(I guarantee nothing. No warranty I am not responsible blah blah blah. Seems to work great for me so far. Thanks to Tyler Bird who I forked this from.)
This installs a patched ruby 1.9.3-p392 with the railsexpress patchsets: https://github.com/skaes/rvm-patchsets
You will also need a C Compiler. If you're on Linux, you probably already have one or know how to install one. On OS X, you should install XCode, and brew install autoconf
using homebrew.
Putting the following in your shell config (eg. ~/.bash_profile
) will make Rails even faster, but will increase its memory footprint. For most applications, this will probably work well for you:
export RUBY_GC_MALLOC_LIMIT=60000000
export RUBY_FREE_MIN=200000
If you have a particularly large rails app (say, >100k lines), this seems to improve it even more:
export RUBY_GC_MALLOC_LIMIT=1000000000
export RUBY_FREE_MIN=500000
export RUBY_HEAP_MIN_SLOTS=40000
If you're feeling adventurous, you can set some additional compile flags before you run the command above. These may cause the build to fail. If so, you can try again without the march
flag, and it'll probably work. This generally makes my ruby ~1.5% faster. See http://www.opikdesign.com/kios/procie_kernel/ for more guidance on -march
value.
export CFLAGS="-march=core2 -O3 -pipe -fomit-frame-pointer"
This has to be run BEFORE you compile ruby.
Users who have installed libreadline and openssl via homebrew will find these libraries linked automatically. No need to specify any CONFIGURE_OPTS!
curl https://gist.github.com/oscardelben/6992653/raw/rbenv.sh | sh ; rbenv global 1.9.3-p392-railsexpress