Lightweight Python Build Tool.
Project description
Why I did this fork and what will happen here?
This project was forked from Pynt. Raghunandan Rao
I appreciate work made by Raghunandan Rao and will push any good parts of my changes to initial rags/pynt repo.
Aim of this navio-builder project is to provide my clients with lightweight and easy to use python devops tool. I’m going to accumulate work done by Raghunandan Rao and other pynt contributers here. My own changes and new features will be implemented here and push as PR to original pynt repo.
A pynt of Python build.
Features
Easy to learn.
Build tasks are just python funtions.
Manages dependencies between tasks.
Automatically generates a command line interface.
Rake style param passing to tasks
Supports python 2.7 and python 3.x
Todo Features
Async tasks
Additional tasks timing reporting
Installation
You can install navio-builder from the Python Package Index (PyPI) or from source.
Using pip
$ pip install navio-builder
Using easy_install
$ easy_install navio-builder
Example
The build script is written in pure Python and navio-builder takes care of managing any dependencies between tasks and generating a command line interface.
Writing build tasks is really simple, all you need to know is the @task decorator. Tasks are just regular Python functions marked with the @task() decorator. Dependencies are specified with @task() too. Tasks can be ignored with the @task(ignore=True). Disabling a task is an useful feature to have in situations where you have one task that a lot of other tasks depend on and you want to quickly remove it from the dependency chains of all the dependent tasks.
build.py
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
from navio.builder import task
@task()
def clean():
'''Clean build directory.'''
print 'Cleaning build directory...'
@task(clean)
def html(target='.'):
'''Generate HTML.'''
print 'Generating HTML in directory "%s"' % target
@task(clean, ignore=True)
def images():
'''Prepare images.'''
print 'Preparing images...'
@task(html,images)
def start_server(server='localhost', port = '80'):
'''Start the server'''
print 'Starting server at %s:%s' % (server, port)
@task(start_server) #Depends on task with all optional params
def stop_server():
print 'Stopping server....'
@task()
def copy_file(src, dest):
print 'Copying from %s to %s' % (src, dest)
@task()
def echo(*args,**kwargs):
print args
print kwargs
# Default task (if specified) is run when no task is specified in the command line
# make sure you define the variable __DEFAULT__ after the task is defined
# A good convention is to define it at the end of the module
# __DEFAULT__ is an optional member
__DEFAULT__=start_server
Organizing build scripts
You can break up your build files into modules and simple import them into your main build file.
from deploy_tasks import *
from test_tasks import functional_tests, report_coverage
Contributors/Contributing
Raghunandan Rao - navio-builder is preceded by and forked from pynt, which was created by Raghunandan Rao.
Calum J. Eadie - pynt is preceded by and forked from microbuild, which was created by Calum J. Eadie.
If you want to make changes the repo is at https://github.com/naviotech/navio-builder. You will need pytest to run the tests
$ ./b t
It will be great if you can raise a pull request once you are done.
If you find any bugs or need new features please raise a ticket in the issues section of the github repo.
License
navio-builder is licensed under a MIT license
Changes
0.1.0 - ??/12/2017
Initial release. Fork from pynt.
Rename done to modules
Add task running time to output
Project details
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