class Gem::Commands::UnpackCommand

Public Class Methods

new ()
Calls superclass method Gem::Command::new
# File lib/rubygems/commands/unpack_command.rb, line 20
def initialize
  require "fileutils"

  super "unpack", "Unpack an installed gem to the current directory",
        version: Gem::Requirement.default,
        target: Dir.pwd

  add_option("--target=DIR",
             "target directory for unpacking") do |value, options|
    options[:target] = value
  end

  add_option("--spec", "unpack the gem specification") do |_value, options|
    options[:spec] = true
  end

  add_security_option
  add_version_option
end

Public Instance Methods

description ()
# File lib/rubygems/commands/unpack_command.rb, line 48
  def description
    <<-EOF
The unpack command allows you to examine the contents of a gem or modify
them to help diagnose a bug.

You can add the contents of the unpacked gem to the load path using the
RUBYLIB environment variable or -I:

  $ gem unpack my_gem
  Unpacked gem: '.../my_gem-1.0'
  [edit my_gem-1.0/lib/my_gem.rb]
  $ ruby -Imy_gem-1.0/lib -S other_program

You can repackage an unpacked gem using the build command.  See the build
command help for an example.
    EOF
  end
execute ()
# File lib/rubygems/commands/unpack_command.rb, line 75
def execute
  security_policy = options[:security_policy]

  get_all_gem_names.each do |name|
    dependency = Gem::Dependency.new name, options[:version]
    path = get_path dependency

    unless path
      alert_error "Gem '#{name}' not installed nor fetchable."
      next
    end

    if @options[:spec]
      spec, metadata = Gem::Package.raw_spec(path, security_policy)

      if metadata.nil?
        alert_error "--spec is unsupported on '#{name}' (old format gem)"
        next
      end

      spec_file = File.basename spec.spec_file

      FileUtils.mkdir_p @options[:target] if @options[:target]

      destination = if @options[:target]
        File.join @options[:target], spec_file
      else
        spec_file
      end

      File.open destination, "w" do |io|
        io.write metadata
      end
    else
      basename = File.basename path, ".gem"
      target_dir = File.expand_path basename, options[:target]

      package = Gem::Package.new path, security_policy
      package.extract_files target_dir

      say "Unpacked gem: '#{target_dir}'"
    end
  end
end
find_in_cache (filename)

Find cached filename in Gem.path. Returns nil if the file cannot be found.

# File lib/rubygems/commands/unpack_command.rb, line 127
def find_in_cache(filename)
  Gem.path.each do |path|
    this_path = File.join(path, "cache", filename)
    return this_path if File.exist? this_path
  end

  nil
end
get_path (dependency)

Return the full path to the cached gem file matching the given name and version requirement. Returns ‘nil’ if no match.

Example:

get_path 'rake', '> 0.4' # "/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8/cache/rake-0.4.2.gem"
get_path 'rake', '< 0.1' # nil
get_path 'rak'           # nil (exact name required)
# File lib/rubygems/commands/unpack_command.rb, line 147
def get_path(dependency)
  return dependency.name if /\.gem$/i.match?(dependency.name)

  specs = dependency.matching_specs

  selected = specs.max_by(&:version)

  return Gem::RemoteFetcher.fetcher.download_to_cache(dependency) unless
    selected

  return unless /^#{selected.name}$/i.match?(dependency.name)

  # We expect to find (basename).gem in the 'cache' directory.  Furthermore,
  # the name match must be exact (ignoring case).

  path = find_in_cache File.basename selected.cache_file

  return Gem::RemoteFetcher.fetcher.download_to_cache(dependency) unless path

  path
end