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202 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
202 lines
7.7 KiB
Markdown
<div align="center">
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<h1 align="center"> task.mk </h1>
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<img src="./assets/help.svg" alt="help" width=400 >
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<p align="center">
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the task runner for GNU Make you've been missing
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</p>
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</div>
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</br>
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GNU make is an excellent build tool and the task runner we love to hate, but can't escape.
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So let's improve the UX to make it the best task runner it can be.
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`Task.mk`, is a standalone `Makefile` you can deploy alongside your own
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to add some QOL improvements for your users and fellow maintainers.
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Current Features:
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- ANSI escape code support (including NO_COLOR)
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- formatted help output
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- custom print function
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Depends on `GNU Make`, obviously and `Python >=3.7`.
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Wait python?!?!, I'm not `pip` installing some package just to parse my makefile.
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I agree, so I've hacked together a file containing the bits of python we need with some tricks to run it.
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## Setup
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You can include this as an optional dependency on your project by adding the below lines to the end of your `Makefile`.
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If someone tries to invoke `make help` it will download `.task.mk` for them.
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```make
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-include .task.mk
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$(if $(filter help,$(MAKECMDGOALS)),$(if $(wildcard .task.mk),,.task.mk: ; curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/daylinmorgan/task.mk/v22.9.7/task.mk -o .task.mk))
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```
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You might also consider making it a consistently downloaded dependency if you plan to use any of it's advanced feature set, by dropping the `$(MAKECMDGOALS)` check.
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```make
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-include .task.mk
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$(if $(wildcard .task.mk),,.task.mk: ; curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/daylinmorgan/task.mk/v22.9.7/task.mk -o .task.mk)
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```
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## Usage
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`Task.mk` will add access to a recipe `help` (also aliased to `h`).
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In order to use `make help` to you will need to add some custom comments to your `Makefile`.
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Deliberately, I don't get names from recipes themselves.
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This not only greatly simplifies the parsing but add's some opportunity to customize the output.
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Such as to document wildcard or redundant recipes.
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You can place these anywhere, but I recommend adding these notes directly above their relevant recipes.
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The format is `## <recipe> | <msg>`
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```make
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## build | build the project
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.PHONY: build
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build:
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...
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```
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Now when you invoke `make help` it will parse these and generate your help output.
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In addition to a generic help output you can expose some configuration settings with `make vars`.
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To do so define the variables you'd like to print with `PRINT_VARS := VAR1 VAR2 VAR3`.
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In addition to the `help` and `vars` recipes you can use a custom make function to format your text for fancier output.
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For this there are two options depending on your needs `tprint` or `tprint-sh`. (`tprint-sh` is for use within a multiline sub-shell that has already been silenced, see the version-check rule of this project's `Makefile` for an example.)
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To use `tprint` you call it with the builtin `make` call function.
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It accepts only one argument: an unquoted f-string literal.
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All strings passed to `tprint` have access to an object `ansi` or `a` for simplicity.
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This stores ANSI escape codes which can be used to style your text.
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```make
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## build | compile the source
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.PHONY: build
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build:
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$(call tprint,{a.cyan}Build Starting{a.end})
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...
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$(call tprint,{a.green}Build Finished{a.end})
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```
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See this projects `make info` for more examples of `tprint`.
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To see the available colors and formatting(bold,italic,etc.) use the hidden recipe `make _print-ansi`.
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**Note**: Any help commands starting with an underscore will be ignored.
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To view hidden `tasks` (or recipes in GNU Make land) you can use `make _help`.
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In addition, you can use custom colors using the builtin `ansi.custom` or (`a.custom`) method.
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It has two optional arguments `fg` and `bg`. Which can be used to specify either an 8-bit color from the [256 colors](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8-bit_color).
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Or a tuple/list to define an RBG 24-bit color, for instance `a.custom(fg=(5,10,255))`.
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See this project's `make info` for an example.
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## Configuration
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You can quickly customize some of the default behavior of `task.mk` by overriding the below variables prior to the `-include .task.mk`.
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```make
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# ---- CONFIG ---- #
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HEADER_COLOR ?= b_cyan
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PARAMS_COLOR ?= b_magenta
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ACCENT_COLOR ?= b_yellow
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GOAL_COLOR ?= $(ACCENT_COLOR)
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MSG_COLOR ?= faint
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HELP_SEP ?= |
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HELP_SORT ?= # sort goals alphabetically
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# python f-string literals
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EPILOG ?=
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define USAGE ?=
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{ansi.$(HEADER_COLOR)}usage{ansi.end}:
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make <recipe>
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endef
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```
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To use a custom color for one of the predefined configuration variables specify only the custom method.
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```make
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HEADER_COLOR = custom(fg=171,bg=227)
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```
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**NOTE**: `HELP_SEP` does not change the argument definitions syntax only the format of `make help`.
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## Advanced Usage: Embedded Python Scripts
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You can take advantage of the builtin python script runner and write multi-line python scripts of your own.
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This is a simple example but a few lines of python in your `Makefile`
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may be easier than balancing sub-shells and strung together awk commands.
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When `make` expands the function it will take the parameters passed to `py` and expand them.
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`$(1)` is the variable name and `$(2)` in this case is the implicit pattern from the rule. Pay attention to quotes.
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If you need to debug your python script, use `DEBUG=1` when you run `make` and it will first print the script that will be piped to `python`.
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```make
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define list_files_py
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from pathlib import Path
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print("files in $(2)")
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print([f.name for f in (Path("$(2)").iterdir())])
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endef
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## list-% | use pathlib.Path to list files
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list-%:
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$(call py,list_files_py,$*)
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```
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For what it's worth there is also a predefined function for `bash` (named `tbash`) as well should you need to accomplish something similar of more easily embedding your bash script rather than having to escape every line with a backslash.
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```make
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define bash_script
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echo "This is from bash"
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cat /etc/hostname
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printf "%s\n" "$(2)"
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endef
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.PHONY: test-bash
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test-bash:
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$(call tbash,bash_script,test bash multiline)
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```
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## Zsh Completions for GNU Make
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If you use `GNU Make` with zsh you may want to add the following
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line to your rc file to allow `make` to handle the autocomplete.
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```zsh
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zstyle ':completion::complete:make:*:targets' call-command true
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```
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## Why Make?
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There are lot of `GNU Make` alternatives but none have near the same level of ubiquity.
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This project attaches to `make` some of the native features of [`just`](https://github.com/casey/just), a command runner.
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Just is a great task runner, but it suffers two problems, users probably don't have it installed already, and there is no way to define file specific recipes.
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Most of my `Makefile`'s are comprised primarily of handy `.PHONY` recipes, but I always end up with a few file specific recipes.
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Another interesting project I've evaluated for these purposes is [`go-task/task`](https://github.com/go-task/task).
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`Task` has many of the features of `GNU Make` and some novel features of it's own.
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But like `just` it's a tool people don't usually already have and it's configured using a `yaml` file.
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`Yaml` files can be finicky to work with and and it uses a golang based shell runtime, not your native shell, which might lead to unexpected behavior.
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## Simpler Alternative
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But I just want a basic help output, surely I don't need python for this... you would be right.
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`Task.mk` replaces my old `make help` recipe boilerplate which may better serve you (so long as you have `sed`/`awk`).
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```make
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## h, help | show this help
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.PHONY: help h
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help h: Makefile
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@awk -v fill=$(shell sed -n 's/^## \(.*\) | .*/\1/p' $< | wc -L)\
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'match($$0,/^## (.*) \|/,name) && match($$0,/\| (.*)$$/,help)\
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{printf "\033[1;93m%*s\033[0m | \033[30m%s\033[0m\n",\
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fill,name[1],help[1];} match($$0,/^### (.*)/,str) \
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{printf "%*s \033[30m%s\033[0m\n",fill," ",str[1];}' $<
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```
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