Missing theme file on Jekyll installed with RVM - macos

I've error when i install Jekyll on MacOS 10.13.2 with 'gem install jekyll' command:
ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::FilePermissionError)
To solve this problem i am installed RVM and install Jekyll with RVM. Jekyll runs perfectly. But i've some critical problem here. Jekyll comes with default theme named 'Minima'. I want to customize theme, but i check site file, includes file is not here. So can't customize theme.
To find the includes file i use that command on the terminal:
which gem minima
Output:
/Users/bekircem/.rvm/rubies/ruby-2.4.1/bin/gem
So i can't access to includes and other similiar files.
How can i fix that problem? Any suggestions?

Ok. I found a solution. Detailed description on the Jekyll.org about theme defaults.

Related

Ruby-Rubocop not working on vscode

/Users/me/.rbenv/versions/2.5.1/lib/ruby/2.5.0/rubygems.rb:289:in ``find_spec_for_exe': can't find gem rubocop (>= 0.a) with executable rubocop (Gem::GemNotFoundException) from /Users/me/.rbenv/versions/2.5.1/lib/ruby/2.5.0/rubygems.rb:308:in ``activate_bin_path' from /Users/me/.rbenv/versions/2.5.1/bin/rubocop:23:in'
This is the error I keep getting whenever I type something. Does anyone know how to fix this problem?
After many agonising hours and reading other solutions I finally deduce that the answer was in installing Rubocop from the root. Below steps worked when I tried.
You first need to go the root in your terminal.
Install Rubocop then find the path and add it to the execute path in Rubocop settings
$ cd ~
$ gem install rubocop
$ which rubocop
Paste location given in Ruby-Rubocop configuration settings > Execute Path
/Users/username/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.6.1/bin/
I can propose you 2 solutions because I had experienced the same problem:
For me installing the bundler with sudo -> sudo gem install bundler fix the issue.
Also it can be a mistake coming from you RubyGems version. It seems like ruby -v2.5 has a compatible problem with RubyGems -v2.7.3. So try upgrading the RubyGems to -v2.7.4 using the gem update --system command.
For anyone who downloaded Ruby26-x64 and is having the same issue. It is probably because of the install locations and that your C://Users//you//whatever doesn't exist. To fix this I simply checked where ruby was installed on my C drive. For me, it downloaded by default into a file called Ruby26-x64 on my C drive. Open the folder go to bin and double check that there is a rubocop.bat somewhere. Copy paste the path, into settings.json. Should look something like this.
"ruby.rubocop.executePath": "C:\\Ruby26-x64\\bin\\",
Note that this is a solution I found on Windows 10, I don't know about Mac.
EDIT:
Settings.json can be found by going to File>Preferences>Settings>Workbench
and under "Editor Associations", you will see a button that says Edit in settings.json, there are many ways to open your settings.json file, this is just one.
After installing rubocop gem gem install rubocop
Run bundle install and then run rubcop again. It functioned for me.

Error installing SASS gem - don't have permissions

I'm not well versed in terminal, but I'll try my best to make this as clear and concise as I can.
I'm trying to install SASS and get the following errors:
When using gem install sass I get .
ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::FilePermissionError)
You don't have write permissions for the /Library/Ruby/Gems/2.3.0 directory.
When using sudo gem install sass I get .
ERROR: While executing gem ... (Gem::FilePermissionError)
You don't have write permissions for the /usr/bin directory.
I have Xcode installed and I have agreed to the terms.
I even tried updating my Ruby, but terminal tells me I already have the most updated version.
ruby 2.3.3p222 (2016-11-21 revision 56859) [universal.x86_64-darwin17]
The worst part of all of this is that when I navigate to my Ruby/Gems/2.3.0/gems directory, there is a sass-3.5.5 folder!!! (linked image to follow)
Ruby directory path to sass folder
I try running sass -v and get -bash: sass: command not found
I feel like I've tried everything that I can think of or find online. I'm at a loss and definitely need some help.
The issue can be fixed by installing RVM or Rbenv for managing ruby versions and gems.
Also, FilePermissionError can be fixed using the -n parameter
sudo gem install sass -n /usr/bin
I prefer not touching sudo command, so I managed to solve this issue by referring to SASS home page:
If you use Node.js, you can also install Sass using npm by running
npm install -g sass
If you find it helpful, kindly upvote or leave comment so that I know it can solve your issues too.
Or one could update the directory for where gems are installed.
Please see the origional answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/2619731/3302764
export GEM_HOME=~/.gem
export GEM_PATH=~/.gem

Getting Pygments dependency error when trying to compile Jekyll site

I'm beginning to set up a Jekyll site and I've installed everything and copied the contents of this theme into the site's directory. I've installed Pygments via the gem install pygments.rb command and it seemed to install fine. But I'm still getting the error from my screenshot below when trying jekyll serve . I found this post and tried the commands in the given answer, installing pygments worked fine, but when I tried gem 'pygments.rb' I got the error in the first line of the screenshot "Unknown command pygments.rb".
I'm running this command in the directory with my gemfile, so I'm not sure what the problem is.
I'm not really sure what else I can try. I've installed pygments but I still get the error that it is not installed. I am using rbenv to manage my Ruby versions, I have the global ruby version set to 2.0.0-p247. Any ideas how I can fix this?
Edit: So I followed the theme's install guide, but I'm getting the same error except for Kramdown:
Conversion error: Jekyll::Converters::Markdown encountered an error while converting '_posts/2016-01-08-welcome-to-jekyll.markdown':
Missing dependency: kramdown
ERROR: YOUR SITE COULD NOT BE BUILT:
------------------------------------
Missing dependency: kramdown
If you read theme's install steps, your not supposed to battle with any pygments install.
Here are two working ways for a Jekyll install :
http://jekyllrb.com/docs/quickstart/
https://help.github.com/articles/using-jekyll-with-pages/#installing-jekyll

How to install Compass on Windows

I have installed Ruby on my system, and now I want to install Compass. But when I execute the gem install compass command, it shows an error like this:
could not find valid gem 'compass' <>=0> in any repositary
And also:
SocketError: getadressinfo: no such host is known.<http://rubygems.org/latest_specs.4.8.gz>
I don't know what the problem is. If I run ruby -v, it shows the Ruby version. So what's the problem with installing Compass?
Can anyone explain this to me properly? I've searched Google, but all I could find was some proxy problem - and I couldn't understand how to set the proxy at all.
I'm using Windows and a company internet connection, so I don't know the username and password of my proxy.
I was behind a proxy and HumberFrench's solution above helped:
Go to Ruby bin folder:
cd c:/Ruby193/bin
And then install compass gem:
gem install compass --http-proxy http://<proxy_adreess>:<port_of_proxy>
Another tip: am on Aptana Studio, so this could be run from within Aptana's terminal.
Cant up-vote so adding this here.
I had the same problem, finally solved it manually.
Goto the rubygems compass page, and download the gem by clicking the Download link. Scroll down and you will see three Runtime Dependencies. Goto each of them and download those gems also. Put all of them in a directory, and try
gem install downloaded_compass_filename
This should solve your problem.
If it gives an repository not found error message, you can force gem to try local files through the gem --local install option
if you use a proxy, and get error, do it
gem install compass --http-proxy http://<proxy_adreess>:<port_of_proxy>
gem install -h gives you a lor of options
The proxy is the most likely cause. You will have to get permission from the network admin, or manually download compass. For more info, See this SA post.
If you decide to go the manual route here is a link to the RubyGems compass page. This not ideal, but also better than having to write css without compass magic ^^
Good luck!
On windows i had a few instalations of ruby:
C:\ruby187
and
C:\Ruby200-x64
install compass in both places, using:
gem install compass
Try running the install command in the bin folder.
$ cd C:\Your_Ruby_Folder\bin
$ gem install compass
I have same problem and i resolve it with.
Uninstall ruby end deleted folder ruby
Download ruby version 1.9.x
After thet install sass
last stem: install compass

Jekyll - command not found

I am trying to get Jekyll running but I have no experience with Ruby.
As far as I can tell the installation of Jekyll has succeeded.
However:
$ jekyll
Gives an error:
-bash: jekyll: command not found
This is the gem env result:
- RUBYGEMS VERSION: 1.3.4
- RUBY VERSION: 1.8.7 (2010-01-10 patchlevel 249) [universal-darwin10.0]
- INSTALLATION DIRECTORY: /Volumes/HDD/DADU/gems
- RUBY EXECUTABLE: /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/1.8/usr/bin/ruby
- EXECUTABLE DIRECTORY: /Volumes/HDD/DADU/gems/bin
- RUBYGEMS PLATFORMS:
- ruby
- universal-darwin-10
- GEM PATHS:
- /Volumes/HDD/DADU/gems
- /Volumes/HDD/DADU/.gem/ruby/1.8
- /Library/Ruby/Gems/1.8
- /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/1.8/usr/lib/ruby/gems/1.8
- GEM CONFIGURATION:
- :update_sources => true
- :verbose => true
- :benchmark => false
- :backtrace => false
- :bulk_threshold => 1000
- REMOTE SOURCES:
- http://gems.rubyforge.org/
And I found the following paths leading to "something" Jekyll:
~.gem/ruby/1.8/gems/jekyll-0.11.0/lib/jekyll.rb
~.gem/ruby/1.8/gems/bin/jekyll (exec file)
If you are using MacOS, from the Troubleshooting guide:
Jekyll & Mac OS X 10.11Permalink
With the introduction of System Integrity Protection, several directories that were previously writable are now considered system locations and are no longer available. Given these changes, there are a couple of simple ways to get up and running. One option is to change the location where the gem will be installed (again, using sudo only if necessary):
$ gem install -n /usr/local/bin jekyll
For others coming here with the following set up:
OS X + brewed install of ruby + (possibly) zsh
I figured the problem is that after installing jekyll as per their instructions, gem installs the jekyll gem in the brew cellar, not where the OS usually expects it (somehwere in a gem directory for ruby).
So, all that was needed here was to find out where the brew install of ruby installs gems, locate the jekyll binary, and create a symbolic link to it in /usr/bin.
Here is are the steps I took to fix it:
Type gem env and look for GEM PATHS. For me it was:
/usr/local/Cellar/ruby/1.9.3-p194/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1.
Make sure you can see the jekyll binary in the directory from 1 above and copy its path (if you can't, search any other paths listed in GEM PATHS for it). For me it was:
/usr/local/Cellar/ruby/1.9.3-p194/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/jekyll-1.4.3/bin/jekyll
Use the path from step 2 above to create a symlink to /usr/bin/jekyll. I did it by typing this (you might need sudo to create the symlink):
cd /usr/bin && ln -s /usr/local/Cellar/ruby/1.9.3-p194/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/jekyll-1.4.3/bin/jekyll jekyll
Now all should be merry if you type jekyll.
The easiest method of doing this is to use RVM. It manages Ruby and all its gems for you and it's easy to use. See this link for using it.
If you did not want to use that you will need to modify your PATH variables so it can find your gems. I have found this to be tedious and reverted to RVM, but here are the general steps.
You will need to find out where your gems are getting installed. If you did gem install ... the gems will be in ~/.gem/ruby/1.8/gems/bin, if you used sudo gem install ... the gems will be somewhere in /System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/1.8/Resources
You have to add this path to your PATH variable. Easiest way to do this is by running :
echo 'PATH=$PATH:above/path/to/gems' >> ~/.bash_profile
If you are using RBENV instead of RVM you simply need to run rehash in the command line after installing jekyll:
rbenv rehash
I installed my ruby2.6.0 and gem via brew on MacOS 10.14.
For me, add the following line to my ~/.zshrc solved this issue.
export PATH=/usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/2.6.0/bin:$PATH
I found jekyll executable file with command locate jekyll.
Maybe a little late, but...
I had some trouble to install Jekyll on Ubuntu and tried everything that people answered in this thread - unfortunately nothing worked.
Then, I watched a video on Jekyll's site and after installing the whole ruby package again, sudo gem install jekyll worked.
Try it before anything else:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install ruby-full
sudo gem install jekyll
jekyll -v
It seems pretty simple, but it works on Ubuntu.
One solution would be editing your ~/.bashrc file and add this line:
PATH=$PATH:~/.gem/ruby/1.8/gems/bin
This will add ~/.gem/ruby/1.8/gems/bin in Bash's lookup path.
Reopen the terminal and it should work. Or you can use the following command:
. ~/.bashrc
Following steps solved my problem
gem uninstall jekyll
sudo gem install jekyll
Open ~/.bash_profile and add this code in the last line,
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/lib/ruby/gems/1.9.1/gems/jekyll-2.5.2/bin
Save and close the .bash_profile
Close and reopen the mac terminal, try running jekyll now, it should work
For me, I followed this installation guide instead of their main page's installation instruction. It worked after I changed the bash_profile file and restarted Terminal.
Jekyll is a ruby gem : Ruby gems in linux, for example, are in /var/lib/gems/1.8, as can be seen in the "ruby env" output.
Thus, you need to add the executables in this directory to your path.
In general, if a ruby gem is "not found" by your OS, it simply indicates that either
1) You don't have the gem installed or
2) You don't have the gem installed in a directory that is on your path.
I have found that there have been a few issues with installing ruby and ruby gems on linux (I have found that it can be tricky on Ubuntu v10, and have confirmed this with the Ruby folks on IRC). Thus, tools like RVM or rbenv might be the best approach to setting up a stable, maintainable ruby environment.
Easier than creating a symlink just install it correctly.
If you got permission errors like a lot of people are getting when trying to use
gem install jekyll
instead use
sudo gem install jekyll
#jayunit100,
I'm running into the same issue with a Jekyll blog. I've installed the gem via RVM in a 'Blog directory and the _config.yml file says that it should generate into Blog/_site. Is it as simple as adding Blog to the PATH or is there something else I'm missing?
Update: My bad, I didn't really have the gem installed. Lesson learned: rvm requirements and brew doctor are there for a reason - before you install stuff USE THEM
In my case I had to run bundle install --force
Then bundle exec jekyll serve works, but jekyll serve still doesn't. It seems I'll have to go with the former from now on…
When you use the --user-install option, RubyGems will install the gems to a directory inside your home directory, something like ~/.gem/ruby/1.9.1. The commands provided by the gems you installed will end up in ~/.gem/ruby/1.9.1/bin. For the programs installed there to be available for you, you need to add ~/.gem/ruby/1.9.1/bin to your PATH environment variable.
For example, if you use bash you can add that directory to your PATH by adding code like this to your ~/.bashrc file:
if which ruby >/dev/null && which gem >/dev/null; then
PATH="$(ruby -r rubygems -e 'puts Gem.user_dir')/bin:$PATH"
fi
https://guides.rubygems.org/faqs/#user-install
I put it in the .bash_profile (Mac OS X).
https://hathaway.cc/2008/06/how-to-edit-your-path-environment-variables-on-mac/
Here's an updated answer for 2020 (soon 2021). To install any Ruby gem, whether it's Jekyll, Bundler, Rails, etc., you need a proper Ruby development environment on a Mac. There are various ways to install Ruby on a Mac, as I have written about in great detail in my definitive guide to installing Ruby gems on a Mac. The only one I recommend is to use a Ruby manager because it's the most flexible and sets you up for success for the long term. My preferred one is chruby because it's the lightest and easiest to use. As part of installing Ruby, you also need to properly configure your shell startup file (typically ~/.zshrc or ~/.bash_profile) so that it knows where to find the gems you install. Otherwise, you'll get the "command not found" error, which I've also written about.
Since there are several steps involved in setting up a working Ruby development environment on a Mac, I wrote some scripts to automate the whole process and make things easier and faster for people. You can read more about the scripts in my guide mentioned above.
I had this problem for a very stupid reason, which is that I was working on Linux and had installed both flatpak and .deb versions of Visual Studio Code. I was confused because I could successfully run bundle exec jekyll serve in the terminal application, but not from the integrated terminal in Visual Studio Code.
Well, it turns out the integrated terminal loaded my PATH correctly in the .deb version but not the flatpak one. So... if you, like me, have foolishly installed multiple versions of Visual Studio Code, check which one you are using.
This is what worked for me. I'm not developing in ruby, and don't have a lot of tools that I use it for, so I don't need RVM. I also don't need to install jekyll as root. I just want it to run.
(This answer is just a more descriptive version of answers by Santa Zhang, jayunit100, and a few others.)
1. Find Local Gem Path
> gem env
Assuming this runs, it will list a bunch of useful information. You are looking for GEM PATHS. If there are two, then you want the one that is found in your home directory. Mine was something like /home/<user>/.local/share/gem/ruby/3.0.0
If it doesn't run, install the ruby gem program and try again.
2. Find Gem Binaries Path
Look in that directory until you find the location where the jekyll executable is actually installed. I found it in /home/<user>/.local/share/gem/ruby/3.0.0/bin/jekyll. But what I need is the directory path, not the file, so: /home/<user>/.local/share/gem/ruby/3.0.0/bin/.
3. Add That to PATH
Figure out how to add a directory to your PATH environment variable. Instructions for that are too extensive to provide here, as it depends on your operating system and preferred shell, and the versions of the same. Search for that information elsewhere on Stackoverflow.
4. Restart Your Session
Close your terminal and open a new one. Make sure the directory was added to your path. Depending on how you set your PATH variable, you might need to log out of your session and log in again.

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