Start with an idea, end with a distributable package of Ruby code.
Ways to share your gem code with other users.
- Introduction
- Sharing Source Code
- Serving Your Own Gems
- Publishing to RubyGems.org
- Push Permissions on RubyGems.org
- Gem Security
Introduction
Now that you’ve created your gem, you’re probably ready to share it. While it is perfectly reasonable to create private gems solely to organize the code in large private projects, it’s more common to build gems so that they can be used by multiple projects. This guide discusses the various ways that you can share your gem with the world.
Sharing Source Code
The simplest way (from the author’s perspective) to share a gem for other developers’ use is to distribute it in source code form. If you place the full source code for your gem on a public git repository (often, though not always, this means sharing it via GitHub), then other users can install it with Bundler’s git functionality.
For example, you can install the latest code for the wicked_pdf gem in a project by including this line in your Gemfile:
gem "wicked_pdf", :git => "git://github.com/mileszs/wicked_pdf.git"
Installing a gem directly from a git repository is a feature of Bundler, not a feature of RubyGems. Gems installed this way will not show up when you run
gem list
.
Serving Your Own Gems
If you want to control who can install a gem, or directly track the activity surrounding a gem, then you’ll want to set up a private gem server. You can set up your own gem server or use a commercial service such as Gemfury.
RubyGems 2.2.0 and newer support the allowed_push_host
metadata value to
restrict gem pushes to a single host. If you are publishing private gems you
should set this value to prevent accidental pushes to rubygems.org:
Gem::Specification.new 'my_gem', '1.0' do |s|
# ...
s.metadata['allowed_push_host'] = 'https://gems.my-company.example'
end
See the Resources guide for an up-to-date listing of options for private gem servers.
Publishing to RubyGems.org
The simplest way to distribute a gem for public consumption is to use
RubyGems.org. Gems that are published to RubyGems.org
can be installed via the gem install
command or through the use of tools such
as Isolate or Bundler.
To begin, you’ll need to create an account on RubyGems.org. Visit the sign up page and supply an email address that you control, a handle (username) and a password.
After creating the account, use your email and password when pushing the gem. (RubyGems saves the credentials in ~/.gem/credentials for you so you only need to log in once.)
Note that your gem name must be unique. It cannot have a name that is already in use by another gem already published to RubyGems.org.
To publish version 0.1.0 of a new gem named ‘squid-utils’:
$ gem push squid-utils-0.1.0.gem
Enter your RubyGems.org credentials.
Don't have an account yet? Create one at https://rubygems.org/sign_up
Email: gem_author@example
Password:
Signed in.
Pushing gem to RubyGems.org...
Successfully registered gem: squid-utils (0.1.0)
Congratulations! Your new gem is now ready for any ruby user in the world to install!
Push Permissions on RubyGems.org
If you have multiple maintainers for your gem you can give your fellow maintainers permission to push the gem to rubygems.org through the gem owner command.
Gem Security
See Security page.