.rvmrc in lumberg-1.0.0 vs .rvmrc in lumberg-1.0.1

- old
+ new

@@ -1,48 +1,96 @@ -rvm 1.9.2@lumberg +#!/usr/bin/env bash + +# This is an RVM Project .rvmrc file, used to automatically load the ruby +# development environment upon cd'ing into the directory + +# First we specify our desired <ruby>[@<gemset>], the @gemset name is optional. +environment_id="ruby-1.9.2-p180@lumberg" + +# +# First we attempt to load the desired environment directly from the environment +# file. This is very fast and efficicent compared to running through the entire +# CLI and selector. If you want feedback on which environment was used then +# insert the word 'use' after --create as this triggers verbose mode. +# +if [[ -d "${rvm_path:-$HOME/.rvm}/environments" \ + && -s "${rvm_path:-$HOME/.rvm}/environments/$environment_id" ]] ; then + \. "${rvm_path:-$HOME/.rvm}/environments/$environment_id" + + [[ -s ".rvm/hooks/after_use" ]] && . ".rvm/hooks/after_use" +else + # If the environment file has not yet been created, use the RVM CLI to select. + rvm --create use "$environment_id" +fi + +# +# If you use an RVM gemset file to install a list of gems (*.gems), you can have +# it be automatically loaded. Uncomment the following and adjust the filename if +# necessary. +# +# filename=".gems" +# if [[ -s "$filename" ]] ; then +# rvm gemset import "$filename" | grep -v already | grep -v listed | grep -v complete | sed '/^$/d' +# fi + +# +# If you use bundler and would like to run bundle each time you enter the +# directory, you can uncomment the following code. +# +# # Ensure that Bundler is installed. Install it if it is not. +# if ! command -v bundle >/dev/null; then +# printf "The rubygem 'bundler' is not installed. Installing it now.\n" +# gem install bundler +# fi +# +# # Bundle while reducing excess noise. +# printf "Bundling your gems. This may take a few minutes on a fresh clone.\n" +# bundle | grep -v '^Using ' | grep -v ' is complete' | sed '/^$/d' +# +