9.3 KiB
I have a penchant for setting up all my projects so they work the same.
I like to do these things in all my projects:
- Have all my tests run before committing. I don't like buying ice cream for the team on test failures, and setting up internal CI for smaller projects is a pain.
- If I'm developing gems alongside this project, I use a
Gemfile.penchant
to get around the "one gem, one source" issue in current versions of Bundler. - I can also factor out and simplify a lot of my Gemfile settings.
- If I'm moving to different machines or (heaven forbid!) having other developers work on the project, I want to make getting all those local gems as easy as possible.
This gem makes that easier!
What's it do?
Installs a bunch of scripts into the scripts
directory of your project:
gemfile
which switches betweenGemfile.penchant
environmentsinstall-git-hooks
which will do just what it sayshooks
, several git hooks that the prior script symlinks into .git/hooks for youinitialize-environment
, which bootstraps your local environment so you can get up and running
Gemfile.penchant?!
Yeah, it's a Gemfile
with some extras:
# Gemfile.penchant
source :rubygems
# ensure git hooks are installed when a gemfile is processed, see below
ensure_git_hooks!
gem 'rails', '3.2.3'
# expands to:
#
# gem 'rake'
# gem 'nokogiri'
# gem 'rack-rewrite'
gems 'rake', 'nokogiri', 'rack-rewrite'
# define custom gem properties that get expanded to ones bundler understands
property :github, :git => 'git://github.com/$1/%s.git'
# values to the key are [ value ].flatten-ed and the $s are replaced on the fly,
# with $1 being the first parameter given
# set up defaults for all gems in a particular environment
defaults_for env(:local), :path => '../%s' # the %s is the name of the gem
no_deployment do
group :development, :test do
gem 'rspec', '~> 2.6.0'
dev_gems = %w{flowerbox guard-flowerbox}
# set up defaults for certain gems that are probably being used in envs
defaults_for dev_gems, :require => nil
env :local do
# expands to:
#
# gem 'flowerbox', :path => '../flowerbox', :require => nil
# gem 'guard-flowerbox', :path => '../guard-flowerbox', :require => nil
gems dev_gems
end
env :remote do
# expands to:
#
# gem 'flowerbox', :git => 'git://github.com/johnbintz/flowerbox.git', :require => nil
# gem 'guard-flowerbox', :git => 'git://github.com/johnbintz/guard-flowerbox.git', :require => nil
gems dev_gems, :github => 'johnbintz'
end
# an even shorter way to specify environments!
# in remote env, expands to:
# gem 'bullseye', :git => 'git://github.com/johnbintz/bullseye.git'
# in local env, expands to:
# gem 'bullseye', :path => '../bullseye'
env :remote, :opposite => :local do
gem 'bullseye', :github => 'johnbintz'
end
# only expanded on Mac OS X
os :darwin do
gem 'rb-fsevent'
end
# only expanded on Linux
os :linux do
gems 'rb-inotify', 'ffi'
end
end
end
Use script/gemfile local
to get at the local ones, and script/gemfile remote
to get at the remote ones.
It then runs bundle install
.
You can also run penchant gemfile ENV
. Just straight penchant gemfile
will rebuild the Gemfile
from
Gemfile.penchant
for whatever environment the Gemfile
is currently using.
If you have an existing project, penchant convert
will convert the Gemfile
into a Gemfile.penchant
and add some bonuses, like defining that anything in env :local
blocks automatically reference ..
,
ensuring that hooks are always installed when penchant gemfile
is executed, and adding the :github
gem property
that lets you pass in the username of the repo to reference that repo:
gem 'penchant', :github => 'johnbintz'
.
Stupid-simple local/remote setup
Use opposites :local, :remote
and environment settings for local/remote gems will be set accordingly depending
on environment:
defaults_for env(:local), :path => '../%s'
opposites :local, :remote
env :remote do
gem 'my-gem', :git => 'git://github.com/johnbintz/my-gem.git'
end
In remote
, the Git repo version is used. In local
, the path is used. Only one gem definition needed!
Deployment mode
Use no_deployment
blocks to indicate gems that shouldn't even appear in Gemfiles
destined for
remote servers. Very helpful when you have OS-specific gems and are developing on one platform
and deploying on another, or if you don't want to deal with the dependencies for your testing
frameworks:
gem 'rails'
no_deployment do
os :darwin do
gems 'growl_notify', 'growl', 'rb-fsevent'
end
os :linux do
gem 'libnotify', :require => nil
end
group :test do
# ... all your testing libraries you won't need on the deployed end ...
end
end
Run penchant gemfile ENV --deployment
to get this behavior. This is run by default when the
pre-commit git hook runs, but only after the default Rake task passes.
If you just want any locally installed gems, add the --local
switch. Great if rubygems.org is down!
Won't this change the project dependencies?!
Probably not. You probably have the "main" gems in your project locked to a version of Rails or Sinatra or something else, and all of the other gems for authentication, queue processing, etc. are dependent on that framework. Ripping out your testing framework and deployment helpers really shouldn't be changing the main versions of your application gems. It WORKSFORME and YMMV.
Getting local gems all set up
penchant bootstrap
will go through and find all git repo references in your Gemfile.penchant
and
will download them to the specified directory (by default, ..
). This means blocks like this
will work as expected when you penchant bootstrap
and then penchant gemfile local
:
env :local do
gem 'my-gem', :path => '../%s'
end
env :remote do
gem 'my-gem', :git => 'git://github.com/johnbintz/%s.git'
end
Note that this just does a quick git clone
, so if your project is already in there in a different state,
nothing "happens" except that git fails.
initialize-environment
Get new developers up to speed fast! script/initialize-environment
does the following when run:
- Check out any remote repos found in
Gemfile.penchant
to the same directory where your current project lives. That way, you can have yourGemfile.penchant
set up as above and everything works cleanly. - Runs
script/gemfile remote
to set your project to using remote repositories. - Runs
rake bootstrap
for the project if it exists.
After-gemfile
hooks?
Drop a file called .penchant
in your project directory. It'll get executed every time you switch environments using
Penchant. I use it to tell my Hydra clients to sync and update their Gemfiles, too:
# rake knows if you need "bundle exec" or not.
rake "hydra:sync hydra:remote:bundle"
What environment are you currently using in that Gemfile?
head -n 1
that puppy, or penchant gemfile-env
.
git hook?!
It runs penchant gemfile remote
then runs bundle exec rake
. Make sure your default Rake task for the project runs your
tests and performs any other magic necessary before each commit. Your re-environmented Gemfile and Gemfile.lock will be added
to your commit if they've changed.
Ensuring git hooks get installed
I find that when I pull down new projects I never remember to install the git hooks, which involves an awkward running
of bundle exec rake
after I've already committed code. Since we have computers now, and they can be told to do things,
you can add ensure_git_hooks!
anywhere in your Gemfile.penchant
to make sure the git hooks are symlinked to the ones
in the script/hooks
directory with every processing of Gemfile.penchant
.
Performing pre-bundle exec rake
tasks.
Example: I use a style of Cucumber testing where I co-opt the @wip
tag and then tell Guard to only run scenarios with @wip
tags.
I don't want @wip
tasks to be committed to the repo, since committing a half-completed scenario seems silly.
So I use bundle exec rake preflight_check
to check all feature files for @wip
tasks, and to fail if I hit one. Yes, Cucumber
already does this, but in order to get to bundle exec rake
, I need to go through two Gemfile
creations, one for remote --deployment
and one for remote
to make sure my tests work on remote gems only.
If bundle exec rake -T preflight_check
returns a task, that task will be run before all the Gemfile
switcheroo. Don't use it
as a place to run your tests!
Skipping all that Rake falderal?
Do it Travis CI style: stick [ci skip]
in your commit message. That's why the meat of the git hooks resides in
commit-msg
and not pre-commit
: you need the commit message before you can determine if the tests should be run
based on the commit message. Weird, I know.
How?!
- No RVM?
gem install penchant
- RVM?
rvm gemset use global && gem install penchant && rvm gemset use default
cd
to your project directory
And then one of the following:
penchant install
for a new project (--dir=WHEREVER
will install the scripts to a directory other than$PWD/scripts
)penchant update
to update the installation (--dir=WHEVEVER
works here, too)penchant convert
for an existing project (--dir=WHEVEVER
works here, too)