WIP: New README #17
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#+TITLE: The Project Manager
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ADD INTRODUCTION BANNER
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Library inspired by =make= utility in IEEE Std 1003.1-2017 (POSIX) that aims to make the task of mataintaing, updating and regeneration programs more functional while enabling you to write project management tasks and build scripts in GNU Guile!
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** Hello World!
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#+BEGIN_SRC scheme-mode
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#!/usr/bin/env sh
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exec guile -s "$0" "$@"
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!#
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(use-modules (potato make))
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(initialize)
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;; Rule that outputs a simple hello world when called
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(: "hello" '()
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(lambda ()
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(display "Hello from The Project Manager!\n")))
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(execute)
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#+END_SRC
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$ GUILE_LOAD_PATH=path/to/this/project path/to/this/project/examples/hello.scm hello
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Hello from The Project Manager!
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“hello”: PASS
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“hello”: COMPLETE
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The recipe “hello” finished successfully.
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--------
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** Command-Line Arguments
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This boilerplate loads the library functions and it parses the
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command-line arguments. The command-line arguments are the following,
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<your-script-name> [-hvqVeEbknB] [var=value...] [target_name...]
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-h, --help
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displays help
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-v, --version
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displays the version number of this script
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-V [0,1,2,3], --verbosity=[0,1,2,3]
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choose the verbosity of the output
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-e, --environment
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environment variables are converted to makevars
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-E, --elevate-environment
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environment variables are converted to makevars
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and will override makevars set in the script
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-b, --builtins
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adds some default makevars and suffix rules
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--ignore-errors [NOT IMPLEMENTED YET]
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keep building even if a command fails
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-k, --continue-on-error [NOT IMPLEMENTED YET]
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keep building some targets even if a command fails
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-n, --no-execute [NOT IMPLEMENTED YET]
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print rules, but only execute rules marked as
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'always execute'
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-a, --ascii
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use ASCII-only output and no colors
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-W, --warn [NOT IMPLEMENTED YET]
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enable warning messages
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[var=value...]
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set the value of makevars
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[target_name...]
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Set one or more targets to be executed. If no target
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is specified, the first target found will be executed.
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## MAKEVARS
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A hash table called `%makevars` has string keys. These procedures
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are syntax that add quotation marks around `key`, so you call them without the quotes on
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`key`. The returned value of `$` is a string, or an empty string on failure.
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You define makevars in the script, in the environment, or on the command line.
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($ KEY) -> "VAL"
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($ key [transformer])
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Look up `key` in the `%makevars` hash table and return the
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result as a string. If `key` is not found, return an empty
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string. If a string-to-string transformer procedure is
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provided, apply it to each space-separated token in the
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result.
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(?= key val)
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Assign `val` to `key` in the `%makevars` hash table. If `val`
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is a procedure, assign its output to `key` the first time that
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`key` is referenced.
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(:= key val)
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Assign `val` to `key` in the `%makevars` hash table. If `val`
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is a procedure, evaluate it and assign its output to `key`
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immediately.
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## Rules
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The *target rule* is for when the target, and the prerequisites, if any,
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have filenames or phony names.
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```scheme
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(: target-name '(prereq-name-1 prereq-name-2 ...)
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recipe-1
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recipe-2
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...)
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```
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`target-name` is a string which is either a filename to be
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created or an phony name like "all" or "clean".
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Recipe as a string to be evaluated by the system
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```scheme
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(: "foo.o" '("foo.c")
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"cc -c foo.o")
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```
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Recipe as a procedure
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```scheme
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(: "clean-foo" '()
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(lambda ()
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(delete-file "foo.o")))
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```
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Recipe as a procedure that returns #f to indicate failure
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```scheme
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(: "recent" '()
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(lambda ()
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(if condition
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#t
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#f))))
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```
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Recipe as a procedure returning a string to be evaluated by the
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system
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```scheme
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(: "foo.o" '("foo.c")
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(lambda ()
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(format #f "cc ~A -c foo.c" some-flags))
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```
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Recipe using recipe helper procedures, which create a string to
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be evaluated by the system
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```scheme
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(: "foo.c" '("foo.c")
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(~ ($ CC) ($ CFLAGS) "-c" $<))
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```
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Recipe as a boolean to indicate pass or failure without doing any
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processing. For example, the rule below tells Potato Make that
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the file "foo.c" exists without actually testing for it.
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```scheme
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(: "foo.c" '() #t)
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```
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If there is no recipe at all, it is shorthand for the recipe #t,
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indicating a recipe that always passes. This is used
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in prerequisite-only target rules, such as below, which passes
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so long as the prerequisites pass. These two rules are the same.
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```scheme
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(: "all" '("foo.exe"))
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(: "all" '("foo.exe") #t)
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```
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Lastly, if the recipe is #f, this target will always fail.
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```scheme
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(: "fail" '() #f)
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```
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The *suffix rule* is a generic rule to convert one source file to a
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target file, based on the filename extensions.
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```scheme
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(-> ".c" ".o"
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(~ ($ CC) ($ CFLAGS) "-c" $< "-o" $@))
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```
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## Recipe Helpers
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Concatenate elements with `~`. `~` inserts spaces between the
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elements.
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Elements can be
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- strings
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- procedures that return strings
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- `%makevar` hash-table references
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- automatic variables
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- anything whose string representation as created by
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(format #f "~A" ...) make sense
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Any procedures are applied lazily, when the rule is executed.
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(~ "string" (lambda () "string") ($ KEY) $@ 100 )
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Three versions of `~` with special effects
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(~- ...) ignores any errors
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(~@ ...) doesn't print recipe to console
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(~+ ...) runs even when `--no-execute` was chosen
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## Automatic Variables
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Recipes can contain the following automatic variables
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$@ the target
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$* the target w/o a filename suffix
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$< the first prerequisite
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$^ the prerequisites, as a single space-separated string
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$$^ the prerequisites, as a scheme list of strings
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$? the prerequisites that are files newer than the target file
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as a single space-separated string
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$$? the prerequisites that are files newer than the target file
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as a scheme list of strings
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## POSIX Makefile Parser
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Recipes can contain the following parser function
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(parse ...) reads a standard Makefile and creates
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rules based on its contents.
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Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user