From 0cc91871a81aeb3152fcb72b5a50bcee2f7d03b0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Josh Nichols Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2023 06:22:39 -0800 Subject: [rubygems/rubygems] Update bundle-exec man page for with_unbundled_env `with_clean_env` has been deprecated in `with_unbundled_env`. It already generates a deprecation warning when it uses, but this man page was still referring to it. --- lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1 | 8 ++++---- lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1.ronn | 10 +++++----- 2 files changed, 9 insertions(+), 9 deletions(-) diff --git a/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1 b/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1 index fab413563f..281f3faede 100644 --- a/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1 +++ b/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1 @@ -74,13 +74,13 @@ Finally, \fBbundle exec\fR also implicitly modifies \fBGemfile\.lock\fR if the l By default, when attempting to \fBbundle exec\fR to a file with a ruby shebang, Bundler will \fBKernel\.load\fR that file instead of using \fBKernel\.exec\fR\. For the vast majority of cases, this is a performance improvement\. In a rare few cases, this could cause some subtle side\-effects (such as dependence on the exact contents of \fB$0\fR or \fB__FILE__\fR) and the optimization can be disabled by enabling the \fBdisable_exec_load\fR setting\. . .SS "Shelling out" -Any Ruby code that opens a subshell (like \fBsystem\fR, backticks, or \fB%x{}\fR) will automatically use the current Bundler environment\. If you need to shell out to a Ruby command that is not part of your current bundle, use the \fBwith_clean_env\fR method with a block\. Any subshells created inside the block will be given the environment present before Bundler was activated\. For example, Homebrew commands run Ruby, but don\'t work inside a bundle: +Any Ruby code that opens a subshell (like \fBsystem\fR, backticks, or \fB%x{}\fR) will automatically use the current Bundler environment\. If you need to shell out to a Ruby command that is not part of your current bundle, use the \fBwith_unbundled_env\fR method with a block\. Any subshells created inside the block will be given the environment present before Bundler was activated\. For example, Homebrew commands run Ruby, but don\'t work inside a bundle: . .IP "" 4 . .nf -Bundler\.with_clean_env do +Bundler\.with_unbundled_env do `brew install wget` end . @@ -89,13 +89,13 @@ end .IP "" 0 . .P -Using \fBwith_clean_env\fR is also necessary if you are shelling out to a different bundle\. Any Bundler commands run in a subshell will inherit the current Gemfile, so commands that need to run in the context of a different bundle also need to use \fBwith_clean_env\fR\. +Using \fBwith_unbundled_env\fR is also necessary if you are shelling out to a different bundle\. Any Bundler commands run in a subshell will inherit the current Gemfile, so commands that need to run in the context of a different bundle also need to use \fBwith_unbundled_env\fR\. . .IP "" 4 . .nf -Bundler\.with_clean_env do +Bundler\.with_unbundled_env do Dir\.chdir "/other/bundler/project" do `bundle exec \./script` end diff --git a/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1.ronn b/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1.ronn index 5f5e78ed12..05948095e2 100644 --- a/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1.ronn +++ b/lib/bundler/man/bundle-exec.1.ronn @@ -84,20 +84,20 @@ the `disable_exec_load` setting. Any Ruby code that opens a subshell (like `system`, backticks, or `%x{}`) will automatically use the current Bundler environment. If you need to shell out to a Ruby command that is not part of your current bundle, use the -`with_clean_env` method with a block. Any subshells created inside the block +`with_unbundled_env` method with a block. Any subshells created inside the block will be given the environment present before Bundler was activated. For example, Homebrew commands run Ruby, but don't work inside a bundle: - Bundler.with_clean_env do + Bundler.with_unbundled_env do `brew install wget` end -Using `with_clean_env` is also necessary if you are shelling out to a different +Using `with_unbundled_env` is also necessary if you are shelling out to a different bundle. Any Bundler commands run in a subshell will inherit the current Gemfile, so commands that need to run in the context of a different bundle also -need to use `with_clean_env`. +need to use `with_unbundled_env`. - Bundler.with_clean_env do + Bundler.with_unbundled_env do Dir.chdir "/other/bundler/project" do `bundle exec ./script` end -- cgit v1.2.3