Written on 10 March, 2012

Did you know you can create as many groups in Bundler as you like? You can and I think you should! Let me show you some ways I use groups to clean up my Gemfile.

Why groups?

Speed: Requiring gems can get slow, even more so when you have a lot of them. Groups help you require the gems only when they are needed.

This is especially true if you use Ruby 1.9.2. In this version of Ruby, the require statement can get very slow. The number of gems inside a project can get rather large, so loading only the gems that are needed can improve Rails' boot time immensely.

Safety: Some gems provide functionality that you don't want to enable in certain cases. Take webmock, for instance. This handy gem blocks all outgoing network traffic inside your application. Very handy for testing purposes, but not in production!

Clarity: The group name can act as documentation. If you ever wonder what a gem does and where it is used inside your application, a group can tell you a lot.

The Basics

You probably already know the basics of groups in Bundler. Rails already uses groups out of the box. If you have a group named after the Rails environment, it will get loaded.

If you have gems that are used in the application itself, your best bet is to put them outside of any group. I'm talking about gems like Rails itself, devise, will_paginate, and so on.

Gems without a specified group are placed in the :default group and will be loaded in every Rails environment.

This is your safest choice. When in doubt in which group to place a gem, don't use a group at all.

Adding custom groups

You can easily add other groups. For example, Rails 3.1 and up have gems in the :assets group. This line from config/application.rb instructs Bundler to only require the assets in development and test environments.

Bundler . require ( * Rails . groups ( :assets => %w(development test) ))

You can add your own groups and let Bundler require them automatically.

Here is an example:

group :security do gem 'devise' gem 'cancan' end group :monitoring do gem 'newrelic_rpm' gem 'airbrake' end

So, we want security to always be there, but monitoring only in production. Then your configuration inside config/application.rb should read:

groups = { assets: %w(development test) , monitoring: %w(production) } Bundler . require ( :security , * Rails . groups ( groups ))

You can group together gems per type of gem, like :assets , or per part of the application, like :security , or :backend . See what makes the most sense for your application.

Grouping related gems

When you use Cucumber, Spinach, or Turnip, you'll end up with a set of related gems. When you cram all of these into the test group, they'll end up loaded in your RSpec tests too.

You could create a group for this:

group :cucumber do gem 'cucumber-rails' gem 'capybara' gem 'launchy' gem 'database_cleaner' end

This group won't be loaded. If you want to require these gems inside your Cucumber tests, add this line to features/support/env.rb :

Bundler . require ( :cucumber )

You could do this for other groups of related gems too. For instance, you might have a couple of scripts or rake tasks running periodically that use gems that you don't use in the rest of your application. With groups you can require them at the right moment.

Other gems

There are also some gems that are only used from the command line. An example might be thin, or capistrano. Here are some more examples:

group :capistrano do gem 'capistrano' gem 'capistrano-ext' gem 'capistrano_colors' gem 'capistrano_chef_solo' end group :test_tools do gem 'autotest' gem 'spork' gem 'spec_coverage' , :platforms => :ruby_19 gem 'fuubar' gem 'fuubar-cucumber' end

There is no need to add :require => false to every gem, because it won't get loaded anyway. These gems either provide a command line tool like cap or autotest , or they will be required manually at a specific moment, only when they are needed.

Console Extensions

There are a number of gems that will spice up your IRB session, like awesome_print, hirb and wirb. You can load them inside your ~/.irbrc file, but if they are not present inside your Gemfile, they won't be available inside projects using Bundler.

A group can play a part in solving this problem.

group :console do gem 'wirb' gem 'hirb-unicode' gem 'awesome_print' , :require => 'ap' end

Now, to automatically load them in Rails, but only when opening the console, open up config/application.rb . At the top you'll find an if-statement checking for Bundler. Inside this block, you can add this piece of code:

Class . new Rails :: Railtie do console do | app | Bundler . require ( :console ) Wirb . start Hirb . enable end end

This creates an anonymous Railtie in which you can specify what happens when the console is started. Here you can require all your console extensions and perform additional configuration.

Railties need to be loaded before you define your Rails application, or else you're too late and the console block won't be executed.