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DONTBUILD (NPOTB)
86 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
86 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
The mach Driver
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===============
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The *mach* driver is the command line interface (CLI) to the source tree.
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The *mach* driver is invoked by running the *mach* script or from
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instantiating the *Mach* class from the *mach.main* module.
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Implementing mach Commands
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--------------------------
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The *mach* driver follows the convention of popular tools like Git,
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Subversion, and Mercurial and provides a common driver for multiple
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subcommands.
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Subcommands are implemented by decorating a class inheritting from
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mozbuild.base.MozbuildObject and by decorating methods that act as
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subcommand handlers.
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Relevant decorators are defined in the *mach.base* module. There are
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the *Command* and *CommandArgument* decorators, which should be used
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on methods to denote that a specific method represents a handler for
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a mach subcommand. There is also the *CommandProvider* decorator,
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which is applied to a class to denote that it contains mach subcommands.
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Here is a complete example:
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from mozbuild.base import MozbuildObject
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from mach.base import CommandArgument
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from mach.base import CommandProvider
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from mach.base import Command
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@CommandProvider
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class MyClass(MozbuildObject):
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@Command('doit', help='Do ALL OF THE THINGS.')
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@CommandArgument('--force', '-f', action='store_true',
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help='Force doing it.')
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def doit(self, force=False):
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# Do stuff here.
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When the module is loaded, the decorators tell mach about all handlers.
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When mach runs, it takes the assembled metadata from these handlers and
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hooks it up to the command line driver. Under the hood, arguments passed
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to the decorators are being used as arguments to
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*argparse.ArgumentParser.add_parser()* and
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*argparse.ArgumentParser.add_argument()*. See the documentation in the
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*mach.base* module for more.
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The Python modules defining mach commands do not need to live inside the
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main mach source tree. If a path on *sys.path* contains a *mach/commands*
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directory, modules will be loaded automatically by mach and any classes
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containing the decorators described above will be detected and loaded
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automatically by mach. So, to add a new subcommand to mach, you just need
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to ensure your Python module is present on *sys.path*.
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Minimizing Code in Mach
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-----------------------
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Mach is just a frontend. Therefore, code in this package should pertain to
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one of 3 areas:
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1. Obtaining user input (parsing arguments, prompting, etc)
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2. Calling into some other Python package
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3. Formatting output
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Mach should not contain core logic pertaining to the desired task. If you
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find yourself needing to invent some new functionality, you should implement
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it as a generic package outside of mach and then write a mach shim to call
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into it. There are many advantages to this approach, including reusability
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outside of mach (others may want to write other frontends) and easier testing
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(it is easier to test generic libraries than code that interacts with the
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command line or terminal).
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Keeping Frontend Modules Small
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------------------------------
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The frontend modules providing mach commands are currently all loaded when
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the mach CLI driver starts. Therefore, there is potential for *import bloat*.
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We want the CLI driver to load quickly. So, please delay load external modules
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until they are actually required. In other words, don't use a global
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*import* when you can import from inside a specific command's handler.
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