rebar ===== rebar is an Erlang build tool that makes it easy to compile and test Erlang applications, port drivers and releases. [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/basho/rebar.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/basho/rebar) rebar is a self-contained Erlang script, so it's easy to distribute or even embed directly in a project. Where possible, rebar uses standard Erlang/OTP conventions for project structures, thus minimizing the amount of build configuration work. rebar also provides dependency management, enabling application writers to easily re-use common libraries from a variety of locations (git, hg, etc). Building -------- Information on building and installing [Erlang/OTP](http://www.erlang.org) can be found [here](https://github.com/erlang/otp/wiki/Installation) ([more info](https://github.com/erlang/otp/blob/master/INSTALL.md)). ### Dependencies To build rebar you will need a working installation of Erlang R13B03 (or later). Should you want to clone the rebar repository, you will also require git. #### Downloading You can download a pre-built binary version of rebar from: https://github.com/basho/rebar/wiki/rebar #### Building rebar ```sh $ git clone git://github.com/basho/rebar.git $ cd rebar $ ./bootstrap Recompile: src/getopt ... Recompile: src/rebar_utils ==> rebar (compile) Congratulations! You now have a self-contained script called "rebar" in your current working directory. Place this script anywhere in your path and you can use rebar to build OTP-compliant apps. ``` Contributing to rebar ===================== Pull requests and branching --------------------------- Use one topic branch per pull request. Do not commit to master in your fork. Provide a clean branch without any merge commits from upstream. Usually you should squash any intermediate commits into the original single commit. Code style ---------- Do not introduce trailing whitespace. Do not mix spaces and tabs. Do not introduce lines longer than 80 characters. [erlang-mode (emacs)](http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/erlang.el.html) indentation is preferred. vi-only users are encouraged to give [Vim emulation](http://emacswiki.org/emacs/Evil) ([more info](https://gitorious.org/evil/pages/Home)) a try. Writing Commit Messages ----------------------- Structure your commit message like this:
One line summary (less than 50 characters)

Longer description (wrap at 72 characters)
### Summary * Less than 50 characters * What was changed * Imperative present tense (fix, add, change) * `Fix bug 123` * `Add 'foobar' command` * `Change default timeout to 123` * No period ### Description * Wrap at 72 characters * Why, explain intention and implementation approach * Present tense ### Atomicity * Break up logical changes * Make whitespace changes separately Dialyzer and Tidier ------------------- Before you submit a patch check for [xref](http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/xref.html) and [Dialyzer](http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/dialyzer.html) warnings. A successful run of ``make check`` looks like: ```sh $ make check Recompile: src/rebar_core ==> rebar (compile) Command 'debug' not understood or not applicable Congratulations! You now have a self-contained script called "rebar" in your current working directory. Place this script anywhere in your path and you can use rebar to build OTP-compliant apps. ==> rebar (xref) make: [dialyzer_warnings] Error 2 (ignored) ``` [xref](http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/xref.html) and [Dialyzer](http://www.erlang.org/doc/man/dialyzer.html) warnings are compared against a set of safe-to-ignore warnings found in [dialyzer_reference](https://raw.github.com/tuncer/rebar/maint/dialyzer_reference) and [xref_reference](https://raw.github.com/tuncer/rebar/maint/xref_reference). It is **strongly recommended** to check the code with [Tidier](http://tidier.softlab.ntua.gr:20000/tidier/getstarted). Select all transformation options and enable **automatic** transformation. If Tidier suggests a transformation apply the changes **manually** to the source code. Do not use the code from the tarball (*out.tgz*) as it will have white-space changes applied by Erlang's pretty-printer.