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Updating Gems

Updating a Dependency

Of course, at some point, you might want to update the version of a particular dependency your application relies on. For instance, you might want to update rails to 3.0.0 final. Importantly, just because you're updating one dependency, it doesn't mean you want to re-resolve all of your dependencies and use the latest version of everything. In our example, you only have three dependencies, but even in this case, updating everything can cause complications.

To illustrate, the rails 3.0.0.rc gem depends on actionpack 3.0.0.rc gem, which depends on rack ~> 1.2.1 (which means >= 1.2.1 and < 1.3.0). The rack-cache gem depends on rack >= 0.4. Let's assume that the rails 3.0.0 final gem also depends on rack ~> 1.2.1, and that since the release of rails 3.0.0, the Rack team released rack 1.2.2.

If we naïvely update all of our gems in order to update Rails, we'll get rack 1.2.2, which satisfies the requirements of both rails 3.0.0 and rack-cache. However, we didn't specifically ask to update rack-cache, which may not be compatible with rack 1.2.2 (for whatever reason). And while an update from rack 1.2.1 to rack 1.2.2 probably won't break anything, similar scenarios can happen that involve much larger jumps. (see [1] below for a larger discussion)

In order to avoid this problem, when you update a gem, bundler will not update a dependency of that gem if another gem still depends on it. In this example, since rack-cache still depends on rack, bundler will not update the rack gem. This ensures that updating rails doesn't inadvertently break rack-cache. Since rails 3.0.0's dependency actionpack 3.0.0 remains compatible with rack 1.2.1, bundler leaves it alone, and rack-cache continues to work even in the face of an incompatibility with rack 1.2.2.

Since you originally declared a dependency on rails 3.0.0.rc, if you want to update to rails 3.0.0, simply update your Gemfile to gem 'rails', '3.0.0' and run:

$ bundle install

As described above, the bundle install command always does a conservative update, refusing to update gems (or their dependencies) that you have not explicitly changed in the Gemfile. This means that if you do not modify rack-cache in your Gemfile, bundler will treat it **and its dependencies** (rack) as a single, unmodifiable unit. If rails 3.0.0 was incompatible with rack-cache, bundler will report a conflict between your snapshotted dependencies (Gemfile.lock) and your updated Gemfile.

If you update your Gemfile, and your system already has all of the needed dependencies, bundler will transparently update the Gemfile.lock when you boot your application. For instance, if you add mysql to your Gemfile, and have already installed it in your system, you can boot your application without running bundle install, and bundler will persist the "last known good" configuration to the Gemfile.lock snapshot.

This can come in handy when adding or updating gems with minimal dependencies (database drivers, wirble, ruby-debug). It will probably fail if you update gems with significant dependencies (rails), or that a lot of gems depend on (rack). If a transparent update fails, your application will fail to boot, and bundler will print out an error instructing you to run bundle install.

Updating a Gem Without Modifying the Gemfile

Sometimes, you want to update a dependency without modifying the Gemfile. For example, you might want to update to the latest version of rack-cache. Because you did not declare a specific version of rack-cache in the Gemfile, you might want to periodically get the latest version of rack-cache. To do this, you want to use the bundle update command:

$ bundle update rack-cache

This command will update rack-cache and its dependencies to the latest version allowed by the Gemfile (in this case, the latest version available). It will not modify any other dependencies.

It will, however, update dependencies of other gems if necessary. For instance, if the latest version of rack-cache specifies a dependency on rack >= 1.2.2, bundler will update rack to 1.2.2 even though you have not asked bundler to update rack. If bundler needs to update a gem that another gem depends on, it will let you know after the update has completed.

If you want to update every gem in the Gemfile to the latest possible versions, run:

$ bundle update

This will resolve dependencies from scratch, ignoring the Gemfile.lock. If you do this, keep git reset --hard and your test suite in your back pocket. Resolving all dependencies from scratch can have surprising results, especially if a number of the third-party packages you depend on have released new versions since you last did a full update.

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