StrongVersions enforces a strict policy on your Gemfile
requirements:
- The pessimistic
~>
operator must be used for all gem requirement definitions. - If the gem version is greater than 1, the requirement format must be
major.minor
, e.g.'~> 2.5
' - If the gem version is less than 1, the requirement format must be
major.minor.patch
, e.g.'~> 0.8.9'
- A lower/upper bound can be specified as long as a valid pessimistic version is also specified, e.g.
'~> 8.4', '< 8.6.7'
- All gems with a
path
orgit
source are ignored, e.g.path: '/path/to/gem'
,git: 'https://github.com/bobf/strong_versions'
- All gems specified in the ignore list are ignored.
Any gems that do not satisfy these rules will be included in the StrongVersions output with details on why they did not meet the standard.
When all gems in a Gemfile
follow this convention it SHOULD always be safe to run bundle update
(assuming all gems adhere to Semantic Versioning).
Add the gem to your Gemfile
gem 'strong_versions', '~> 0.4.5'
And rebuild your bundle:
$ bundle install
StrongVersions is invoked with a provided executable:
$ bundle exec strong_versions
The executable will output all non-passing gems and will return an exit code of 1
on failure, 0
on success (i.e. all gems passing). This makes StrongVersions suitable for use in a continuous integration pipeline:
Auto-correct is available with the -a/--auto-correct
option:
$ bundle exec strong_versions -a
You can tell StrongVersions to ignore any of your gems (e.g. those that don't follow semantic versioning) by adding them to the ignore
section of .strong_versions.yml
in your project root, e.g.:
# .strong_versions.yml
ignore:
- rails
Gems in the ignore list will not be updated when using the -a/--auto-correct
option.
Fork and create a pull request.
Run tests with RSpec:
$ bin/rspec
Check code with Rubocop:
$ bin/rubocop