For now, this is just a proof of concept; would make sense to add a lot
of things, such as quick access to invoking rebar itself (with approproate
code reloading), as well as an eunit-aware version so that tests could be
run interactively.
By default, executables in paths such as /bin and /usr/local/bin have
the mode saying they can be executed by all.
The current version of escriptize only sets u+x, which creates problems
when copied directly in repositories and requiring other programs to
interact with them.
This change makes rebar follow the standard of linuxes and unixes by
setting the permission flag to a+x, allowing users, the group and others
to execute it.
'Erlang' projects that do not contain any erlang files (Joxa, LFE,
Elixir, etc) break the eunit task. It attempts to copy an empty list
of source files to the .eunit directory. This change makes copying an
empty list a simple no-op.
Make sure files from erl_opts->src_dirs are copied to .eunit for cover
inspection.
Without this patch cover failed to find source files which were in
src_dirs, and threw the following exception:
ERROR: eunit failed while processing
/path/to/project:
{'EXIT',{{badmatch,{error,no_source_code_found}},
[{rebar_eunit,'-cover_analyze/3-fun-0-',1,
[{file,"src/rebar_eunit.erl"},{line,280}]},
{lists,foreach,2,[{file,"lists.erl"},{line,1262}]},
{rebar_eunit,cover_analyze,3,
[{file,"src/rebar_eunit.erl"},{line,279}]},
{rebar_eunit,eunit,2,[{file,"src/rebar_eunit.erl"},{line,140}]},
{rebar_core,run_modules,4,[{file,"src/rebar_core.erl"},{line,425}]},
{rebar_core,execute,5,[{file,"src/rebar_core.erl"},{line,359}]},
{rebar_core,process_dir0,6,[{file,"src/rebar_core.erl"},{line,223}]},
{rebar_core,process_dir,4,
[{file,"src/rebar_core.erl"},{line,130}]}]}}
Now all source files are copied to .eunit.
Not every system under test can be run with long names, and this makes
rebar's common_test support useless in those environments, as it
currently uses long names (test@hostname.domain) by default, without
recourse to change them.
This patch adds support for a {ct_use_short_names, boolean()} config
variable, which allows the user to specify whether short or long names
are required.
The custom queries are configured in rebar.config via the tuple
{xref_queries, [{query(), query_result()},...]}. The implementation
passes the query() string to xref:q and compares the return value with
query_result(). It will result in an error if they do not match.
The following configuration, for example, is the same as running the
xref check undefined_function_calls. It additionally filters
ejabberd_logger:*_msg/4 from the result as these functions are generated
on execution by ejabberd and not available at compile time.
{xref_queries, [{"(XC - UC) || (XU - X - B -
(\"ejabberd_logger\":\".*_msg\"/\"4\"))",[]}]}.
This patch also modifies the build process of this package by running a
custom query instead of doing a diff against a static xref_warning file.
The latest version of erlydtl requires that custom tag modules be in
the path when templates are compiled. Without this change rebar silently
exits when using the custom_tags_modules option.
Before copying the .erl files to the .eunit directory ensure that they
are deleted if they already exist. This prevents EACCES errors to happen
when trying to re-copy .erl files that are read-only.
a) make_symlink throws "not supported" on OS < Vista (e.g. 2003)
b) tarball creation stores windows symlinks as absolute paths
instead of relative, causing service to fail to start after upgrade
is made permanent.
Avoid error reports like this one:
prompt$ rebar eunit
==> dummy (eunit)
Test passed.
=ERROR REPORT==== 29-Dec-2011::23:22:11 ===
** Generic server inet_gethost_native_sup terminating
** Last message in was {'EXIT',<0.62.0>,killed}
** When Server state == {state,inet_gethost_native,undefined,<0.62.0>,
{local,inet_gethost_native_sup}}
** Reason for termination ==
** killed
Previously, it could happen if an eunit test did something that
required a name lookup, like in this example:
-module(dummy_tests).
-include_lib("eunit/include/eunit.hrl").
x_test() ->
{ok, _Hostent} = inet:gethostbyname(localhost).
The inet_gethost_native is a process, started on demand, under a
supervisor_bridge under the kernel_sup, but it is not a gen_server
process or the like, so it has nothing in '$ancestors' in its process
dictionary to indicate it is part of kernel.
This patch allows users to specify the directory in which common_test
source files can be found. Most common_test suites are integration,
rather than unit tests and keeping the sources apart from test sources
for other frameworks such as eunit and PropEr is a useful feature.
It is now possible to call rebar as:
rebar xref skip_app=Mod1,Mod2,...
This makes it easy to skip running xref on (e.g)
imported dependencies in your application.
The function rebar_utils:is_skipped_app/0 is added so
that other rebar commands may use it.
Previously if erl_interface could not be found {error, not_found} was
incorrectly used as a path. With this change we fail early with a
descriptive error message.
When generating a node using rebar generate, rebar always used
code:root_dir() to find the Erlang installation to clone into the node
tree. However, for anyone wishing to build a cross-compiled node, there
was no way to override this. This patch adds a new option to
reltool.config file to allow an alternate root_dir to be specified, for
example:
{root_dir, "/tmp/otp_R14B03_armv7l"}
This assumes that the contents of /tmp/otp_R14B03_armv7l has been
generated using the instructions found in the xcomp directory in your
$ERL_TOP structure. NOTE: you may have to add additional filters to
exclude files not present in the xcomp version, such as the .smp files
if you have disabled that.
This means that applications get a chance to shut down themselves,
before rebar will start killing their processes. This avoids ERROR
REPORTS from application supervisors.
The function may fail with a badarg exception because the first regex
returns an iolist() which is allowed to be a improper list. In this case
'++' cannot append to the iolist. The correct way to append something to
an iolist() is
[iolist(), "tail"]
because iolist's are allowed to be arbitrarily deep lists.