cache. Bundler can run without connecting to the internet (or the RubyGems server) if all the gems you need are present in that folder and checked in to your source control. This is an optional step, and not recommended, due to the increase in size of your source control repository.

Sharing Your Application With Other Developers

When your co-developers (or you on another machine) check out your code, it will come with the exact versions of all the third-party code your application used on the machine that you last developed on (in the Gemfile.lock). When **they** run bundle install, bundler will find the Gemfile.lock and skip the dependency resolution step. Instead, it will install all of the same gems that you used on the original machine.

In other words, you don't have to guess which versions of the dependencies you should install. In the example we've been using, even though rack-cache declares a dependency on rack >= 0.4, we know for sure it works with rack 1.2.1. Even if the Rack team releases rack 1.2.2, bundler will always install 1.2.1, the exact version of the gem that we know works. This relieves a large maintenance burden from application developers, because all machines always run the exact same third-party code.

Edit this document on GitHub if you caught an error or noticed something was missing.