Passenger installation with nginx fails
I'm running an ubuntu 9.10 server on an amd-64 platform. Everything's pretty much standard, and I've got Sinatra 0.94 running on a ruby 1.8 installation. I w开发者_开发百科ant to install passenger in order to easily configure ssl.
The problem is, it fails to find the installer.
I run
sudo gem install passenger
or
sudo gem install -r passenger
and then the next line,
passenger-install-nginx-module
or
passenger-install-apache2-module
both fail because the path isn't found.
Is there something I'm forgetting here? Shouldn't it just work, straight up, once the gem is installed?
A bit late for an answer I guess, but actually, the correct way of running the Phusion Passenger installer for nginx, when using RVM, is to use rvmsudo
as in:
rvmsudo passenger-install-nginx-module
Credits go to this blog post,
I got it working with
rvmsudo `which passenger-install-nginx-module`
according to this issue on github: https://github.com/wayneeseguin/rvm/issues/1307
seems like you have to do full path:
this worked for me:
which passenger-install-nginx-module
rvmsudo ~/.rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p327-new/gems/passenger-3.0.18/bin/passenger-install-nginx-module
apparently, the gem is installed in a place that's off the path, according to
http://groups.google.com/group/phusion-passenger/browse_thread/thread/78ca12c4838034a6/b5a3c7a00a871283?lnk=gst&q=ubuntu+9.10#b5a3c7a00a871283
Frustrating error, which is why I leave this question rather than delete it (and, with the upvote, I think I'm not the only one with the problem).
I had a similar issue. You need to add gems to your system PATH, paste this into your shell:
export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/bin:/var/lib/gems/1.8/bin
or, to make it permanent add it to your bashrc, usually here: ~/.bashrc
You can also execute just passenger-install-nginx-module by going to the directory at: /var/lib/gems/1.8/bin
Good luck!
I know you already answered the question, but figured I'd chime in with a cent or two.
I recently did a similar nginx install, but chose to go with RVM for managing Ruby versions, which requires us to NOT use sudo.
I recommend this route because all versions of Ruby and all your gems are organized neatly in your home directory. Doing so will also require you to compile nginx manually, which certainly helps understand the pipes a little.
You can compile nginx manually using the "--add-module=/home/user/path_to_passenger_gem/ext," but you'll want to read up RVM's instructions very carefully...really, don't skip a line as they are very concise.
Here's a link to RVM's instructions:
http://rvm.beginrescueend.com/passenger/
and to the Nginx manual instructions (which you probably already skimmed).
http://www.modrails.com/documentation/Users%20guide%20Nginx.html#_installing_phusion_passenger_for_nginx_manually
I have got a bit of information on my blog regarding setting up nginx with passenger (and ssl in this case). Perhaps it is of use since it goes through the whole process of recompiling nginx with options.
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