Ruby Command-Line Options

About the Examples

Some examples here use command-line option -e, which passes the Ruby code to be executed on the command line itself:

$ ruby -e 'puts "Hello, World."'

Some examples here assume that file desiderata.txt exists:

$ cat desiderata.txt
Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.

Options

-0: Set $/ (Input Record Separator)

Option -0 defines the input record separator $/ for the invoked Ruby program.

The optional argument to the option must be octal digits, each in the range 0..7; these digits are prefixed with digit 0 to form an octal value.

If no argument is given, the input record separator is 0x00.

If an argument is given, it must immediately follow the option (no intervening whitespace or equal-sign character '='); argument values:

Examples:

$ ruby -0 -e 'p $/'
"\x00"
ruby -00 -e 'p $/'
""
$ ruby -012 -e 'p $/'
"\n"
$ ruby -015 -e 'p $/'
"\r"
$ ruby -0377 -e 'p $/'
"\xFF"
$ ruby -0400 -e 'p $/'
nil

See also:

-a: Split Input Lines into Fields

Option -a, when given with either of options -n or -p, splits the string at $_ into an array of strings at $F:

$ ruby -an -e 'p $F' desiderata.txt
["Go", "placidly", "amid", "the", "noise", "and", "the", "haste,"]
["and", "remember", "what", "peace", "there", "may", "be", "in", "silence."]
["As", "far", "as", "possible,", "without", "surrender,"]
["be", "on", "good", "terms", "with", "all", "persons."]

For the splitting, the default record separator is $/, and the default field separator is $;.

See also:

-c: Check Syntax

Option -c specifies that the specified Ruby program should be checked for syntax, but not actually executed:

$ ruby -e 'puts "Foo"'
Foo
$ ruby -c -e 'puts "Foo"'
Syntax OK

-C: Set Working Directory

The argument to option -C specifies a working directory for the invoked Ruby program; does not change the working directory for the current process:

$ basename `pwd`
ruby
$ ruby -C lib -e 'puts File.basename(Dir.pwd)'
lib
$ basename `pwd`
ruby

Whitespace between the option and its argument may be omitted.

-d: Set $DEBUG to true

Some code in (or called by) the Ruby program may include statements or blocks conditioned by the global variable $DEBUG (e.g., if $DEBUG); these commonly write to $stdout or $stderr.

The default value for $DEBUG is false; option -d sets it to true:

$ ruby -e 'p $DEBUG'
false
$ ruby -d -e 'p $DEBUG'
true

Option --debug is an alias for option -d.

-e: Execute Given Ruby Code

Option -e requires an argument, which is Ruby code to be executed; the option may be given more than once:

$ ruby -e 'puts "Foo"' -e 'puts "Bar"'
Foo
Bar

Whitespace between the option and its argument may be omitted.

The command may include other options, but should not include arguments (which, if given, are ignored).

-E: Set Default Encodings

Option -E requires an argument, which specifies either the default external encoding, or both the default external and internal encodings for the invoked Ruby program:

# No option -E.
$ ruby -e 'p [Encoding::default_external, Encoding::default_internal]'
[#<Encoding:UTF-8>, nil]
# Option -E with default external encoding.
$ ruby -E cesu-8 -e 'p [Encoding::default_external, Encoding::default_internal]'
[#<Encoding:CESU-8>, nil]
# Option -E with default external and internal encodings.
$ ruby -E utf-8:cesu-8 -e 'p [Encoding::default_external, Encoding::default_internal]'
[#<Encoding:UTF-8>, #<Encoding:CESU-8>]

Whitespace between the option and its argument may be omitted.

See also:

Option --encoding is an alias for option -E.

-F: Set Input Field Separator

Option -F, when given with option -a, specifies that its argument is to be the input field separator to be used for splitting:

$ ruby -an -Fs -e 'p $F' desiderata.txt
["Go placidly amid the noi", "e and the ha", "te,\n"]
["and remember what peace there may be in ", "ilence.\n"]
["A", " far a", " po", "", "ible, without ", "urrender,\n"]
["be on good term", " with all per", "on", ".\n"]

The argument may be a regular expression:

$ ruby -an -F'[.,]\s*' -e 'p $F' desiderata.txt
["Go placidly amid the noise and the haste"]
["and remember what peace there may be in silence"]
["As far as possible", "without surrender"]
["be on good terms with all persons"]

The argument must immediately follow the option (no intervening whitespace or equal-sign character '=').

See also:

-h: Print Short Help Message

Option -h prints a short help message that includes single-hyphen options (e.g. -I), and largely omits double-hyphen options (e.g., --version).

Arguments and additional options are ignored.

For a longer help message, use option --help.

-i: Set ARGF In-Place Mode

Option -i sets the ARGF in-place mode for the invoked Ruby program; see ARGF#inplace_mode=:

$ ruby -e 'p ARGF.inplace_mode'
nil
$ ruby -i -e 'p ARGF.inplace_mode'
""
$ ruby -i.bak -e 'p ARGF.inplace_mode'
".bak"

-I: Add to $LOAD_PATH

The argument to option -I specifies a directory to be added to the array in global variable $LOAD_PATH; the option may be given more than once:

$ pushd /tmp
$ ruby -e 'p $LOAD_PATH.size'
8
$ ruby -I my_lib -I some_lib -e 'p $LOAD_PATH.size'
10
$ ruby -I my_lib -I some_lib -e 'p $LOAD_PATH.take(2)'
["/tmp/my_lib", "/tmp/some_lib"]
$ popd

Whitespace between the option and its argument may be omitted.

-l: Set Output Record Separator; Chop Lines

Option -l, when given with option -n or -p, modifies line-ending processing by:

Without option -l (unchopped):

$ ruby -n -e 'p $_' desiderata.txt
"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,\n"
"and remember what peace there may be in silence.\n"
"As far as possible, without surrender,\n"
"be on good terms with all persons.\n"

With option ‘-l’ (chopped):

$ ruby -ln -e 'p $_' desiderata.txt
"Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,"
"and remember what peace there may be in silence."
"As far as possible, without surrender,"
"be on good terms with all persons."

See also:

-n: Run Program in gets Loop

Option -n runs your program in a Kernel#gets loop:

while gets
  # Your Ruby code.
end

Note that gets reads the next line and sets global variable $_ to the last read line:

$ ruby -n -e 'puts $_' desiderata.txt
Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.

See also:

-p: -n, with Printing

Option -p is like option -n, but also prints each line:

$ ruby -p -e 'puts $_.size' desiderata.txt
42
Go placidly amid the noise and the haste,
49
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
39
As far as possible, without surrender,
35
be on good terms with all persons.

See also:

-r: Require Library

The argument to option -r specifies a library to be required before executing the Ruby program; the option may be given more than once:

$ ruby -e 'p defined?(JSON); p defined?(CSV)'
nil
nil
$ ruby -r CSV -r JSON -e 'p defined?(JSON); p defined?(CSV)'
"constant"
"constant"

Whitespace between the option and its argument may be omitted.

-s: Define Global Variable

Option -s specifies that a “custom option” is to define a global variable in the invoked Ruby program:

More than one custom option may be given:

$ cat t.rb
p [$foo, $bar]
$ ruby t.rb
[nil, nil]
$ ruby -s t.rb -foo=baz
["baz", nil]
$ ruby -s t.rb -foo
[true, nil]
$ ruby -s t.rb -foo=baz -bar=bat
["baz", "bat"]

The option may not be used with option -e

-S: Search Directories in ENV['PATH']

Option -S specifies that the Ruby interpreter is to search (if necessary) the directories whose paths are in the program’s PATH environment variable; the program is executed in the shell’s current working directory (not necessarily in the directory where the program is found).

This example uses adds path 'tmp/' to the PATH environment variable:

$ export PATH=/tmp:$PATH
$ echo "puts File.basename(Dir.pwd)" > /tmp/t.rb
$ ruby -S t.rb
ruby

-v: Print Version; Set $VERBOSE

Options -v prints the Ruby version and sets global variable $VERBOSE:

$ ruby -e 'p $VERBOSE'
false
$ ruby -v -e 'p $VERBOSE'
ruby 3.3.0 (2023-12-25 revision 5124f9ac75) [x64-mingw-ucrt]
true

-w: Synonym for -W1

Option -w (lowercase letter) is equivalent to option -W1 (uppercase letter).

-W: Set Warning Policy

Any Ruby code can create a warning message by calling method Kernel#warn; methods in the Ruby core and standard libraries can also create warning messages. Such a message may be printed on $stderr (or not, depending on certain settings).

Option -W helps determine whether a particular warning message will be written, by setting the initial value of global variable $-W:

The value of $-W, in turn, determines which warning messages (if any) are to be printed to $stdout (see Kernel#warn):

$ ruby -W1 -e 'p $foo'
nil
$ ruby -W2 -e 'p $foo'
-e:1: warning: global variable '$foo' not initialized
nil

Ruby code may also define warnings for certain categories; these are the default settings for the defined categories:

Warning[:experimental] # => true
Warning[:deprecated]   # => false
Warning[:performance]  # => false

They may also be set:

Warning[:experimental] = false
Warning[:deprecated]   = true
Warning[:performance]  = true

You can suppress a category by prefixing no- to the category name:

$ ruby -W:no-experimental -e 'p IO::Buffer.new'
#<IO::Buffer>

-x: Execute Ruby Code Found in Text

Option -x executes a Ruby program whose code is embedded in other, non-code, text:

The ruby code:

Example:

$ cat t.txt
Leading garbage.
#!ruby
puts File.basename(Dir.pwd)
__END__
Trailing garbage.

$ ruby -x t.txt
ruby

The optional argument specifies the directory where the text file is to be found; the Ruby code is executed in that directory:

$ cp t.txt /tmp/
$ ruby -x/tmp t.txt
tmp
$

If an argument is given, it must immediately follow the option (no intervening whitespace or equal-sign character '=').

--backtrace-limit: Set Backtrace Limit

Option --backtrace-limit sets a limit on the number of entries to be displayed in a backtrace.

See Thread::Backtrace.limit.

Option --copyright prints a copyright message:

$ ruby --copyright
ruby - Copyright (C) 1993-2024 Yukihiro Matsumoto

--debug: Alias for -d

Option --debug is an alias for option -d.

--disable: Disable Features

Option --disable specifies features to be disabled; the argument is a comma-separated list of the features to be disabled:

ruby --disable=gems,rubyopt t.rb

The supported features:

See also option –enable.

--dump: Dump Items

Option --dump specifies items to be dumped; the argument is a comma-separated list of the items.

Some of the argument values cause the command to behave as if a different option was given:

For other argument values and examples, see Option –dump.

--enable: Enable Features

Option --enable specifies features to be enabled; the argument is a comma-separated list of the features to be enabled.

ruby --enable=gems,rubyopt t.rb

For the features, see option –disable.

--encoding: Alias for -E.

Option --encoding is an alias for option -E.

--external-encoding: Set Default External Encoding

Option --external-encoding sets the default external encoding for the invoked Ruby program; for values of encoding, see Encoding: Names and Aliases.

$ ruby -e 'puts Encoding::default_external'
UTF-8
$ ruby --external-encoding=cesu-8 -e 'puts Encoding::default_external'
CESU-8

--help: Print Help Message

Option --help prints a long help message.

Arguments and additional options are ignored.

For a shorter help message, use option -h.

--internal-encoding: Set Default Internal Encoding

Option --internal-encoding sets the default internal encoding for the invoked Ruby program; for values of encoding, see Encoding: Names and Aliases.

$ ruby -e 'puts Encoding::default_internal.nil?'
true
$ ruby --internal-encoding=cesu-8 -e 'puts Encoding::default_internal'
CESU-8

--verbose: Set $VERBOSE

Option --verbose sets global variable $VERBOSE to true and disables input from $stdin.

--version: Print Ruby Version

Option --version prints the version of the Ruby interpreter, then exits.

Experimental Options

These options are experimental in the current Ruby release, and may be modified or withdrawn in later releases.

--jit

Option -jit enables JIT compilation with the default option.

--jit-debug

Option --jit-debug enables JIT debugging (very slow); adds compiler flags if given.

--jit-max-cache=num

Option --jit-max-cache=num sets the maximum number of methods to be JIT-ed in a cache; default: 100).

--jit-min-calls=num

Option jit-min-calls=num sets the minimum number of calls to trigger JIT (for testing); default: 10000).

--jit-save-temps

Option --jit-save-temps saves JIT temporary files in $TMP or /tmp (for testing).

--jit-verbose

Option --jit-verbose prints JIT logs of level num or less to $stderr; default: 0.

--jit-wait

Option --jit-wait waits until JIT compilation finishes every time (for testing).

--jit-warnings

Option --jit-warnings enables printing of JIT warnings.