I recently installed Ruby 1.9.1 on CentOS (/Redhat). I had to jump through a few hoops, so I thought I would share in case anyone else is dealing with similar problems. https://github.com/mrupert/MTR/wiki/Setting-up-Ruby-on-Rails-on-CentOS-Redhat-%28Ruby-1.9.2%29 When it comes to setting up Ruby on Rails many of us developers are on our own as far as configuring the environment. While I love working in Linux, I am hardly a Linux administrator. I''ve learned a few things along the way while setting up my Ruby on Rails environment in CentOS, and I thought I would share these lessons here (and record them for my own future use). Note: Before doing any of this, you should probably know your way around Linux with some degree of confidence, and you will need root access. Its probably also a good idea to have openssh-server installed and configured. I recommend PuTTY as an SSH client for Windows. 1. On a fresh Redhat installation you may first have to install GCC. You can simply install GCC and other libraries you need, or you can run: yum groupinstall ''Development Tools'' This command will install all kinds of ''stuff'' that is not really necessary though. This is necessary especially if you are building a current version of Ruby on Rails (e.g. 1.9.1, which includes GEM but does not have a yum installer for CentOs or Redhat). Install these items before you proceed to build (make and make install) Ruby from source: yum install gcc yum install zlib yum install zlib-devel yum install openssl yum install openssl-devel Note: Later, if you go to run gem and get an error including, "no such file to load -- zlib," it means you forgot to install zib and/or zlib- devel before building Ruby. You''ll have to rebuild and re-install. 1. Download the Ruby source (from http://ruby-lang.org). The file comes in a tarball, so once it is download extract is somewhere (~) and: tar xvf <ruby-1.9.2-p136.tar.gz> (tar xvf handles the unzipping as well.) 2. If installing over an existing Ruby installation, it may be best NOT to overwrite that installation and simply add a suffix to your Ruby install (and put it in /usr/local). cd <ruby-1.9.1> ./configure --program-suffix=19 --enable-shared --with-readline- dir=/usr/local make && sudo make install The default installation on Redhat/CentOS will be /usr/local/bin/ ruby. Make sure this is the case by doing: which ruby ruby -v (verify 1.9.1. is installed) If you installed with a program-suffix (like in the ./configure example above), Ruby will be installed as ruby19 (and gem as gem19). You may want to make a symlink to point to your version of Ruby, but its perfectly fine to continue to reference "ruby19" in your scripts. Strangely, after attempting to launch my first app after the CentOS installation of Ruby 1.9.1, I received an error that openssl could not be loaded. This was resovled by re-building Ruby''s openssl library. Details here. Also, note the fact that I did a yum install of openssl and openssl-devel beforehand. 1. Install mod_rails (Phusion Passenger) and setup up Apache. This is your Ruby server deployment. 2. Set up your database. I like PostgreSQL, but I''ve have some difficulty getting PgAdmin to run on CentOS. There are a few dependencies: yum install gtk+-devel yum install gtk2-devel yum install libxml2-devel yum install libxslt-devel After gtk is installed you will have to install wxGTK and wxWidgets (don''t forget wxWidgets contribs) before you can build/ install PgAdmin. PostgreSQL installed easily, but getting PgAdmin going was more effort. 3. Run your app! If you are running CentOS/Redhat in a virtual machine you will likely need to set up a bridged network adapter. In VirtualBox go to Devices->Network Adapters. It is likely that, if using the default configuration, Adapter 1 is attached to NAT. Add a second adapter attached to "Bridged Adapter," and within your CentOS network configuration enabled it. (By the way, if you are going to run PgAdmin on Windows or some other server, make sure your Linux Posgres server has the PostgreSQL post, e.g. 5432, open to TCP connections.) (Read all about CentOS/Redhat network configuration here.) To access your Apache or Webrick server externally you will have to use that Bridged network adapter (probably eth1). From a terminal run ifconfig -a to view the inet address. Apache typically uses port 80 and Webrick typically uses port 3000 (this is basic stuff, and if it is new to you, you may need to read up a little on web servers before doing much more with Rails). As you can see, there were some hoops to jump through and some problems to resolve. These problems stem mostly from the fact that there is presently (01/19/2011) no yum install for Ruby 1.9.1. Once everything is up and running, however, myself and others have had no problem running Ruby 1.9.1 on CentOS/Redhat. Related links: PostgreSQL Installation on CentOS Rails 3 + PostgreSQL -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Ruby on Rails: Talk" group. To post to this group, send email to rubyonrails-talk-/JYPxA39Uh5TLH3MbocFF+G/Ez6ZCGd0@public.gmane.org To unsubscribe from this group, send email to rubyonrails-talk+unsubscribe-/JYPxA39Uh5TLH3MbocFF+G/Ez6ZCGd0@public.gmane.org For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rubyonrails-talk?hl=en.