Awesome
NAME
Daiku - Make for Perl
SYNOPSIS
#! perl
use Daiku;
use autodie ':all';
desc 'do all tasks';
task 'all' => 'foo';
file 'foo' => 'foo.o' => sub {
system "gcc -c foo foo.o";
};
rule '.o' => '.c' => sub {
system "gcc -c foo.o foo.c";
};
build shift @ARGV || 'all';
DESCRIPTION
Daiku is yet another build system for Perl5.
USAGE GUIDE
use Daiku
By declaring use Daiku
in your own Perl script,
you can use Daiku DSL to write your build procedure.
See "SYNOPSIS" for example of this usage.
daiku command and Daikufile
Daiku comes with daiku command-line tool.
Just like make
reads Makefile
, daiku reads Daikufile
and runs the build procedure.
See daiku for detail.
FUNCTIONS
The following functions are exported by default.
desc
desc $desc:Str
Description of the following task.
task
task $dst:Str, \@deps:ArrayRef[Str]
task $dst:Str, \@deps:ArrayRef[Str], \&code:CodeRef
task $dst:Str, $deps:Str
task $dst:Str, $deps:Str, \&code:CodeRef
task $dst:Str, \&code:CodeRef
Register a .PHONY task.
If \&code
is passed, it is executed when Daiku builds this task.
$code->($task, @args)
where $task
is a Daiku::Task object, and @args
is the arguments for the task.
You can access attributes of the task via $task
object.
$dst = $task->dst;
$array_ref_of_deps = $task->deps;
You can pass arguments to a task via build()
function. For example,
task "all", sub { my ($task, @args) = @_; ... };
build("all[xxx yyy]");
then, @args
is ("xxx", "yyy")
.
As you see in the above example, arguments are specified inside brackets, and they are parsed as if they were command-line arguments (i.e., arguments are separated by spaces).
You can also specify task arguments via daiku command.
file
file $dst, $deps:Str, \&code:CodeRef
file $dst, \@deps:ArrayRef[Str], \&code:CodeRef
Register a file creation rule.
The \&code
is executed when Daiku builds the file. It is supposed to create the file named $dst
.
$code->($file)
where $file
is a Daiku::File object.
You can access attributes of the file task via $file
object.
$dst = $file->dst;
$array_ref_of_deps = $file->deps;
rule
rule $dst:Str, $src:Str, \&code:CodeRef
rule $dst:Str, \@srcs:ArrayRef[Str], \&code:CodeRef
rule $dst:Str, \&srcs:CodeRef, \&code:CodeRef
Register a suffix rule. It's the same as following code in Make.
.c.o:
cc -c $<
The \&code
is executed when Daiku builds this task.
$code->($rule, $dst_filename, @src_filenames)
where $rule
is a Daiku::SuffixRule object, $dst_filename
is the destination filename
and @src_filenames
are the source filenames.
The $code
is supposed to create the file named $dst_filename
.
If you pass a CodeRef as \&srcs
, it is executed to derive source filenames.
@src_filenames = $srcs->($dst_filename)
For example,
rule '.o' => sub {
my ($file) = @_;
$file =~ s/\.o$//;
("$file.h", "$file.c");
} => sub {
my ($task, $dst, $src_h, $src_c) = @_;
compile($src_c, $dst);
};
You can also return an ArrayRef from \&srcs
instead of a list.
In that case, the ArrayRef is just flattened.
build
build $task : Str
Build one object named $task
.
Return Value: The number of built jobs.
namespace
namespace $namespace:Str, \&codeblock:CodeRef
Declare a namespace of tasks. Namespaces can be nested.
With namespaces, you can organize your tasks in a hierarchical way. For example,
namespace n1 => sub {
desc 't1';
task task1 => sub { };
namespace n2 => sub {
desc 't2';
task task2 => sub { };
};
};
The full task name includes all containing namespaces joined with colons (:
).
$ daiku n1:task1
$ daiku n1:n2:task2
sh
sh @command:List[Str]
Executes the @command
.
This is similar to system()
built-in function, but it throws an exception when the command returns a non-zero exit value.
NOTE
This module doesn't detect recursion, but Perl5 can detect it.
AUTHOR
Tokuhiro Matsuno <tokuhirom AAJKLFJEF GMAIL COM>
SEE ALSO
LICENSE
Copyright (C) Tokuhiro Matsuno
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.