Related
ruby 2.6.3
Ubuntu 16.04
Unable to locate package libmysqlclient-dev
description:
Fetching mysql2 0.5.2
Installing mysql2 0.5.2 with native extensions
Gem::Ext::BuildError: ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension.
To solve this I ran following.
gem install mysql2 -v '0.5.2' --source 'https://rubygems.org/'
Then got the following error.
mysql client is missing. You may need to 'apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev'
now I am stuck and found no solution working. tried google and all other option but no suggestion is working for me.
Unable to locate package libmysqlclient-dev
To give you proper answer as I found that all comments are to the point, but I wanted to check if really such issue exists. So I spin up new ubuntu server 16.04 and used following commands to installd mysql gem. I used rvm to install ruby
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install mysql-server
sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
sudo apt-add-repository -y ppa:rael-gc/rvm
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install rvm
Now relogin to terminal to rvm command can start with its environment
rvm install ruby 2.6.3
Now I used ruby -version to check I am using same version as you were so got response ruby 2.6.3p62 (2019-04-16 revision 67580) [x86_64-linux] Now I used following command to install gem. If it succeed then rails will be also installed.
gem install mysql2 -v '0.5.2' --source 'https://rubygems.org/'
But I am getting same error as yours, now let us solve it as it is saying us how to solve error. This error is already giving me information what should I do. It told me to install following package
apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
And now I tried again and it worked. Hope it will resolve your issue. If you still have issue, than you can try by removing mysql packages you install and reinstall using these commands.
For context, it on a remote server which has a firewall. I'm setting up my environment through a proxy. I have ruby 1.8.7. When I try to gem install..
sudo gem install --http-proxy <host address>:<port> json
I get the following error:
Building native extensions. This could take a while...
ERROR: Error installing json:
ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension.
/usr/bin/ruby extconf.rb
mkmf.rb can't find header files for ruby at /usr/lib/ruby/ruby.h
Gem files will remain installed in /usr/lib64/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/json-1.8.1 for inspection.
Results logged to /usr/lib64/ruby/gems/1.8/gems/json-1.8.1/ext/json/ext/generator/gem_make.out
Since I was unsure what the problem is, I googled and found these
gem install: Failed to build gem native extension (can't find header files) - the instructions here seem to be specific to the gem being installed.
How to install json gem - Failed to build gem native extension This seems to be slightly different error.
Any hints? Thanks!
Modern era update, as stated by mimoralea:
In case that you are using ruby 2.0 or 2.2 (thanks #patrick-davey).
sudo apt-get install ruby2.0-dev
sudo apt-get install ruby2.2-dev
sudo apt-get install ruby2.3-dev
or, generic way:
sudo apt-get install ruby-dev
or
sudo apt-get install ruby`ruby -e 'puts RUBY_VERSION[/\d+\.\d+/]'`-dev
The first link you’ve posted is exactly your case: there is no ruby development environment installed. Development env is needed to compile ruby extensions, which are mostly written in C. Proxy has nothing to do with the problem: everything is downloaded fine, just compilation fails.
I would suggest you to install ruby-dev (ruby-devel for rpm-based distros) package onto you target machine.
gcc package might be needed as well.
Try:
$ sudo apt-get install ruby-dev
Or, for Redhat distro:
$ sudo yum install ruby-devel
Or, for [open]SuSE:
$ sudo zypper install ruby-devel
For Xcode 11 on macOS 10.14, this can happen even after installing Xcode and installing command-line tools and accepting the license with
sudo xcode-select --install
sudo xcodebuild -license accept
The issue is that Xcode 11 ships the macOS 10.15 SDK which includes headers for ruby2.6, but not for macOS 10.14's ruby2.3. You can verify that this is your problem by running
ruby -rrbconfig -e 'puts RbConfig::CONFIG["rubyhdrdir"]'
which on macOS 10.14 with Xcode 11 prints the non-existent path
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.15.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/2.3/usr/include/ruby-2.3.0
However, Xcode 11 installs a macOS 10.14 SDK within /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOS10.14.sdk. It isn't necessary to pollute the system directories by installing the old header files as suggested in other answers. Instead, by selecting that SDK, the appropriate ruby2.3 headers will be found:
sudo xcode-select --switch /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools
ruby -rrbconfig -e 'puts RbConfig::CONFIG["rubyhdrdir"]'
This should now correctly print
/Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.14.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks/Ruby.framework/Versions/2.3/usr/include/ruby-2.3.0
Likewise, gem install should work while that SDK is selected.
To switch back to the current Xcode SDK, use
sudo xcode-select --switch /Applications/Xcode.app
In case that you are using ruby 2.0 or 2.2 (thanks #patrick-davey) or 2.3 (thanks #juanitofatas).
sudo apt-get install ruby-dev
sudo apt-get install ruby2.0-dev
sudo apt-get install ruby2.2-dev
sudo apt-get install ruby2.3-dev
And you get the pattern here...
I also encountered this problem because I install Ruby on Ubuntu via brightbox, and I thought ruby-dev is the trunk of ruby. So I did not install. Install ruby2.3-dev fixes it:
sudo apt-get install ruby2.3-dev
For those who are getting this on Mac OS X you may need to run the following command to install the XCode command-line tools, even if you already have XCode installed:
sudo xcode-select --install
Also you must agree the terms and conditions of XCode by running the following command:
sudo xcodebuild -license
I had a similar problem using cygwin to run the following command:
$ gem install rerun
I solved it by installing the following cygwin packages:
ruby-devel
libffi-devel
gcc-core
gcc-g++
make
automake1.15
Most voted solution didn't work on my machine (linux mint 18.04).
After a careful look, i found that g++ was missing.
Solved with
sudo apt-get install g++
in case you use SUSE
sudo yast2 -i ruby-devel
Xcode 11 / macOS Catalina
On Xcode 11 / macOS Catalina, the header files are no longer in the old location and the old /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg file is no longer available.
Instead, the headers are now installed to the /usr/include directory of the current SDK path:
/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/include
Most of this directory can be found by using the output of xcrun --show-sdk-path. And if you add this path to the CPATH environment variable, then build scripts (including those called via bundle) will generally be able to find it.
I resolved this by setting my CPATH in my .zshrc file:
export CPATH="$(xcrun --show-sdk-path)/usr/include"
After opening a new shell (or running source .zshrc), I no longer receive the error message mkmf.rb can't find header files for ruby at /usr/lib/ruby/ruby.h and the rubygems install properly.
Note on Building to Non-macOS Platforms
If you are building to non-macOS platforms, such as iOS/tvOS/watchOS, this change will attempt to include the macOS SDK in those platforms, causing build errors. To resolve, either don't set CPATH environment variable on login, or temporarily set it to blank when running xcodebuild like so:
CPATH="" xcodebuild --some-args
In Fedora 21 and up, you simply open a terminal and install the Ruby Development files as root.
dnf install ruby-devel
On Mac 10.14, the header files don't seem to be installed in the correct place. Rather than changing paths like the other fixes, I was able to just run this:
open /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg
Follow the instructions and it resolved this problem for me.
You may need to install gcc after install ruby-devel
Xcode -> Preferences -> Locations
change Command Line Tools to Xcode 11.2.1
You need to install the entire ruby and not just the minimum package. The correct command to use is:
sudo apt install ruby-full
The following command will also not install a complete ruby:
sudo apt-get install ruby2.3-dev
For Ubuntu 18, after checking log file mentioned while install
Results logged to /var/canvas/vendor/bundle/ruby/2.5.0/extensions/x86_64-linux/2.5.0/nio4r-2.5.2/gem_make.out
with
less /var/canvas/vendor/bundle/ruby/2.5.0/extensions/x86_64-linux/2.5.0/nio4r-2.5.2/gem_make.out
I noticed that make is not found. So installed make by
sudo apt-get install make
everything worked.
I faced a similar issue on Xcode 12 with macOS 10.15 and cocoapods. Just make sure that the xcode-select command points to the SDK you want to build against. It should build without issues afterwards.
BEFORE you follow the tip from Joki's answer (below) and IF :
you have MacOS 10.14.6
at /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/ you have folders
MacOSX.sdk(symbolic), MacOSX10.14.sdk, MacOSX10.15.sdk
Move MacOSX10.15.sdk to anywhere (admin privileges needs)
Delete symbolic link (admin privileges needs)
At /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/ create another symbolic link now to MacOSX10.14.sdk folder using (admin privileges needs)
sudo ln -s /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/MacOSX10.14.sdk MacOSX.sdk
Now you can follow Joki's answer
WARNING!
If you move MacOSX10.15.sdk folder to /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/SDKs/ again, the command
ruby -rrbconfig -e 'puts RbConfig::CONFIG["rubyhdrdir"]'
will show MacOSX10.15.sdk folder like default again, nowadays I dunno how to fix it! My suggestion, compress the folder and put the original folder until fix will be available.
macOS RubyMine Gem installation failure
My problem with this error message was when trying to install a Gem via RubyMine. It didn't like that I had changed the global Ruby version with rbenv, so I fixed it by changing back to the system default Ruby version with:
rbenv global system
and restarted RubyMine.
sudo apt-get --reinstall install ruby
try it for ubuntu 16.04
I just upgraded ubuntu from 11.10 to 12.04 and after that when I run my server inside my rails project I got this error
$ rails s
/usr/share/ruby-rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p125/gems/mysql2-0.3.11/lib/mysql2.rb:9:in `require':
libmysqlclient_r.so.16: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory -
/usr/share/ruby-rvm/gems/ruby-1.9.3-p125/gems/mysql2-0.3.11/lib/mysql2/mysql2.so (LoadError)
any help please?
Go to your project and follow the steps,
rvm gemset empty <gemset name>
gem install bundler
bundle install
It will solve your problem.
If that does not work, or if you are not using rvm, please use
gem uninstall mysql2
bundle install
from one of your mysql2-using Rails project's directory.
I followed Babak's instruction that he posted and it worked after a small change.
My system is Ubuntu 12.04 server and it has Ruby1.9.3 installed so I did this
sudo apt-get install mysql-server libmysqlclient-dev
Seems like the libmysqlclient16-dev is now renamed to libmysqlclient-dev in Ubuntu 12.04
Afterwards I ran
gem install mysql2
Well, I would suggest double checking the ruby and the rails version and make sure they are the same ones u created your project with. Maybe you have to change the version using rvm:
rvm use 'Version'
Maybe you can uninstall and reinstall the mysql packages again, also try installing:
sudo apt-get install mysql-client mysql-server libmysqlclient16-dev
or
sudo apt-get install mysql-client mysql-server libmysqlclient-dev
Also try uninstalling and reinstalling your mysql gem. This blog post had a solution for this error as well, although the error was cause at a different time.
For me nothing up there work. Then I found this and try to delete and create again the database.yml file. AND IT WORKS!
I am having some problems when trying to install mysql2 gem for Rails. When I try to install it by running bundle install or gem install mysql2 it gives me the following error:
Error installing mysql2: ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension.
How can I fix this and successfully install mysql2?
On Ubuntu/Debian and other distributions using aptitude:
sudo apt-get install libmysql-ruby libmysqlclient-dev
Package libmysql-ruby has been phased out and replaced by ruby-mysql. This is where I found the solution.
If the above command doesn't work because libmysql-ruby cannot be found, the following should be sufficient:
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
On Red Hat/CentOS and other distributions using yum:
sudo yum install mysql-devel
On Mac OS X with Homebrew:
brew install mysql
I'm on a mac and use homebrew to install open source programs. I did have to install mac Dev tools in order to install homebrew, but after that it was a simple:
brew install mysql
to install mysql. I haven't had a mysql gem problem since.
here is a solution for the windows users, hope it helps!
Using MySQL with Rails 3 on Windows
Install railsinstaller -> www.railsinstaller.org (I installed it to c:\Rails)
Install MySQL (I used MySQL 5.5) -> dev.mysql.com/downloads/installer/
--- for mySQL installation ---
If you dont already have these two files installed you might need them to get your MySQL going
vcredist_x86.exe -> http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=5555
dotNetFx40_Full_x86_x64.exe -> http://www.microsoft.com/download/en/details.aspx?id=17718
Use default install
Developer Machine
-MySQL Server Config-
port: 3306
windows service name: MySQL55
mysql root pass: root (you can change this later)
(username: root)
-MySQL Server Config-
--- for mySQL installation ---
--- Install the mysql2 Gem ---
Important: Do this with Git Bash Command Line(this was installed with railsinstaller) -> start/Git Bash
gem install mysql2 -- '--with-mysql-lib="c:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.5\lib" --with-mysql-include="c:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.5\include"'
Now the gem should have installed correctly
Lastly copy the libmysql.dll file from
C:\Program Files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.5\lib
to
C:\Rails\Ruby1.9.2\bin
--- Install the mysql2 Gem ---
You will now be able to use your Rails app with MySQL, if you are not sure how to create a Rails 3 app with MySQL read on...
--- Get a Rails 3 app going with MySQL ---
Open command prompt(not Git Bash) -> start/cmd
Navigate to your folder (c:\Sites)
Create new rails app
rails new world
Delete the file c:\Sites\world\public\index.html
Edit the file c:\Sites\world\config\routes.rb
add this line -> root :to => 'cities#index'
Open command prompt (generate views and controllers)
rails generate scaffold city ID:integer Name:string CountryCode:string District:string Population:integer
Edit the file c:\Sites\world\app\models\city.rb to look like this
class City < ActiveRecord::Base
set_table_name "city"
end
Edit the file c:\Sites\world\config\database.yml to look like this
development:
adapter: mysql2
encoding: utf8
database: world
pool: 5
username: root
password: root
socket: /tmp/mysql.sock
add to gemfile
gem 'mysql2'
Open command prompt windows cmd, not Git Bash(run your app!)
Navigate to your app folder (c:\Sites\world)
rails s
Open your browser here -> http://localhost:3000
--- Get a Rails 3 app going with MySQL ---
For MacOS Mojave:
gem install mysql2 -v '0.5.2' -- --with-ldflags=-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib --with-cppflags=-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include
On Ubuntu(18.04)
i was able to solve this issue by running the following:
sudo apt-get install build-essential libmysqlclient-dev
gem install mysql2
reference
Another way for MacOS users
If you used "brew" to install mysql:
gem install mysql2 -v 'x.x.x' -- --with-mysql-config=/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/y.y.y/bin/mysql_config
x.x.x = version of the mysql2 gem you want to install
y.y.y = the version of mysql you have installed ls /usr/local/Cellar/mysql to find it.
I have several computers, 32 and 64 bits processor, they run on Ubuntu Linux, Maverick (10.10) release.
I had the same problem, and for me, the
sudo apt-get install libmysql-ruby libmysqlclient-dev
did the job!!!
Have you tried using
gem install mysql -- --with-mysql-lib=/usr/lib/mysql/lib
to specify the location of thebase directory as well as the path to the MySQL libraries that are necessary to complete the gem installation?
Sources:
MySQL Gem Install ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension
MySQL Forums :: Ruby :: Help needed with installing MySQL binding for Ruby
If you are using yum try:
sudo yum install mysql-devel
This solved my problem once in Windows:
subst X: "C:\Program files\MySQL\MySQL Server 5.5"
gem install mysql2 -v 0.x.x --platform=ruby -- --with-mysql-dir=X: --with-mysql-lib=X:\lib\opt
subst X: /D
On Debian Stretch the package that worked for me was default-libmysqlclient-dev
sudo apt-get update && apt-get install -y default-libmysqlclient-dev
If you are still having trouble….
Try installing
sudo apt-get install ruby1.9.1-dev
In my case this helped:
$ export LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib"
$ export CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include"
Then:
gem install mysql2 -v '0.5.2' --source 'https://rubygems.org/' -- --with-cppflags=-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include --with-ldflags=-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib
Result:
Building native extensions with: '--with-cppflags=-I/usr/local/opt/openssl/include --with-ldflags=-L/usr/local/opt/openssl/lib'
This could take a while...
Successfully installed mysql2-0.5.2
Parsing documentation for mysql2-0.5.2
Installing ri documentation for mysql2-0.5.2
Done installing documentation for mysql2 after 0 seconds
1 gem installed
See this post (WARNING: Japanese language inside).
I had this issue on Windows 7. This is apparently an incompatibility issue and the solution is as follows:
Download the libmySQL.dll file from an older InstantRails installer. It is available from the InstantRails GitHub repo.
Next, copy that file into your Ruby/bin folder.
Now, you are good to go ;)
I got this error too. Solved by installing development packages. I'm using arch and it was:
sudo pacman -S base-devel
which installed:
m4, autoconf, automake, bison, fakeroot, flex, libmpc, ppl, cloog-ppl, elfutils, gcc,
libtool, make, patch, pkg-config
but I think it actually needed make and gcc. Error output said (on my machine, among other):
"You have to install development tools first."
So it was an obvious decision and it helped.
You have to Install some dependencies
sudo apt-get install libmysql-ruby libmysqlclient-dev
I can see most of the people have found the solution to this problem, this is mostly coused but not limited to missing packages, this happened to me after I have purged mysql and reinstalled it. I had to run this command in order to fix my problem:
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
This command helped me fix my problem
I was running into this error on my mac and found that I needed to upgrade from mysql 32bit to mysql 64 bit to get this error to go away. I was running OSX 10.6 on an intel macbook pro with ruby 1.9.2 and rails3.0.0
I also needed to install xcode in order to get unix utilities like "make" that are required to compile the gem.
once this was done I was able to run gem install mysql and gem install mysql2 without error.
I got the gem built on Mac OS X 10.6.6 by
1) Ensuring the Developer tools package is installed
2) Downloading the current MySQL package (5.5.8 in my case) from Source
3) Installing the cmake tool from cmake.org
4) Following the instructions in section 2.11 of INSTALL-SOURCE from the mysql distribution files
5) sudo gem install mysql2 -- --srcdir=/usr/local/mysql/include
The gem built successfully, but there are two errors in the documentation that rdoc and ri complain about.
But now when I try to require 'mysql2' I get a
LoadError: no such file to load -- mysql2/mysql2
I was hoping the error I would get was that the libmysqlclient.16.dylib couldn't be found because we figured that out in another post (search for install_name_tool).
My $PATH has /usr/local/mysql in it (that's where my source and built files are located), so I'm a little stumped. If anyone has any thoughts, I'll check back after a few hours of sleep.
For windows user:
You set the lib and include path of your mysql, for instance, if youre using xampp you can have like this:
gem install mysql2 -- '--with-mysql-lib="C:\xampp\mysql\lib" --withmysql-include="C:\xampp\mysql\include"'
Solution only works on Mac OS X
If you've installed MySQL with homebrew, what worked for me was uninstalling MySQL, and installing MySQL Community Edition via the MySQL website (https://www.mysql.com/).
After installed, just re-enter the command to gem install mysql2 or if necessary, sudo gem install mysql2, if you are getting permission denied problems.
If still getting error then follow the steps of mysql2 gem installation on Rails 3 on -
http://rorguide.blogspot.com/2011/03/installing-mysql2-gem-on-ruby-192-and.html
where most of the user were able to install mysql2 gem.
After you get the mysql-dev issues corrected, you may need to remove the bad mysql2 install. Look carefully at the messages after $ bundle install. You may need to
rm -rf vendor/cache/
rm -rf ./Zentest
This will clear out the bad mysql2 installation so that a final $ bundle install can create a good one.
download the right version of mysqllib.dll then copy it to ruby bin really works for me. Follow this link plases mysql2 gem compiled for wrong mysql client library
Got the "You have to install development tools first." error when trying to install the mysql2 gem after upgrading to Mac OS X Mountain Lion. Apparently doing this upgrade removes the command line compilers.
To fix:
I uninstalled my very old version of Xcode (ran the uninstall script in /Developer/Library). Then deleted the /Developer directory.
Went to the AppStore and downloaded Xcode.
Launched Xcode and went into the Preferences -> Downloads, and installed the command line tools.
You are getting this problem because you have not install MySql. Before install mysql2 gem. Install MySQL. After that mysql2 gem will install.
I just wanted to add this answer specifically for Mac Users.
My server was running perfectly fine until I updated my xcode. The while starting my rails server the error was shown like this
Gem::Installer::ExtensionBuildError: ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension.
/Users/user/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.3-p448/bin/ruby extconf.rb --with-mysql-
checking for rb_thread_blocking_region()... /Users/user/.rvm/rubies/ruby-1.9.3-
p448/lib/ruby/1.9.1/mkmf.rb:381:in `try_do': The compiler failed to generate an
executable file. (RuntimeError)
And there was suggestion to install mysql2 gem at the end of the error message. So when i tried installing it I got the error as above mentioned in this question. The error I got is as follows
ERROR: Error installing mysql2:
ERROR: Failed to build gem native extension.
So as suggested in this post I tried 'brew install mysql' and that quitted saying that mysql version so and so already installed. But there was warning before it saying
Warning: You have not agreed to the Xcode license.
Builds will fail! Agree to the license by opening Xcode.app or running:
xcodebuild -license
Then I tried this sudo xcodebuild -license and type 'agree' at the end. You have to be root to agree to the license.
After this, I again tried bundle install and then everything is working fine as normal. [ Even due to this xcode updation, I had problem with my tower also.]
libmysql-ruby has been phased out and replaced. New command:
sudo apt-get install ruby-mysql libmysqlclient-dev
Under ubuntu 20.04 LTS it's the only solution that have been working for me:
sudo apt-get install ruby-mysql2
According to https://github.com/brianmario/mysql2/issues/1175 , I fixed it by
gem install mysql2 -- \
--with-mysql-lib=/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/8.0.26/lib \
--with-mysql-dir=/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/8.0.26 \
--with-mysql-config=/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/8.0.26/bin/mysql_config \
--with-mysql-include=/usr/local/Cellar/mysql/8.0.26/include
Im getting an error with a rails app.
The bundled mysql.rb driver has been
removed from Rails 2.2. Please install
the mysql gem and try again: gem
install mysql.
And when i try to do gem install mysql it still doesnt work and im getting this error.
WARNING: Installing to ~/.gem since
/Library/Ruby/Gems/1.8 and /usr/bin
aren't both writable. WARNING: You
don't have
/Users/bartligthart/.gem/ruby/1.8/bin
in your PATH, gem executables will
not run.
I also tried this but it didn't work
sudo gem install mysql −− −−with−mysql−config≡/usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql_config
what could i do to install mysql?
you need to install this first:
apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
Did you install the MySQL db server? If so, does this file actually exist?:
/usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql_config
If mysql isn't installed, install that first. Then make sure that the mysql_config script you point to is actually there.
What worked for me is adding this to ~/.bash_profile:
export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/mysql/lib/
After installing the MySQL gem like this (64 bit version on an Intel osx 10.6):
export ARCHFLAGS="-arch x86_64" ; sudo gem install --no-rdoc --no-ri mysql -v 2.7 -- --with-mysql-dir=/usr/local --with-mysql-config=/usr/local/mysql/bin/mysql_config
Try
sudo gem update --include-dependencies
sudo gem install mysql
sudo apt-get install libsqlite3-dev
sudo gem install sqlite3-ruby
This article helped me at the time:
http://craiccomputing.blogspot.com/2008/11/installing-rails-22-on-mac-os-x-mysql.html
To fix that, add "gem: --no-user-install" in your ~/.gemrc file
via