budgie

command module
v1.1.0 Latest Latest
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Published: Apr 2, 2023 License: Unlicense Imports: 5 Imported by: 0

README

Budgie

A simple task builder
No dependencies, blazing fast

How to install

go install github.com/Hand-of-Doom/budgie@latest

Examples

Hello World
target printHelloWorld:
    echo "Hello world!"
end
Complex example

Use the power of bash

output=$(pwd)

for i in $(seq 1 5) {
    output="$output/$i"
}

target build:
   go build -o $output
   add() {
       echo $(($1 + $2))
   }
   echo "compilation time is $(add 2 3) ms"
end 
Real world example

A single page application written in lit-html and go
Click to go to an example

output="$(pwd)/build"
mkdir -p $output

exe_file="$output/app.bin"

target buildBackend:
    cd ./backend
    go build -o "$exe_file"
    cp ./config.yaml $output
end

target buildFrontend:
    cd ./frontend
    [ ! -d ./node_modules ] && npm i
    public_dir="$output/public"
    npx esbuild ./app.js --bundle --minify --outfile="$public_dir/bundle.js"
    cp -a ./static/. "$public_dir/"
end

target build(buildBackend buildFrontend):end

target run(build):
    cd $output
    $exe_file
end

How to use

Create a tasks.budgie file with the following content

target printHello:
    echo -n "Hello "
end

# inline
target printWorld: echo "world!" end

# with dependencies
target printHelloWorld(printHello printWorld):end

Then run a line below in your terminal

$ budgie printHelloWorld

How it works

  1. Reads the targets from the tasks.budgie file in your working directory
  2. Finds a target named printHelloWorld
  3. Executes it and the targets depends on it

The output

$ Hello world!

If you don't want to use tasks.budgie as a filename, just pass the path to the file you want as the second argument

$ budgie printHelloWorld anotherFile.budgie

These commands are the same

$ budgie printHelloWorld
$ budgie printHelloWorld tasks.budgie

It uses tasks.budgie as the default filename if no filename is passed

More about budgie files

Target
target targetName:
    echo "this target is named targetName"
end

You can use all characters in the target names except spaces
These names are valid: target-name, $&*targetName

You can declare a target that depends on other targets
They will run after each other

target targetName1: echo "the first line displayed" end
target targetName2: echo "the second line displayed" end

target print(targetName1 targetName2):end
Scopes

The global scope can be accessed from the target as follows

printHello() {
    echo -n "Hello "
}

printWorld() {
    echo "world!"
}

target printHelloWorld:
    printHello
    printWorld
end

The global scope below the target cannot be accessed

target printHelloWorld:
    printHello
    printWorld
end

printHello() {}

printWorld() {}

The output

printHello: command not found

Documentation

The Go Gopher

There is no documentation for this package.

Directories

Path Synopsis
examples

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