Ah forgot, in your case you need rails itself I don't have it on my
servers since packed within the application.
$ sudo gem install rails

On Nov 3, 12:55 am, Daniel Guettler <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Nathan,
>
> from your previous posts I think you are using Ubuntu here is how I
> recently setup my stack on Ubuntu 10.04 (you may be on 10.10 since you
> actually have a Ruby 1.9.2-p0 package... 10.04 doesn't)
>
> My setup consists of:
> - nginx for front-end web server
> - mysql for database
> - git for source control (optional)
> - memcached for caching and sessions (optional)
> - unicorn as ruby application server (you may want to consider nginx
> or apache with passenger since easier to setup)
> - ruby 1.9.2-p0
> - god for monitoring (optional)
> - capistrano for deploy (optional)
> - rcov for codecoverage (optional)
> - compass (optional)
>
> Run the following on the command line:
> $ sudo apt-get install nginx
> $ sudo apt-get install mysql-server libmysqlclient-dev
> $ sudo apt-get install git-core memcached
> $ sudo apt-get install ruby # your ruby package for 1.9.2 plus I
> installed the following addition packages: libhttp-access2-ruby
> libopenssl-ruby libreadline-ruby irb
>
> Next installation of rubygems and needed gems
> $ wgethttp://rubyforge.org/frs/download.php/70696/rubygems-1.3.7.tgz
> $ tar xzf rubygems-1.3.7.tgz
> $ cd rubygems-1.3.7; sudo ruby setup.rb
> Your gem executable probably will end up under /usr/bin/gem so make
> sure you have /usr/bin in your $PATH
> If not update your ~/.bashrc to contain in the end:
> export PATH=/usr/bin:$PATH
>
> Ensure you have the right ruby and gem version. You should see
> something like this:
> $ ruby -v
> ruby 1.9.2dev (2010-07-02) [x86_64-linux]
> $ cat `which gem` | head -1
> #!/usr/bin/ruby1.9.2
>
> Continue with installation of gems
> $ sudo gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc god memcache-client unicorn rcov
> compass capistrano rack
> $ sudo gem install --no-ri --no-rdoc mysql -- --with-mysql-config=/usr/
> bin/mysql_config
>
> Now you should be able to generate a new rails application:
> $ rails new my_new_app
>
> If you cd into your new app you must setup the database configuration
> and create the database. Even without this you should be able to:
> a) start the rails console
> $ rails console
> b) if above successful start a unicorn server
> $ unicorn_rails -p 8000
>
> Setup your nginx server to serve your rails application, or if you are
> on the local machine you can access your application from a web
> browser on port 8000
>
> Hope this gets you started...
>
> Best, Daniel
>
> On Nov 2, 6:31 pm, Nathan Domier <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > ok, I'm completely frustrated with the install process for gems and
> > rails \.
>
> > apt-get install rubygems1.9.1 seems to work, but when I try to run gem,
> > it says it's not installed.
>
> > To get gem to work, I have to apt-get ruby, which installs 1.8, instead
> > of 1.9, yet enables the gem command.
>
> > Then, gem install rails seems to work, but when I try to run rails, it
> > says it's not installed.
>
> > To get rails to work, I have to apt-get rails, which installs 2.3.5
> > instead of 3.
>
> > how do I get 1.9.2 and 3.0 working!?
>
> > T_T
>
> > --
> > Posted viahttp://www.ruby-forum.com/.

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