If you happen to fetch a zip archive of the git repo and try to build
from that, you may, for example, ask erlc to build src/._rebar.erl.
._* are OS X resource forks and not real .erl files. This may also
happen with network filesystems on OS X. To fix that, limit the
files compiled by rebar to include only those which start with
a letter or a digit.
As mentioned in the OTP documentation, licensed customers may use
patched OTP installations where the otp_patch_apply tool adds a '**'
suffix as a flag saying the system consists of application versions from
multiple OTP versions. When we get such a version string, we drop the
suffix, as we cannot obtain relevant information from it as far as
tooling is concerned.
ensure any processes with a reference to an old user process as their
group leader are updated to use the new user process. this introduces a
slight delay at startup as the system must wait for the new processes
to be registered. there is a max wait period of three seconds (before
the shell command gives up and throws a timeout error)
fixes#314 ("rebar shell" somehow blocks using io:format in gen_server
handle_call)
Moves ct_extra_params to the end of the generated ct_run command.
This allows users to pass commands to the underlying emulator
using -erl_args. The included rt test demonstrates that it is
possible to pass an addtional option to ct_run and -erl_args at
the same time. Finally, the test executes in regular and verbose
modes because rebar constructs the ct_run command differently in
verbose mode.
Partially revert naming changes introduced in 93689703c1:
CoverageModules -> FilteredModules
get_coverage_modules -> get_matching_modules
Having the name "coverage" meaning "filtered/selected modules" can be
confused with code coverage.
- Use `cover' with QuickCheck testing
- Reuse the `cover_*' rebar.config options
- Refactor cover-related code to separate module (`qc_cover_utils')
for use with both `eunit' and `qc'
REBAR will be set to the rebar binary which was executed and runs the
builds. Enables the use of the same binary for rebar invocations as
part of a pre or post hook like so:
${REBAR} escriptize
The combination of changes to rebar_erlc_compiler, and the fact
that erl_first_files is inherited, caused a regression. To fix
that, ensure every project uses its own .rebar/erlcinfo. While at
it, fix the issue that erl_first_files entries were not included
when initializing the dep digraph.
Reported-by: Louis-Philippe Gauthier
Reported-by: Roland Karlsson
Thanks: Tuncer Ayaz
When trying to skip spec files under deps/ directory,
ignore "deps" component which is also included in Cwd.
For example, "/home/deps/src/myapp/test/cover.spec"
contains "deps" component but should not be skipped if
Cwd is "/home/deps/src/myapp/".
Augment 'tests' option of 'rebar eunit' command with ability to specify
tests to run using module-qualified names. This change also forced me
to change the way modules for coverage and for testing itself are
selected - module-qualified tests specifications are now taken into
consideration. Extend tests to cover new functionality. Update
dialyzer_reference accordingly.
attempt to emulate the behavior of
`erl -pa ebin -pa deps/*/ebin`
fix error messages and formatting issues of `rebar shell` by
shutting down and restarting the user subsystem in a mode more
hospitable to the shell than the simple user started when run
as an escript. emulate `error_logger` behaviour when the shell
is run via `erl`
add documentation of the shell command
limitations:
the erlang interrupt handler is not enabled when running as an
escript and there is no interface to re-enable it via erlang code.
this means `ctrl-c` will immediately exit the running process
unlike when running the shell via `erl`. `ctrl-g` is, however,
unaffected
the user subsystem is killed and restarted but not supervised. if
your code somehow relies on the user subsystem crashing and
restarting `rebar shell` may interfere with it's operation
On windows, bootstrap.bat failed with next error.
Command 'escriptize' not understood or not applicable
This happens because the drive name in path got from rebar_utils:get_cwd() and base_dir(Config) are different case.
Made the drive name the same lowercase using filename:absname().
Since the introduction of -r/--recursive, deps were not properly added
to the code path when running ct, eunit, etc.
To fix that, pass a flag down to process_dir1 and conditionalize
execution of the command. This moves the decision into process_dir1
where we can decide to invoke preprocess/2 and postprocess/2 but not
execute the command.
Without this fix, you'd have to, for example, invoke 'rebar -r ct
skip_deps=true', if you wanted to run base_dir's ct suites with deps on
the code path (while skipping all non-base_dir ct suites).
So, with this patch applied, if you run
$ rebar ct
deps will be on the code path, and only base_dir's ct suites will be
tested.
If you want to test ct suites in base_dir and sub_dirs, you have to run
$ rebar -r ct skip_deps=true
If you want to test ct suites in all dirs, you have to run
$ rebar -r ct
The fix is not specific to ct and applies to all commands.
To be able to add inttest/code_path_no_recurse/deps, I had to fix
.gitignore. While at it, I've updated and fixed all entries.
* Fix arg order:
The order of arguments got inconsistent over time. To fix that, use
the same consistent order in all functions.
* Avoid one erlang:'++'/2 call in process_dir/6.
* Avoid lists:prefix/2 and atom_to_list/1 calls:
We can easily avoid 2 lists:prefix/2 calls and one atom_to_list/1 call
in execute/5 by passing in whether the command is a hook or not. The
resulting code is simpler and easier to read.
If the directory we're about to process contains
reltool.config[.script] and the command to be applied is
'generate', then it's safe to process. We do this to retain the
behavior of specifying {sub_dirs, ["rel"]} and have "rebar generate"
pick up rel/reltool.config[.script]. Without this workaround you'd
have to run "rebar -r generate" (which you don't want to do if you
have deps or other sub_dirs) or "cd rel && rebar generate".
Allow rebar to compile applications using Erlang/OTP 17 and older
versions. This patch only provides partial support since the rebar
tool itself must be compiled using an Erlang/OTP version that is older
than 17.
This calls the 'p4' command-line tool to checkout and sync Perforce
trees. It involves significantly more special code in Rebar than
using 'git p4', but it eliminates the indirection of
Rebar->Git->Python->Perforce
Using the filename as a prefix is less readable and inconsistent with
the other log messages.
Before:
DEBUG: src/foo.erl depends on...
After:
DEBUG: Dependencies of src/foo.erl ...
Running 'rebar list-templates' can take quite a long time, when it has
to search the file system. To fix that, make list-templates not recurse
by default. To enable recursion, run 'rebar -r list-templates'.
Always-on recursive application of all rebar commands causes too many
issues. Recursive application is required for:
1. dealing with dependencies: get-deps, update-deps, and compile of deps
right after get-deps or update-deps
2. projects with a riak-like apps/ project structure and dev process
The vast majority of projects are not structured like riak. Therefore,
moving forward it's best to (by default) restrict recursive behavior to
dealing with deps. This commit does that and also adds command line and
rebar.config options for controlling or configuring recursion. Also, we
introduce two meta commands: prepare-deps (equivalent to rebar -r
get-deps compile) and refresh-deps (equivalent to rebar -r update-deps
compile). riak-like projects can extend the list of recursive commands
(to include 'eunit' and 'compile') by adding
{recursive_cmds, [eunit, compile]} to rebar.config.
* update files
* fix Dialyzer warning
* unconditionally enable info fil
* clean-up inconsistencies
* use term_to_binary compression
* use try...catch instead of case...catch...of
* do not write build info file if the graph is unmodified
* store info file as <base_dir>/.rebarinfo
* properly support list of compile directives
* fix regressions:
- Fix a bug in handling of files to compile first.
- If a file that is depended upon itself depends on other files, make sure
those are compiled first. While at it, rename variables for correctness.
Reported-by: David Robakowski
- Make sure that FirstFiles has no dupes and preserves the proper order.
- headers referenced via -include_lib() were not properly resolved to absolute
filenames
- .erl files found in sub dirs of src_dirs were not properly resolved to
absolute filenames
* Do not parse source files twice while checking for relationship.
* Keep files relationships in a graph.
* The option 'keep_build_info' is introduced. When set to 'true'
the graph will be kept in ebin/.rebar.build.info and will be
used by further compiler calls. The default is 'false'.
Option takes either 'true' or a numeric seed value. If true is passed, a
random seed is generated and used. The numeric seed value is for
repeatability.
The idea here is to root out test suites that are order dependant, or
that fail in the presence of certain orderings.
If the syntax error is in a .hrl file, then the reported error message
is not as useful because it's not clear which .erl file was being
compiled. We can fix that easily by first printing what source file was
being processed. We don't change the actual error message, so this will
still work with your editor of choice for jumping to the right line.
Before
------
Success:
Compiled src/foo.erl
Failure:
include/foo.hrl:10: syntax error [...]
After
-----
Success:
Compiled src/foo.erl
Failure:
Compiling src/foo.erl failed:
include/foo.hrl:10: syntax error [...]