RPi Ruby on Rails

Installing Ruby on Rails on Raspberry Pi
This guide is aimed at developers, although it can be used by beginners if they know what they are after. It is provided as neither Ruby or Rails are included as standard in Debian "squeeze". Other Linux RPi distributions may contain this by default.

THE GUIDE IS STILL DRAFT; AND CURRENTLY DOES NOT LEAD TO A WORKING RAILS, BUT IS CLOSE.

Start with a clean image of Debian "squeeze". There is not enough room on a standard 2Gb image. I tested with an 8Gb image, but you may get away with 4Gb.

The installation was all done from the basic (pre startx) command prompt.

This method uses the Ruby enVironment Manager (RVM), so first we must install all its prerequisites:

sudo apt-get install -y git sudo apt-get install -y curl sudo apt-get install -y zlib1g-dev sudo apt-get install -y subversion
 * 1) Install prerequisites

Now we can use RVM straight from github using: curl -L get.rvm.io | bash -s stable --rails

Note: With my default Debian image and keyboard map, it was very hard to get a | (pipe) character. I got it by pressing AltGr+|

When run, you will get some messages about requirements for Ruby. You need to scroll down (TODO Confirm this is necessary) until you see "Press 'q' to continue.", then press 'q'. Note the computer may not react straight away as it is 'thinking'. After a few seconds, the script will download and compile ruby 1.9.x and Rails. This takes a long time! (3 Hrs) Have a sleep and check in the morning. The above step has been successfully performed on a real RPi, but not managed to complete successfully on Qemu.

Now you should have ruby: pi@raspberrypi:~$ ruby -v ruby 1.9.3p194 (2012-04-20 revision 35410) [armv61-linux-eabi]

And you should have a rails command:

pi@raspberrypi:~$ rails -v Rails 3.2.3

Open SSL
Despite having openssl installed, ruby seems to have a problem seeing it. I think this is a common linux problem. The following worked for me, but means waiting a few more hours. pi@raspberrypi:~$ rvm reinstall 1.9.3 --with-openssl-dir=/usr/bin

Java Script
When trying to run the server, you will get a java script error. I have tried installing therubyracer unsuccessfully, but am currently trying node.js using this blog by Tom Gallacher.

Testing Installation
In order to test the installation, let's create a simple project. In this example the name for our new project is register.

rails new register cd register rails s