* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*)
-(** {1 Goaljobs library of useful helper functions.} *)
+(** {1 Goaljobs library API} *)
-(** {2 Targets and requires}
-
- These are used to write goals.
-
- Normally you write a goal with one or more [target]s and
- zero or more [require]s, as the examples below should make
- clear.
-
- In the first example, there are two targets: that [o_file] (object)
- exists, and that it is newer than [c_file] (source). The rule
- meets that target by running the C compiler ([cc]) which, if it
- succeeds, will ensure that the object file exists and is newer
- than the source file.
-
- {v
- let goal compiled c_file =
- let o_file = change_file_extension "o" c_file in
- target (file_exists o_file);
- target (file_newer_than o_file c_file);
-
- sh "cc -c %s -o %s" c_file o_file
- }
-
- In the second example, the rule requires that several files
- have been compiled ([require (compiled ...)]
- before it can link the final program:
-
- {v
- let goal built program sources =
- target (file_exists program);
- target (file_newer_than program sources);
-
- List.iter (fun s -> require (compiled s)) sources;
-
- let objects = List.map (change_file_extension "o") sources in
- sh "cc %s -o %s" (String.concat " " objects) program
- }
-
-*)
+(** {2 Target and require} *)
val target : bool -> unit
- (** [target] {i predicate} defines the target condition that will
- be met once the current rule has run.
+ (** [target] {i condition} defines the target condition that {b will}
+ be met once the current goal has run.
+
+ You can think of the target as a promise or contract that you
+ make, which is met by running the rest of the goal.
Goaljobs is much more flexible than [make]. In [make] only a
single type of target is possible. The following are roughly
{v
foo.o: foo.c
...
+ v}
+ {v
let goal compiled () =
- target (file_exists "foo.o");
- target (file_newer_than "foo.o" "foo.c");
+ target (more_recent ["foo.o"] ["foo.c"]);
+ require (file_exists "foo.c");
...
- }
+ v}
+
+ Targets in goaljobs can be any arbitrary expression. For
+ example, it can access network resources or test URLs.
+
+ Almost every goal should have one target, which should
+ accurately state the outcome once the goal has been run.
- Targets in goaljobs can be any arbitrary expression, and you
- can have any number of different targets.
+ It is possible to have no target. This means the goal
+ always runs (like using "force" in make).
- Almost every rule should have one or more targets, which should
- accurately state the outcome once the rule has been run
+ You should not have multiple targets in a single goal. They
+ won't work the way you expect, and future versions of goaljobs
+ will likely stop you from doing this.
- Normally you put the target(s) early on in the rule, before any
+ Normally you put the target(s) early on in the goal, before any
running code and before any [require]s. This is not a
hard-and-fast rule and it is not enforced, but doing it will
- ensure the rule runs most efficiently since if the target is met
- already then the rest of the rule doesn't run. *)
+ ensure the goal runs most efficiently since if the target is met
+ already then the rest of the goal doesn't run. *)
-val require : unit -> unit
- (** [require] {!goal} defines the requirements of this rule, that
- is, other goals that have to be met before this rule is able to run.
+val target_all : bool list -> unit
+ (** [target_all [t1; t2; ...]] is the same as writing
+ [target (t1 && t2 && ...)] *)
+
+val target_exists : bool list -> unit
+ (** [target_exists [t1; t2; ...]] is the same as writing
+ [target (t1 || t2 || ...)] *)
+
+val require : string -> (unit -> unit) -> unit
+ (** [require] {i goal} defines the requirements of this goal, that
+ is, other goals that have to be met before the rest of the
+ goal is able to run.
In terms of [make], [require]s are roughly equivalent to the
right hand side after the [:], but in goaljobs the requirements
can be much richer than simply "that file must exist".
- Some simple rules don't need any [require]s. Unlike with [make],
- the requirements of a rule can be placed anywhere within the
- rule, as long as you put them before they are needed. *)
+ Some very simple goals don't need any [require]s. You can
+ have as many [require]s as you need in a goal, and you can
+ use a loop or make them conditional if you want.
+
+ Unlike [make], the requirements of a goal can be
+ placed anywhere within the goal, as long as you put them
+ before they are needed. *)
+
+(** {2 Periodic jobs} *)
+
+(* This is what lets you write '30 minutes' etc: *)
+type period_t = Seconds | Days | Months | Years
+val seconds : int * period_t
+val sec : int * period_t
+val secs : int * period_t
+val second : int * period_t
+val minutes : int * period_t
+val min : int * period_t
+val mins : int * period_t
+val minute : int * period_t
+val hours : int * period_t
+val hour : int * period_t
+val days : int * period_t
+val day : int * period_t
+val weeks : int * period_t
+val week : int * period_t
+val months : int * period_t
+val month : int * period_t
+val years : int * period_t
+val year : int * period_t
+
+val every : ?name:string -> int -> int * period_t -> (unit -> unit) -> unit
+ (** [every N (seconds|minutes|hours|days|weeks|months|years) f]
+ runs the function [f] periodically.
+
+ The optional [~name] parameter can be used to name the job
+ (for debugging). *)
(** {2 File and URL testing}
(** Return true if the named file exists.
This function also exists as a goal. Writing:
- {v require (file_exists "somefile");}
+ {v require (file_exists "somefile"); v}
will die unless ["somefile"] exists. *)
+val directory_exists : string -> bool
+ (** Return true if the named directory exists.
+
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
+
val file_newer_than : string -> string -> bool
(** [file_newer_than file_a file_b] returns true if [file_a] is
newer than [file_b]. Note that if [file_a] does not exist, it
- returns false. If [file_b] does not exist, it is an error. *)
+ returns false. If [file_b] does not exist, it is an error.
+
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
+
+val more_recent : string list -> string list -> bool
+ (** [more_recent objects sources] expresses the [make] relationship:
+
+ {v object(s) ...: source(s) ... v}
+
+ in a convenient way:
+
+ {v
+ let goal built objects sources =
+ target (more_recent objects sources);
+ ... code to rebuild ...
+ v}
+
+ It is roughly equivalent to checking that all the object files
+ exist and are newer than all of the source files.
+
+ Note that both parameters are lists (since in [make] you can
+ have a list of source files and a list of object files). If you
+ don't want a list, pass a single-element list containing the
+ single the object/source file.
+
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
val url_exists : string -> bool
(** The URL is tested to see if it exists.
- This function also exists as a goal. Writing:
- {v require (url_exists "http://example.com");}
- will die unless the given URL exists. *)
-
-(** {2 Shell}
-
- Call out to the Unix shell. [/bin/sh] is used unless you set
- {!shell} to some other value. Note that the environment variable
- [SHELL] is {i not} used.
-
- {!sh}, {!shout}, {!shlines} work like [printf]. ie. You can
- substitute variables using [%s], [%d] and so on. For example:
-
- {v
- sh "rsync foo-%s.tar.gz example.com:/html/" version
- }
-
- Each invocation of {!sh} (etc) is a single shell (this is slightly
- different from how [make] works). For example:
-
- {v
- sh "
- package=foo-%s
- tarball=$package.tar.gz
- cp $HOME/$tarball .
- tar zxf $tarball
- cd $package
- ./configure
- make
- " version
- }
-
- The shell error mode is set such that if any single command
- returns an error then the {!sh} function as a whole exits with
- an error. Write:
- {v command ||: }
- to ignore the result of a command.
-
- Each shell runs in a new temporary directory. The temporary directory
- and all its contents is deleted after the shell exits. If you
- want to save any data, [cd] somewhere. For example you could start
- the command sequence with:
- {v cd $HOME/data/ }
-*)
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
-val sh : ('a, unit, string, unit) format4 -> 'a -> unit
- (** Run the command(s). *)
+val file_contains_string : string -> string -> bool
+ (** [file_contains_string filename str] checks if the named file
+ contains the given substring [str].
-(*
-val shout : ('a, unit, string) format -> 'a
- (** Run the command(s). Anything printed on stdout is returned
- as a single string (the trailing [\n] character, if any,
- is not returned). *)
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
+
+val url_contains_string : string -> string -> bool
+ (** [url_contains_string url str] downloads the URL and checks
+ whether the content contains the given substring [str].
+
+ There is also a goal version of this function. *)
+
+val (//) : string -> string -> string
+ (** Concatenate two paths. *)
+
+val quote : string -> string
+ (** Quote the string to make it safe to pass directly to the shell. *)
+
+(** {2 Shell} *)
+
+val sh : ?tmpdir:bool -> ('a, unit, string, unit) format4 -> 'a
+ (** Run the command(s).
+
+ The command runs in a newly created temporary directory (which
+ is deleted after the command exits), {i unless} you use
+ [~tmpdir:false]. *)
-val shlines : ('a, unit, string) format -> 'a
- (** Run the command(s). Any lines printed to stdout are returned
- as a list of strings. Trailing [\n] characters not returned. *)
+val shout : ?tmpdir:bool -> ('a, unit, string, string) format4 -> 'a
+ (** Run the command(s).
+
+ Anything printed on stdout is returned as a string.
+ The trailing [\n] character, if any, is not returned.
+
+ The command runs in a newly created temporary directory (which
+ is deleted after the command exits), {i unless} you use
+ [~tmpdir:false]. *)
+
+val shlines : ?tmpdir:bool -> ('a, unit, string, string list) format4 -> 'a
+ (** Run the command(s).
+
+ Any lines printed to stdout is returned as a list of strings.
+ Trailing [\n] characters are not returned.
+
+ The command runs in a newly created temporary directory (which
+ is deleted after the command exits), {i unless} you use
+ [~tmpdir:false]. *)
val shell : string ref
(** Set this variable to override the default shell ([/bin/sh]). *)
-*)
(** {2 String functions}
library (see the module [String]). For convenience some
extra functions are provided here. *)
+(*
val replace_substring : string -> string -> string -> string
(** [replace_substring patt repl string] replaces all occurrences
of [patt] with [repl] in [string]. *)
+*)
val change_file_extension : string -> string -> string
(** [change_file_extension ext filename] changes the file extension
If the original filename has no extension, this function
adds the extension. *)
+(*
val filter_file_extension : string -> string list -> string
(** [filter_file_extension ext filenames] returns only those
filenames in the list which have the given file extension.
For example [filter_file_extension "o" ["foo.c"; "bar.o"]]
would return [["bar.o"]] (a single element list). *)
+*)
+
+(** {2 Memory (persistent key/value storage)} *)
+
+val memory_exists : string -> bool
+ (** [memory_exists key] checks that the named [key] exists in
+ the Memory. It doesn't matter what value it has.
+
+ This is also available as a goal, so you can write
+ [require (memory_exists key)] *)
+
+val memory_set : string -> string -> unit
+ (** Set [key] to [value] in the Memory. *)
+
+val memory_get : string -> string option
+ (** Return the current value of [key] in the Memory. Returns [None]
+ if the key has never been set or was deleted. *)
+
+val memory_delete : string -> unit
+ (** Delete the [key]. If the key doesn't exist, has no effect. *)
+
+(** {2 Publishing goals} *)
+
+val publish : string -> (string list -> unit) -> unit
+ (** Publish the named goal.
+
+ Use this function as in this example:
+
+ {v
+ let goal compiled program sources =
+ ... stuff for building the program from sources ...
+
+ let () = publish "compiled" (
+ fun args ->
+ let program = List.hd args in
+ let sources = List.tl args in
+ require (compiled program sources)
+ )
+ v}
+
+ This could be used as follows:
+
+ {v ./script compiled program main.c utils.c v}
+
+ You will notice you have to write a bit of OCaml code to
+ map the string arguments from the command line on to the
+ goal arguments. In the example it means taking the first
+ string argument as the program name, and the rest of the
+ string arguments as the source filenames. This is also
+ the place to perform string to int conversion, checks, and
+ so on (remember that OCaml is strongly typed). *)
+
+(** {2 Logging script output} *)
+
+val log_program_output : unit -> string
+ (** [log_program_output] should be called at most once, usually at
+ the top-level of the script. It creates a temporary file
+ and redirects stdout and stderr into this file (they are still
+ sent to the ordinary output, so it acts like [tee]). The
+ filename of the temporary file is returned. *)
+
+(** {2 Sending email} *)
+
+val mailto : ?from:string -> subject:string -> ?attach:string list-> string -> unit
+ (** Send email.
+
+ Optional [?from] is the sender email address.
+
+ Required [~subject] is the subject line.
+
+ Optional [?attach] is a list of attachments (filenames).
+
+ The bare argument is the destination email address. *)
(**/**)
* if the predicate returns false.
*)
val goal_file_exists : string -> unit
+val goal_directory_exists : string -> unit
val goal_file_newer_than : string -> string -> unit
+val goal_more_recent : string list -> string list -> unit
val goal_url_exists : string -> unit
+val goal_file_contains_string : string -> string -> unit
+val goal_url_contains_string : string -> string -> unit
+val goal_memory_exists : string -> unit
+
+(* A single call to this function is added by the 'goaljobs' script.
+ * It is responsible for parsing the command line and so on.
+ *)
+val init : unit -> unit
+
+(* Export this so the macros can catch these exceptions. *)
+type goal_result_t = Goal_OK | Goal_failed of string
+exception Goal_result of goal_result_t
+
+(* Called to print debug message when we enter or leave a goal. *)
+val _enter_goal : string -> unit
+val _leave_goal : string -> unit