Before installing Veewee, please see the Requirements doc.
The Veewee project is moving quickly and the Rubygem might be outdated. Therefore it may be wise to install Veewee from source.
$ gem install veewee
The above command may fail when using OS X Mavericks and XCode 5.1 due to Apple telling the install to fail when unknown flags are used. To get around this, use:
$ ARCHFLAGS=-Wno-error=unused-command-line-argument-hard-error-in-future gem install veewee
Projects that include the veewee
gem can also benefit from utilizing Ruby version management (see below).
Installing Veewee without a Ruby version manager is NOT recommended:
$ cd <path_to_workspace>
$ git clone https://github.com/jedi4ever/veewee.git
$ cd veewee
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
With RVM already installed (see Requirements), ensure a ruby version that's supported by Veewee is available on your machine:
$ rvm install 1.9.2
Clone the veewee project from source:
$ cd <path_to_workspace>
$ git clone https://github.com/jedi4ever/veewee.git
$ cd veewee
Set the local gemset and ruby version within the current directory:
$ rvm use 1.9.2@veewee --create
Run bundle install
to install Gemfile dependencies for our local gemset:
$ gem install bundler
$ bundle install
With rbenv already installed (see Requirements), ensure a ruby version that's supported by Veewee is available on your machine:
$ rbenv install 1.9.2-p320
$ rbenv rehash
Clone the veewee project from source:
$ cd <path_to_workspace>
$ git clone https://github.com/jedi4ever/veewee.git
$ cd veewee
Set the local ruby version within the current directory:
$ rbenv local 1.9.2-p320
$ rbenv rehash
Run bundle install
to install Gemfile dependencies for our selected ruby version:
$ gem install bundler
$ rbenv rehash
$ bundle install
$ rbenv rehash
First, run bundle install
.
Then to run veewee
, use bundle exec veewee
or make a powershell alias to remember for you:
function Run-Veewee { bundle exec veewee }
Set-Alias veewee Run-Veewee
By default the :kvm
gem group is disabled to prevent the installation of ruby-libvirt
on systems
that don't need it. This is done by the file .bundle/config
.
If you do need it, run bundle install --without restrictions
(restrictions is a dummy name).
This will change the file .bundle/config
, which is ignored by Git by default and must not be included in any commits. As this is a remembered option, you don't have to specify it every time.
If you want to switch to the default behavior run bundle install --without kvm
to enable restrictions.
By default the :windows gem group is enabled . This loads the em-winrm
gem - which is incompatible with
ruby-1.8.7 because it depends on the gss-api
gem. To run from source you can execut bundle install --without windows
This will change the file .bundle/config
, which is ignored by Git per default and must not be included in any commits. If you want to switch to the default behavior run bundle install --without restrictions
to include it
Veewee Command Options highlights various approaches for executing Veewee on the command line.