Provided by: ruby-bundler_2.3.15-1_all bug

NAME

       bundle-update - Update your gems to the latest available versions

SYNOPSIS

       bundle   update   *gems   [--all]   [--group=NAME]   [--source=NAME]   [--local]  [--ruby]
       [--bundler[=VERSION]]  [--full-index]  [--jobs=JOBS]  [--quiet]  [--patch|--minor|--major]
       [--redownload] [--strict] [--conservative]

DESCRIPTION

       Update  the  gems  specified  (all  gems,  if --all flag is used), ignoring the previously
       installed gems specified in the Gemfile.lock. In general, you should use bundle install(1)
       bundle-install.1.html to install the same exact gems and versions across machines.

       You would use bundle update to explicitly update the version of a gem.

OPTIONS

       --all  Update all gems specified in Gemfile.

       --group=<name>, -g=[<name>]
              Only  update the gems in the specified group. For instance, you can update all gems
              in the development group with bundle update --group development. You can also  call
              bundle  update  rails --group test to update the rails gem and all gems in the test
              group, for example.

       --source=<name>
              The name of a :git or :path source used in the Gemfile(5).  For  instance,  with  a
              :git  source  of  http://github.com/rails/rails.git,  you  would call bundle update
              --source rails

       --local
              Do not attempt to fetch gems remotely and use the gem cache instead.

       --ruby Update the locked version of Ruby to the current version of Ruby.

       --bundler
              Update the locked version of bundler to the invoked bundler version.

       --full-index
              Fall back to using the single-file index of all gems.

       --jobs=[<number>], -j[<number>]
              Specify the number of jobs to run  in  parallel.  The  default  is  the  number  of
              available processors.

       --retry=[<number>]
              Retry failed network or git requests for number times.

       --quiet
              Only output warnings and errors.

       --redownload
              Force downloading every gem.

       --patch
              Prefer updating only to next patch version.

       --minor
              Prefer updating only to next minor version.

       --major
              Prefer updating to next major version (default).

       --strict
              Do not allow any gem to be updated past latest --patch | --minor | --major.

       --conservative
              Use  bundle  install  conservative  update  behavior  and  do  not  allow  indirect
              dependencies to be updated.

UPDATING ALL GEMS

       If you run bundle update --all, bundler will ignore  any  previously  installed  gems  and
       resolve  all  dependencies again based on the latest versions of all gems available in the
       sources.

       Consider the following Gemfile(5):

           source "https://rubygems.org"

           gem "rails", "3.0.0.rc"
           gem "nokogiri"

       When you run bundle install(1) bundle-install.1.html the first time, bundler will  resolve
       all of the dependencies, all the way down, and install what you need:

           Fetching gem metadata from https://rubygems.org/.........
           Resolving dependencies...
           Installing builder 2.1.2
           Installing abstract 1.0.0
           Installing rack 1.2.8
           Using bundler 1.7.6
           Installing rake 10.4.0
           Installing polyglot 0.3.5
           Installing mime-types 1.25.1
           Installing i18n 0.4.2
           Installing mini_portile 0.6.1
           Installing tzinfo 0.3.42
           Installing rack-mount 0.6.14
           Installing rack-test 0.5.7
           Installing treetop 1.4.15
           Installing thor 0.14.6
           Installing activesupport 3.0.0.rc
           Installing erubis 2.6.6
           Installing activemodel 3.0.0.rc
           Installing arel 0.4.0
           Installing mail 2.2.20
           Installing activeresource 3.0.0.rc
           Installing actionpack 3.0.0.rc
           Installing activerecord 3.0.0.rc
           Installing actionmailer 3.0.0.rc
           Installing railties 3.0.0.rc
           Installing rails 3.0.0.rc
           Installing nokogiri 1.6.5

           Bundle complete! 2 Gemfile dependencies, 26 gems total.
           Use `bundle show [gemname]` to see where a bundled gem is installed.

       As you can see, even though you have two gems in the Gemfile(5), your application needs 26
       different gems in order to run. Bundler remembers  the  exact  versions  it  installed  in
       Gemfile.lock. The next time you run bundle install(1) bundle-install.1.html, bundler skips
       the dependency resolution and installs the same gems as it installed last time.

       After checking in the Gemfile.lock into version control and cloning it on another machine,
       running  bundle  install(1)  bundle-install.1.html  will  still  install the gems that you
       installed last time. You don´t need to worry that a new release of erubis or mail  changes
       the gems you use.

       However,  from time to time, you might want to update the gems you are using to the newest
       versions that still match the gems in your Gemfile(5).

       To do this, run bundle update --all, which will ignore the Gemfile.lock, and  resolve  all
       the  dependencies  again.  Keep  in  mind  that this process can result in a significantly
       different set of the 25 gems, based on the requirements of new gems that the  gem  authors
       released since the last time you ran bundle update --all.

UPDATING A LIST OF GEMS

       Sometimes,  you  want  to update a single gem in the Gemfile(5), and leave the rest of the
       gems that you specified locked to the versions in the Gemfile.lock.

       For instance, in the scenario above, imagine that nokogiri releases version 1.4.4, and you
       want  to  update  it  without  updating Rails and all of its dependencies. To do this, run
       bundle update nokogiri.

       Bundler will update nokogiri and any of its dependencies, but leave alone  Rails  and  its
       dependencies.

OVERLAPPING DEPENDENCIES

       Sometimes,   multiple  gems  declared  in  your  Gemfile(5)  are  satisfied  by  the  same
       second-level   dependency.   For   instance,   consider   the    case    of    thin    and
       rack-perftools-profiler.

           source "https://rubygems.org"

           gem "thin"
           gem "rack-perftools-profiler"

       The thin gem depends on rack >= 1.0, while rack-perftools-profiler depends on rack ~> 1.0.
       If you run bundle install, you get:

           Fetching source index for https://rubygems.org/
           Installing daemons (1.1.0)
           Installing eventmachine (0.12.10) with native extensions
           Installing open4 (1.0.1)
           Installing perftools.rb (0.4.7) with native extensions
           Installing rack (1.2.1)
           Installing rack-perftools_profiler (0.0.2)
           Installing thin (1.2.7) with native extensions
           Using bundler (1.0.0.rc.3)

       In this case, the two gems have their own set of dependencies,  but  they  share  rack  in
       common. If you run bundle update thin, bundler will update daemons, eventmachine and rack,
       which are dependencies of thin, but not open4 or perftools.rb, which are  dependencies  of
       rack-perftools_profiler.  Note  that  bundle update thin will update rack even though it´s
       also a dependency of rack-perftools_profiler.

       In short, by default, when you update a gem using bundle update, bundler will  update  all
       dependencies of that gem, including those that are also dependencies of another gem.

       To  prevent  updating indirect dependencies, prior to version 1.14 the only option was the
       CONSERVATIVE UPDATING behavior in bundle install(1) bundle-install.1.html:

       In this scenario, updating the thin version manually in the Gemfile(5), and  then  running
       bundle install(1) bundle-install.1.html will only update daemons and eventmachine, but not
       rack. For more information, see the CONSERVATIVE UPDATING  section  of  bundle  install(1)
       bundle-install.1.html.

       Starting  with  1.14,  specifying  the  --conservative  option  will also prevent indirect
       dependencies from being updated.

PATCH LEVEL OPTIONS

       Version 1.14 introduced 4 patch-level options that will influence  how  gem  versions  are
       resolved.  One of the following options can be used: --patch, --minor or --major. --strict
       can be added to further influence resolution.

       --patch
              Prefer updating only to next patch version.

       --minor
              Prefer updating only to next minor version.

       --major
              Prefer updating to next major version (default).

       --strict
              Do not allow any gem to be updated past latest --patch | --minor | --major.

       When Bundler is resolving what versions to use to satisfy  declared  requirements  in  the
       Gemfile  or  in  parent gems, it looks up all available versions, filters out any versions
       that don´t satisfy the requirement, and then,  by  default,  sorts  them  from  newest  to
       oldest, considering them in that order.

       Providing  one  of  the  patch  level options (e.g. --patch) changes the sort order of the
       satisfying versions, causing Bundler to consider the latest  --patch  or  --minor  version
       available  before  other versions. Note that versions outside the stated patch level could
       still be resolved to if necessary to find a suitable dependency graph.

       For example, if gem ´foo´ is locked at 1.0.2, with  no  gem  requirement  defined  in  the
       Gemfile,  and  versions  1.0.3, 1.0.4, 1.1.0, 1.1.1, 2.0.0 all exist, the default order of
       preference by default (--major) will be "2.0.0, 1.1.1, 1.1.0, 1.0.4, 1.0.3, 1.0.2".

       If the --patch option is used, the order of  preference  will  change  to  "1.0.4,  1.0.3,
       1.0.2, 1.1.1, 1.1.0, 2.0.0".

       If  the  --minor  option  is  used,  the order of preference will change to "1.1.1, 1.1.0,
       1.0.4, 1.0.3, 1.0.2, 2.0.0".

       Combining the --strict option with any of the patch level options will remove any versions
       beyond the scope of the patch level option, to ensure that no gem is updated that far.

       To  continue  the  previous  example,  if  both --patch and --strict options are used, the
       available versions for resolution would be "1.0.4, 1.0.3, 1.0.2". If --minor and  --strict
       are used, it would be "1.1.1, 1.1.0, 1.0.4, 1.0.3, 1.0.2".

       Gem  requirements as defined in the Gemfile will still be the first determining factor for
       what versions are available. If the gem requirement for foo in the Gemfile  is  ´~>  1.0´,
       that will accomplish the same thing as providing the --minor and --strict options.

PATCH LEVEL EXAMPLES

       Given the following gem specifications:

           foo 1.4.3, requires: ~> bar 2.0
           foo 1.4.4, requires: ~> bar 2.0
           foo 1.4.5, requires: ~> bar 2.1
           foo 1.5.0, requires: ~> bar 2.1
           foo 1.5.1, requires: ~> bar 3.0
           bar with versions 2.0.3, 2.0.4, 2.1.0, 2.1.1, 3.0.0

       Gemfile:

           gem ´foo´

       Gemfile.lock:

           foo (1.4.3)
             bar (~> 2.0)
           bar (2.0.3)

       Cases:

           #  Command Line                     Result
           ------------------------------------------------------------
           1  bundle update --patch            ´foo 1.4.5´, ´bar 2.1.1´
           2  bundle update --patch foo        ´foo 1.4.5´, ´bar 2.1.1´
           3  bundle update --minor            ´foo 1.5.1´, ´bar 3.0.0´
           4  bundle update --minor --strict   ´foo 1.5.0´, ´bar 2.1.1´
           5  bundle update --patch --strict   ´foo 1.4.4´, ´bar 2.0.4´

       In case 1, bar is upgraded to 2.1.1, a minor version increase, because the dependency from
       foo 1.4.5 required it.

       In case 2, only foo is requested to be unlocked, but bar is also allowed to  move  because
       it´s not a declared dependency in the Gemfile.

       In  case  3,  bar goes up a whole major release, because a minor increase is preferred now
       for foo, and when it goes to 1.5.1, it requires 3.0.0 of bar.

       In case 4, foo is preferred up to a minor  version,  but  1.5.1  won´t  work  because  the
       --strict flag removes bar 3.0.0 from consideration since it´s a major increment.

       In  case 5, both foo and bar have any minor or major increments removed from consideration
       because of the --strict flag, so the most they can move is up to 1.4.4 and 2.0.4.

RECOMMENDED WORKFLOW

       In general, when working with an application managed with  bundler,  you  should  use  the
       following workflow:

       •   After you create your Gemfile(5) for the first time, run

           $ bundle install

       •   Check the resulting Gemfile.lock into version control

           $ git add Gemfile.lock

       •   When checking out this repository on another development machine, run

           $ bundle install

       •   When checking out this repository on a deployment machine, run

           $ bundle install --deployment

       •   After changing the Gemfile(5) to reflect a new or update dependency, run

           $ bundle install

       •   Make sure to check the updated Gemfile.lock into version control

           $ git add Gemfile.lock

       •   If  bundle  install(1)  bundle-install.1.html  reports a conflict, manually update the
           specific gems that you changed in the Gemfile(5)

           $ bundle update rails thin

       •   If you want to update all the gems to the latest possible versions  that  still  match
           the gems listed in the Gemfile(5), run

           $ bundle update --all

                                             May 2022                            BUNDLE-UPDATE(1)