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permalink | pubDate | title | tags | |
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daily/2022/08/15/using-run-file-simplify-project-tasks | 2022-08-15 | Using a "run" file to simplify project tasks |
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Every project has its own set of commands that need to be run regularly.
From starting a local server or the project's containers with Docker or Docker Compose, running tests or clearing a cache, or generating the CSS and JavaScript assets, these commands can get quite complicated and time-consuming and error-prone to type over and over again.
One common way to simplify these commands is using a Makefile
.
A Makefile contains a number of named targets that you can reference, and each has one or more commands that it executes.
For example:
# Start the project.
start:
docker-compose up -d
# Stop the project.
stop:
docker-compose down
# Run a Drush command.
drush:
docker-compose exec php-fpm drush $(ARGS)
With this Makefile, I can run make start
to start the project, and make stop
to stop it.
Makefiles work well, but I don't use the full functionality that they offer, such as dependencies for targets, and passing arguments to a command - like arguments for a Drush, Symfony Console, or Artisan command, doesn't work as I originally expected.
In the example, to pass arguments to the drush
command, I'd have to type ARGS="cache:rebuild" make drush
for them to get added and the command to work as expected.
An agency that I worked for created and open-sourced their own Makefile-like tool, written in PHP and built on Symfony Console. I gave a talk on it called Working with Workspace and used it on some of my own personal and client projects.
What I'm using now
The solution that I'm using now is a run
file, which is something that I learned from Nick Janetakis' blog and YouTube channel.
It's a simple Bash file where you define your commands (or tasks) as functions, and then execute them by typing ./run test
or ./run composer require something
.
Here's the Makefile example, but as a run
script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function help() {
# Display some default help text.
# See examples on GitHub of how to list the available tasks.
}
function start {
# Start the project.
docker-compose up -d
}
function stop {
# Stop the project.
docker-compose down
}
function drush {
# Run a Drush command with any additional arguments.
# e.g. "./run drush cache:rebuild"
docker-compose exec php-fpm drush "${@}"
}
# Execute the command, or run "help".
eval "${@:-help}"
As it's Bash, I can just use $1
, $2
etc to get specific arguments, or $@
to get them all, so ./run drush cache:rebuild
works as expected and any additional arguments are included.
You can group tasks by having functions like test:unit
and test:commit
, and tasks can run other tasks. I use this for running groups of commands within a CI pipeline, and to extract helper functions for tasks like running docker-compose exec
within the PHP container that other commands like drush
, console
or composer
could re-use.
As well as running ad-hoc commands during development, I also use the run file to create functions that run Git pre-commit or pre-push hooks, deploy code with Ansible, or build, push or pull the project's latest Docker images.
I also use one within my Talks repository to generate PDF files using rst2pdf, present them using phdpc, and generate thumbnail images.
For examples of run
files that I use in my open-source code, you can look in my public GitHub repositories, and for more information, here is Nick's blog post where I first found the idea.