This gem is aimed to recursively collect the runtime dependencies
footprint of the specified gem.
The output of the library mimics the tree
shell utility, highlighting the nested dependencies via ASCII characters.
Some alternatives exists:
The standard gem dep
command just unearth one level of dependencies.
The bundle viz
command relies on the Gemfile and the graphviz library to generate a visual representation of the gem inter-dependencies.
While it is great to visualize inter-dependencies, i have hard times figuring out gem's runtime footprint.
Install the gem from your shell:
gem install lapidarius
This library relies heavily on the Gem::Commands::DependencyCommand class to recursively the dependencies tree.
Both runtime and development dependencies are counted once, but just the former are printed on screen:
lapidarius sinatra
sinatra (2.0.0)
├── mustermann (~> 1.0)
├── rack (~> 2.0)
├── rack-protection (= 2.0.0)
│ └── rack (>= 0)
└── tilt (~> 2.0)
4 runtime, 5 development
By default this library scans for the latest available version >= 0
found at rubygems.org.
In case you are interested on a specific version just specify the -v
option:
lapidarius sinatra -v 1.4.7
sinatra (1.4.7)
├── rack (~> 1.5)
├── rack-protection (~> 1.4)
│ └── rack (>= 0)
└── tilt (< 3, >= 1.3)
3 runtime, 4 development
By default this library scan for local gems, warning if the gem is not installed:
lapidarius rails -v 1.2.6
No gems found matching rails (= 1.2.6)
If you want to scan for remote gems specify the -r
option (be aware of slowness):
lapidarius rails -v 1.2.6 -r
rails (1.2.6)
├── actionmailer (= 1.3.6)
│ └── actionpack (= 1.13.6)
│ └── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
├── actionpack (= 1.13.6)
│ └── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
├── actionwebservice (= 1.2.6)
│ ├── actionpack (= 1.13.6)
│ │ └── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
│ └── activerecord (= 1.15.6)
│ └── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
├── activerecord (= 1.15.6)
│ └── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
├── activesupport (= 1.4.4)
└── rake (>= 0.7.2)
6 runtime, 5 development
Some gems have several interdependencies that results in a multitude of tree branches.
In case you just dare to count dependencies without the visual noise, you can pass the -q
option:
lapidarius rails -v 5.1.5 -r -q
37 runtime, 48 development