First, clone the sake-tasks repo:
git clone git://github.com/drnic/sake-tasks.git
Or replace 'drnic' with your github username if you have forked the sake-tasks repo.
Then install the sake tasks (this step is repeatable, even if one or more tasks are already exist; that is, any pre-existing tasks with the same name will be overridden)
rake install
To see your list of resulting tasks:
sake -T
It's the marvelous Sake, system-wide Rake.
http://errtheblog.com/posts/60-sake-bomb
The following sake tasks are installed:
sake check:erb # Find all .erb or .rhtml files in the current directory tree and report any syntax errors
sake check:ruby # Find all .rb files in the current directory tree and report any syntax errors
sake check:yaml # Find all .yml files in the current directory tree and report any syntax errors
sake git:analyze:commits:flog_frequent # Flog the most commonly revised files in the git history
sake git:close # Delete the current branch and switch back to master
sake git:manpages:install # Install man pages for current git version
sake git:open # Create a new branch off master
sake git:publish # Push all changes to the SVN repository
sake git:pull # Pull new commits from the repository
sake git:push # Push all changes to the repository
sake git:rebase # Pull new commits from the SVN repository
sake git:src:install # Downloads and installs latest version of git
sake git:status # Show the current status of the checkout
sake git:topic # Create a new topic branch
sake git:update # Pull new commits from the repository
sake mysql:dump # Dump the database to FILE (depends on mysql:params)
sake mysql:load # Load the database from FILE (depends on mysql:params)
sake ssh:install_public_key # Install your public key on a remote server.
The installer rake task rake install
works by assuming that each .sake
file contains one sake task. This allows it to uninstall the task from sake first, and then re-install it (sake barfs if you attempt to reinstall an existing task).
So, to create a task foo:bar:baz
, you'll need to add a folder foo/bar
and create a file baz.sake
inside it. Within that file you would then specify your task using namespace
and task
method calls:
namespace 'foo' do
namespace 'bar' do
desc "This task ..."
task :baz do
end
end
end
Whilst a task is in development you can execute it locally, without sake, using rake testrun
.
To run the local version of foo/bar/baz.sake, use:
rake testrun foo:bar:baz
You can selectively install only tasks/files that you are working on, rather than all the files in your repository, or just install the most recently modified sake file.
To install the latest modified sake file:
rake install:latest
To restrict rake install
to only re-install a task foo:bar:baz
you can either use:
rake install:file f=foo/bar/baz.sake
rake install:task t=foo:bar:baz
The values can be comma-separated lists.
So for iterative install & run development you could run the install task and the sake task via the same command line:
rake install:task t=foo:bar:baz && sake foo:bar:baz --trace
The optional --trace
runs sake in trace mode so useful stacktrace information is given as necessary. Ultimately you'd probably use rake testrun foo:bar:baz
as above.
The latest Ruby.tmbundle on github includes a task
command that generates the above namespace/task snippet based on the path + file name. That is, inside the foo/bar/baz.sake
file, make sure your grammar is 'Ruby' or 'Ruby on Rails' and then type "task" and press TAB. The above snippet will be generated ready for you to specify your task.
- Luke Melia - many git + mysql + ssh tasks
- Dr Nic Williams - repeatable installer rake task