class Rake::Application
Rake main application object. When invoking rake
from the command line, a Rake::Application
object is created and run.
Constants
- DEFAULT_RAKEFILES
Attributes
The name of the application (typically ‘rake’)
The original directory where rake was invoked.
Name of the actual rakefile used.
Number of columns on the terminal
List of the top level task names (task names from the command line).
Override the detected TTY output state (mostly for testing)
Public Class Methods
Initialize a Rake::Application
object.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 49 def initialize super @name = "rake" @rakefiles = DEFAULT_RAKEFILES.dup @rakefile = nil @pending_imports = [] @imported = [] @loaders = {} @default_loader = Rake::DefaultLoader.new @original_dir = Dir.pwd @top_level_tasks = [] add_loader("rb", DefaultLoader.new) add_loader("rf", DefaultLoader.new) add_loader("rake", DefaultLoader.new) @tty_output = STDOUT.tty? @terminal_columns = ENV["RAKE_COLUMNS"].to_i set_default_options end
Public Instance Methods
Add a loader to handle imported files ending in the extension ext
.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 139 def add_loader(ext, loader) ext = ".#{ext}" unless ext =~ /^\./ @loaders[ext] = loader end
Initialize the command line parameters and app name.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 88 def init(app_name="rake", argv = ARGV) standard_exception_handling do @name = app_name begin args = handle_options argv rescue ArgumentError # Backward compatibility for capistrano args = handle_options end collect_command_line_tasks(args) end end
Find the rakefile and then load it and any pending imports.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 102 def load_rakefile standard_exception_handling do raw_load_rakefile end end
Application
options from the command line
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 145 def options @options ||= OpenStruct.new end
Run the Rake application. The run method performs the following three steps:
-
Initialize the command line options (
init
). -
Define the tasks (
load_rakefile
). -
Run the top level tasks (
top_level
).
If you wish to build a custom rake command, you should call init
on your application. Then define any tasks. Finally, call top_level
to run your top level tasks.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 79 def run(argv = ARGV) standard_exception_handling do init "rake", argv load_rakefile top_level end end
Run the given block with the thread startup and shutdown.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 122 def run_with_threads thread_pool.gather_history if options.job_stats == :history yield thread_pool.join if options.job_stats stats = thread_pool.statistics puts "Maximum active threads: #{stats[:max_active_threads]} + main" puts "Total threads in play: #{stats[:total_threads_in_play]} + main" end ThreadHistoryDisplay.new(thread_pool.history).show if options.job_stats == :history end
Run the top level tasks of a Rake application.
# File rake-13.0.1/lib/rake/application.rb, line 109 def top_level run_with_threads do if options.show_tasks display_tasks_and_comments elsif options.show_prereqs display_prerequisites else top_level_tasks.each { |task_name| invoke_task(task_name) } end end end