The following is a summary of the changes that we plan to introduce in Bundler 3, why we will be making those changes, and what the deprecation process will look like. All these deprecations are printed by default in the Bundler 2.1 release.
If you don't want to deal with deprecations right now and want to toggle them
off, you can do it through configuration. Set the BUNDLE_SILENCE_DEPRECATIONS
environment variable to "true", or configure it through bundle config
either
globally through bundle config set --global silence_deprecations true
command, or
locally through bundle config set --local silence_deprecations true
. From now
on in this document we will assume that all three of these configuration options
are available, but will only mention bundle config set <option> <value>
.
As a general note, these changes are intended to improve the experience using bundler for new users, who have no existing usage routines nor possibly biased opinions about how the tool should work based on how it has historically worked. We do understand that changing behaviour that have been existing for years can be annoying for old users, that's why we intend to make this process as smooth as possible for everyone.
I'll be dividing the deprecations into four groups: CLI deprecations, Helper deprecations, DSL deprecations, and misc deprecations. Let's dive into each of them.
The CLI defines a set of commands and options that can be used by our users to create command lines that bundler can understand. There's a number of changes in the upcoming 3 version.
-
Flags passed to
bundle install
that relied on being remembered across invocations have been deprecated.In particular, the
--clean
,--deployment
,--frozen
,--no-prune
,--path
,--shebang
,--system
,--without
, and--with
options tobundle install
.Remembering CLI options has been a source of historical confusion and bug reports, not only for beginners but also for experienced users. A CLI tool should not behave differently across exactly the same invocations unless explicitly configured to do so. This is what configuration is about after all, and things should never be silently configured without the user knowing about it.
The problem with changing this behavior is that very common workflows are relying on it. For example, when you run
bundle install --without development:test
in production, those flags are persisted in the app's configuration file and furtherbundle
invocations will happily ignore development and test gems. This magic will disappear from bundler 3, and you will explicitly need to configure it, either through environment variables, application configuration, or machine configuration. For example, withbundle config set --local without development test
.The removal of this kind of flag also applies to analogous commands, for example, to
bundle check --path
. -
The
--force
flag tobundle install
andbundle update
has been renamed to--redownload
.This is just a simple rename of the flag, to make more apparent what it actually does. This flag forces redownloading every gem, it doesn't "force" anything else.
-
bundle viz
will be removed and extracted to a plugin.This is the only bundler command requiring external dependencies, both an OS dependency (the
graphviz
package) and a gem dependency (theruby-graphviz
gem). Removing these dependencies will make development easier and it was also seen by the bundler team as an opportunity to develop a bundler plugin that it's officially maintained by the bundler team, and that users can take as a reference to develop their own plugins. The plugin will contain the same code as the old core command, the only difference being that the command is now implemented asbundle graph
which is much easier to understand. However, the details of the plugin are under discussion. See #3333. -
The
bundle console
will be removed and replaced withbin/console
.Over time we found
bundle console
hard to maintain because every user would want to add her own specific tweaks to it. In order to ease maintenance and reduce bikeshedding discussions, we're removing thebundle console
command in favor of abin/console
script created bybundle gem
on gem generation that users can tweak to their needs. -
The
bundle install
command will no longer accept a--binstubs
flag.The
--binstubs
option has been removed frombundle install
and replaced with thebundle binstubs
command. The--binstubs
flag would create binstubs for all executables present inside the gems in the project. This was hardly useful since most users will only use a subset of all the binstubs available to them. Also, it would force the introduction of a bunch of most likely unused files into source control. Because of this, binstubs now must be created and checked into version control individually. -
The
bundle inject
command is deprecated and replaced withbundle add
.We believe the new command fits the user's mental model better and it supports a wider set of use cases. The interface supported by
bundle inject
works exactly the same inbundle add
, so it should be easy to migrate to the new command.
These deprecations have been initially announced before, but the deprecations were cancelled before the release of Bundler 2.1.0 in rubygems/bundler#7475.
-
The(postponed)bundle update
command will no longer update all gems, you'll need to pass--all
to it. -
The(postponed)bundle config
command will no longer accept old subcommand-based interface before Bundler 2.1.
-
Bundler.clean_env
,Bundler.with_clean_env
,Bundler.clean_system
, andBundler.clean_exec
are deprecated.All of these helpers ultimately use
Bundler.clean_env
under the hood, which makes sure all bundler-related environment are removed inside the block it yields.After quite a lot user reports, we noticed that users don't usually want this but instead want the bundler environment as it was before the current process was started. Thus,
Bundler.with_original_env
,Bundler.original_system
, andBundler.original_exec
were born. They all use the newBundler.original_env
under the hood.There's however some specific cases where the good old
Bundler.clean_env
behavior can be useful. For example, when testing Rails generators, you really want an environment wherebundler
is out of the picture. This is why we decided to keep the old behavior under a new more clear name, because we figured the word "clean" was too ambiguous. So we have introducedBundler.unbundled_env
,Bundler.with_unbundled_env
,Bundler.unbundled_system
, andBundler.unbundled_exec
. -
Bundler.environment
is deprecated in favor ofBundler.load
.We're not sure how people might be using this directly but we have removed the
Bundler::Environment
class which was instantiated byBundler.environment
since we realized theBundler::Runtime
class was the same thing. During the transitionBundler.environment
will delegate toBundler.load
, which holds the reference to theBundler::Environment
.
The following deprecations in bundler's DSL are meant to prepare for the strict source pinning in bundler 3, where the source for every dependency will be unambiguously defined.
-
Multiple global Gemfile sources will no longer be supported.
Instead of something like this:
source "https://main_source" source "https://another_source" gem "dependency1" gem "dependency2"
do something like this:
source "https://main_source" gem "dependency1" source "https://another_source" do gem "dependency2" end
-
Global
path
andgit
sources will no longer be supported.Instead of something like this:
path "/my/path/with/gems" git "https://my_git_repo_with_gems" gem "dependency1" gem "dependency2"
do something like this:
gem "dependency1", path: "/my/path/with/gems" gem "dependency2", git: "https://my_git_repo_with_gems"
or use the block forms if you have multiple gems for each source and you want to be a bit DRYer:
path "/my/path/with/gems" do # gem "dependency1" # ... # gem "dependencyn" end git "https://my_git_repo_with_gems" do # gem "dependency1" # ... # gem "dependencyn" end
-
Deployment helpers for
vlad
andcapistrano
are being removed.These are natural deprecations since the
vlad
tool has had no activity for years whereascapistrano
3 has built-in Bundler integration in the form of thecapistrano-bundler
gem, and everyone using Capistrano 3 should be already using that instead. If for some reason, you are still using Capistrano 2, feel free to copy the Capistrano tasks out of the Bundler 2 filelib/bundler/deployment.rb
and put them into your app.In general, we don't want to maintain integrations for every deployment system out there, so that's why we are removing these.