module Rake::RakeFileUtils
FileUtilsExt
provides a custom version of the FileUtils
methods that respond to the verbose
and nowrite
commands.
Constants
- DEFAULT
Attributes
Public Instance Methods
Get/set the nowrite flag controlling output from the FileUtils
utilities. If verbose is true, then the utility method is echoed to standard output.
Examples:
nowrite # return the current value of the # nowrite flag nowrite(v) # set the nowrite flag to _v_. nowrite(v) { code } # Execute code with the nowrite flag set # temporarily to _v_. Return to the # original value when code is done.
# File lib/rake/file_utils_ext.rb, line 77 def nowrite(value=nil) oldvalue = FileUtilsExt.nowrite_flag FileUtilsExt.nowrite_flag = value unless value.nil? if block_given? begin yield ensure FileUtilsExt.nowrite_flag = oldvalue end end oldvalue end
Check that the options do not contain options not listed in optdecl
. An ArgumentError exception is thrown if non-declared options are found.
# File lib/rake/file_utils_ext.rb, line 123 def rake_check_options(options, *optdecl) h = options.dup optdecl.each do |name| h.delete name end raise ArgumentError, "no such option: #{h.keys.join(' ')}" unless h.empty? end
Send the message to the default rake output (which is $stderr).
# File lib/rake/file_utils_ext.rb, line 116 def rake_output_message(message) $stderr.puts(message) end
Get/set the verbose flag controlling output from the FileUtils
utilities. If verbose is true, then the utility method is echoed to standard output.
Examples:
verbose # return the current value of the # verbose flag verbose(v) # set the verbose flag to _v_. verbose(v) { code } # Execute code with the verbose flag set # temporarily to _v_. Return to the # original value when code is done.
# File lib/rake/file_utils_ext.rb, line 53 def verbose(value=nil) oldvalue = FileUtilsExt.verbose_flag FileUtilsExt.verbose_flag = value unless value.nil? if block_given? begin yield ensure FileUtilsExt.verbose_flag = oldvalue end end FileUtilsExt.verbose_flag end
Use this function to prevent potentially destructive ruby code from running when the :nowrite flag is set.
Example:
when_writing("Building Project") do project.build end
The following code will build the project under normal conditions. If the nowrite(true) flag is set, then the example will print:
DRYRUN: Building Project
instead of actually building the project.
# File lib/rake/file_utils_ext.rb, line 107 def when_writing(msg=nil) if FileUtilsExt.nowrite_flag $stderr.puts "DRYRUN: #{msg}" if msg else yield end end