Put this in a file named bob_config.php
in your project's root:
<?php
namespace Bob\BuildConfig;
task('default', ['hello']);
task('hello', function() {
echo "Hello World!\n";
});
Run this on your shell:
$ php composer.phar require chh/bob:~1.0@dev
$ vendor/bin/bob
This is Bob. Bob is a lightweight project automation tool in PHP similar to Rake.
Bob can be used as general build tool, but really shines when used in PHP projects as you are capable of reusing existing Application Code and Libraries in your buildfiles.
How Bob compares to Pake:
- Bob uses a set of namespaced functions for the DSL, so PHP 5.3 is a must. If you need 5.2.x support, look at Pake.
- Bob's task definitions directly take a closure for the task's body,
instead of performing magic with functions named
run_<task name>
. - Bob has no file finder similar to
pakeFinder
, if you need this just use the Symfony Finder.
How Bob compares to Phing:
- Bob does not use XML config files to define tasks. I think build files should be written in the language used to write the project itself so the barrier to contribution to build files is as low as possible. Also I think it's quite hilarious to use XML for a DSL with logic and such.
- Bob has nothing like plugins. To add new functions to Bob's DSL just
put them into the
Bob\BuildConfig
namespace and require the file somehow at the beginning of your build file. Simply put: Bob's build configs are only PHP. - Bob has no rich set of provided tasks and I do not plan to add this. Bob is lightweight.
Bob needs at least PHP 5.3.2 to run.
If you plan to hack on Bob, please make sure you
have set phar.readonly
to Off
in your php.ini
. Otherwise you will have a tough luck
creating a PHAR package of Bob.
Install into a Composer-enabled Project (recommended)
Add the chh/bob
package to the require-dev
section in your
composer.json
:
{
"require-dev": {
"chh/bob": "1.0.*@dev"
}
}
Then run composer install --dev
.
You can invoke Bob with:
php vendor/bin/bob
or:
./vendor/bin/bob
To do a system-wide install, download either a Release or clone the Repository with:
$ git clone git://github.com/CHH/bob.git
$ cd Bob
To install all of Bob's dependencies download Composer and run
composer install
:
$ wget http://getcomposer.org/composer.phar
php composer.phar install
Then run php bin/bob install
and you're done.
By default the bob
command is created in /usr/local/bin
. To change
this set a PREFIX
environment variable, the command is then created
in $PREFIX/bin
.
You can output a usage message by running
$ php vendor/bin/bob --help
First run in your projects root directory Bob with the --init
flag.
This creates an empty bob_config.php
with one example task:
$ php vendor/bin/bob --init
Bob loads your tasks from a special file named bob_config.php
in your project's
root directory. Bob also includes all files found in a directory
named bob_tasks
, in the same directory as your bob_config.php
. Files loaded from
bob_tasks
are treated the same way as regular Bob configs.
It's important that you declare that this file belongs to the
Bob\BuildConfig
namespace with namespace Bob\BuildConfig;
, otherwise the DSL functions are
not available.
Hint: It doesn't matter if you're in a sub-directory of your
project, Bob will find your bob_config.php
by wandering up
the directory tree.
Now let's define our first task. This task will output "Hello World":
task('hello', function() {
println('Hello World');
});
Tasks are run by using their name as argument(s) on the command line:
$ php vendor/bin/bob hello
When Bob is invoked without tasks it tries to invoke
the default
task.
To set a task as default task assign the task as prerequisite
of the default
task:
task('default', array('hello'));
You know, tasks should be self-documenting, you really don't want a
manual for your build config or do you? Bob provides the
desc
function for that. Let's add some text to our task, which describes
what the task is all about:
desc('Prints Hello World to the Command Line');
task('hello', function() {
println('Hello World');
});
To view all tasks and their descriptions pass the --tasks
flag:
$ php vendor/bin/bob --tasks
bob hello # Prints Hello World to the Command Line
To see more examples for how Bob can be used, simply look into Bob's
bob_config.php
. It contains all configuration to create Bob's build
artifacts, for example the bob.phar
and the composer config.
A file task is a special kind of task, which gets only run if either the target (the product of some operation) does not exist, or the prerequisites are newer than the target.
So file tasks are very handy if you've some artifacts which are generated from other files, and which you don't want to regenerate if nothing has changed.
For example: Let's write a task which concatenates three input files to one output file.
First we have to create the prerequisites:
$ echo "foo\n" > file1.txt
$ echo "bar\n" > file2.txt
$ echo "baz\n" > file3.txt
Then put this into your bob_config.php
:
fileTask('concat.txt', array('file1.txt', 'file2.txt', 'file3.txt'), function($task) {
println("Concatenating");
$concat = '';
foreach ($task->prerequisites as $file) {
$concat .= file_get_contents($file);
}
@file_put_contents($task->name, $concat);
});
Let's run this task:
$ php vendor/bin/bob concat.txt
Concatenating
This will result in a concat.txt
file in your project root:
$ cat concat.txt
foo
bar
baz
Let's run it again, without modifying the prerequisites:
$ php vendor/bin/bob concat.txt
See it? The callback was not run, because the prerequisites were not modified.
Let's verify this:
$ touch file1.txt
$ php vendor/bin/bob concat.txt
Concatenating
The prerequisites of a file task are also resolved as task names, so they can depend on other file tasks too. Or you can put regular task names into the prerequisites, but then you've to be careful to not accidentally treat them as files when looping through all prerequisites.
Ever did write a collection of tasks which you want to put into a package and reuse across projects?
Enter Task Libraries.
All task libraries implement the \Bob\TaskLibraryInterface
which
defines two methods:
register(\Bob\Application $app)
: Is called when the library is registered in the app.boot(\Bob\Application $app)
: is called just before the Bob is run on the command line. Register your tasks here.
Here's a small example which registers a test
task which uses PHPUnit:
<?php
use Bob\Application;
use Bob\TaskLibraryInterface;
use Bob\BuildConfig as b;
class TestTasks implements TaskLibraryInterface
{
function register(Application $app)
{}
function boot(Application $app)
{
$app->fileTask("phpunit.xml", array("phpunit.dist.xml"), function($task) {
copy($task->prerequisites->current(), $task->name);
});
$app->task("test", array("phpunit.xml"), function($task) {
b\sh("./vendor/bin/phpunit");
})->description = "Runs the test suite";
}
}
You can use task libraries by calling the register
function within
your build scripts:
<?php
namespace Bob\BuildConfig;
register(new TestTasks);
You will now see the test
task when you run ./vendor/bin/bob --tasks
.
There are lots of ways to improve Bob, but the most useful for me is to simply submit Issues to the Issue Tracker.
I'm using the Zend Framework Coding Standard in Bob and so should you when contributing code.
Actually I'm using a loose version of it, the notable differences are:
- I'm treating the
public
keyword as optional in functions. var
is okay for defining public instance variables.
The Code Documentation is all done with Tomdoc, though there isn't anything generated for now.
I'm not requiring unit tests for contributions, though functionality which affects the command line tool should be at least tried a couple of times.
This shouldn't prevent you from writing Unit Tests though. I'm using
PHPUnit for this purpose. There's also a test
task which runs phpunit
(this handles the copying the phpunit.dist.xml
to
phpunit.xml
too).
I'm recommending php-build for doing tests with multiple versions of PHP.
When you've done some changes and want to regenerate the bob.phar
, simply
run Bob on itself:
$ php bin/bob.php
To run only the Test Suite:
$ php bin/bob.php test
(In case you wonder that the PHAR gets sometimes not regenerated: It's only regenerated when the actual source files for the archive change.)