ok
Direktori : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/opt/alt/ruby21/lib64/ruby/2.1.0/rake/ |
Current File : //proc/thread-self/root/proc/self/root/opt/alt/ruby21/lib64/ruby/2.1.0/rake/file_list.rb |
require 'rake/cloneable' require 'rake/file_utils_ext' require 'rake/pathmap' ###################################################################### module Rake # ######################################################################### # A FileList is essentially an array with a few helper methods defined to # make file manipulation a bit easier. # # FileLists are lazy. When given a list of glob patterns for possible files # to be included in the file list, instead of searching the file structures # to find the files, a FileList holds the pattern for latter use. # # This allows us to define a number of FileList to match any number of # files, but only search out the actual files when then FileList itself is # actually used. The key is that the first time an element of the # FileList/Array is requested, the pending patterns are resolved into a real # list of file names. # class FileList include Cloneable # == Method Delegation # # The lazy evaluation magic of FileLists happens by implementing all the # array specific methods to call +resolve+ before delegating the heavy # lifting to an embedded array object (@items). # # In addition, there are two kinds of delegation calls. The regular kind # delegates to the @items array and returns the result directly. Well, # almost directly. It checks if the returned value is the @items object # itself, and if so will return the FileList object instead. # # The second kind of delegation call is used in methods that normally # return a new Array object. We want to capture the return value of these # methods and wrap them in a new FileList object. We enumerate these # methods in the +SPECIAL_RETURN+ list below. # List of array methods (that are not in +Object+) that need to be # delegated. ARRAY_METHODS = (Array.instance_methods - Object.instance_methods). map { |n| n.to_s } # List of additional methods that must be delegated. MUST_DEFINE = %w[inspect <=>] # List of methods that should not be delegated here (we define special # versions of them explicitly below). MUST_NOT_DEFINE = %w[to_a to_ary partition *] # List of delegated methods that return new array values which need # wrapping. SPECIAL_RETURN = %w[ map collect sort sort_by select find_all reject grep compact flatten uniq values_at + - & | ] DELEGATING_METHODS = (ARRAY_METHODS + MUST_DEFINE - MUST_NOT_DEFINE). map { |s| s.to_s }.sort.uniq # Now do the delegation. DELEGATING_METHODS.each do |sym| if SPECIAL_RETURN.include?(sym) ln = __LINE__ + 1 class_eval %{ def #{sym}(*args, &block) resolve result = @items.send(:#{sym}, *args, &block) FileList.new.import(result) end }, __FILE__, ln else ln = __LINE__ + 1 class_eval %{ def #{sym}(*args, &block) resolve result = @items.send(:#{sym}, *args, &block) result.object_id == @items.object_id ? self : result end }, __FILE__, ln end end # Create a file list from the globbable patterns given. If you wish to # perform multiple includes or excludes at object build time, use the # "yield self" pattern. # # Example: # file_list = FileList.new('lib/**/*.rb', 'test/test*.rb') # # pkg_files = FileList.new('lib/**/*') do |fl| # fl.exclude(/\bCVS\b/) # end # def initialize(*patterns) @pending_add = [] @pending = false @exclude_patterns = DEFAULT_IGNORE_PATTERNS.dup @exclude_procs = DEFAULT_IGNORE_PROCS.dup @items = [] patterns.each { |pattern| include(pattern) } yield self if block_given? end # Add file names defined by glob patterns to the file list. If an array # is given, add each element of the array. # # Example: # file_list.include("*.java", "*.cfg") # file_list.include %w( math.c lib.h *.o ) # def include(*filenames) # TODO: check for pending filenames.each do |fn| if fn.respond_to? :to_ary include(*fn.to_ary) else @pending_add << fn end end @pending = true self end alias :add :include # Register a list of file name patterns that should be excluded from the # list. Patterns may be regular expressions, glob patterns or regular # strings. In addition, a block given to exclude will remove entries that # return true when given to the block. # # Note that glob patterns are expanded against the file system. If a file # is explicitly added to a file list, but does not exist in the file # system, then an glob pattern in the exclude list will not exclude the # file. # # Examples: # FileList['a.c', 'b.c'].exclude("a.c") => ['b.c'] # FileList['a.c', 'b.c'].exclude(/^a/) => ['b.c'] # # If "a.c" is a file, then ... # FileList['a.c', 'b.c'].exclude("a.*") => ['b.c'] # # If "a.c" is not a file, then ... # FileList['a.c', 'b.c'].exclude("a.*") => ['a.c', 'b.c'] # def exclude(*patterns, &block) patterns.each do |pat| @exclude_patterns << pat end @exclude_procs << block if block_given? resolve_exclude unless @pending self end # Clear all the exclude patterns so that we exclude nothing. def clear_exclude @exclude_patterns = [] @exclude_procs = [] self end # Define equality. def ==(array) to_ary == array end # Return the internal array object. def to_a resolve @items end # Return the internal array object. def to_ary to_a end # Lie about our class. def is_a?(klass) klass == Array || super(klass) end alias kind_of? is_a? # Redefine * to return either a string or a new file list. def *(other) result = @items * other case result when Array FileList.new.import(result) else result end end # Resolve all the pending adds now. def resolve if @pending @pending = false @pending_add.each do |fn| resolve_add(fn) end @pending_add = [] resolve_exclude end self end def resolve_add(fn) case fn when %r{[*?\[\{]} add_matching(fn) else self << fn end end private :resolve_add def resolve_exclude reject! { |fn| excluded_from_list?(fn) } self end private :resolve_exclude # Return a new FileList with the results of running +sub+ against each # element of the original list. # # Example: # FileList['a.c', 'b.c'].sub(/\.c$/, '.o') => ['a.o', 'b.o'] # def sub(pat, rep) inject(FileList.new) { |res, fn| res << fn.sub(pat, rep) } end # Return a new FileList with the results of running +gsub+ against each # element of the original list. # # Example: # FileList['lib/test/file', 'x/y'].gsub(/\//, "\\") # => ['lib\\test\\file', 'x\\y'] # def gsub(pat, rep) inject(FileList.new) { |res, fn| res << fn.gsub(pat, rep) } end # Same as +sub+ except that the original file list is modified. def sub!(pat, rep) each_with_index { |fn, i| self[i] = fn.sub(pat, rep) } self end # Same as +gsub+ except that the original file list is modified. def gsub!(pat, rep) each_with_index { |fn, i| self[i] = fn.gsub(pat, rep) } self end # Apply the pathmap spec to each of the included file names, returning a # new file list with the modified paths. (See String#pathmap for # details.) def pathmap(spec=nil) collect { |fn| fn.pathmap(spec) } end # Return a new FileList with <tt>String#ext</tt> method applied to # each member of the array. # # This method is a shortcut for: # # array.collect { |item| item.ext(newext) } # # +ext+ is a user added method for the Array class. def ext(newext='') collect { |fn| fn.ext(newext) } end # Grep each of the files in the filelist using the given pattern. If a # block is given, call the block on each matching line, passing the file # name, line number, and the matching line of text. If no block is given, # a standard emacs style file:linenumber:line message will be printed to # standard out. Returns the number of matched items. def egrep(pattern, *options) matched = 0 each do |fn| begin open(fn, "r", *options) do |inf| count = 0 inf.each do |line| count += 1 if pattern.match(line) matched += 1 if block_given? yield fn, count, line else puts "#{fn}:#{count}:#{line}" end end end end rescue StandardError => ex $stderr.puts "Error while processing '#{fn}': #{ex}" end end matched end # Return a new file list that only contains file names from the current # file list that exist on the file system. def existing select { |fn| File.exist?(fn) } end # Modify the current file list so that it contains only file name that # exist on the file system. def existing! resolve @items = @items.select { |fn| File.exist?(fn) } self end # FileList version of partition. Needed because the nested arrays should # be FileLists in this version. def partition(&block) # :nodoc: resolve result = @items.partition(&block) [ FileList.new.import(result[0]), FileList.new.import(result[1]), ] end # Convert a FileList to a string by joining all elements with a space. def to_s resolve self.join(' ') end # Add matching glob patterns. def add_matching(pattern) FileList.glob(pattern).each do |fn| self << fn unless excluded_from_list?(fn) end end private :add_matching # Should the given file name be excluded from the list? # # NOTE: This method was formally named "exclude?", but Rails # introduced an exclude? method as an array method and setup a # conflict with file list. We renamed the method to avoid # confusion. If you were using "FileList#exclude?" in your user # code, you will need to update. def excluded_from_list?(fn) return true if @exclude_patterns.any? do |pat| case pat when Regexp fn =~ pat when /[*?]/ File.fnmatch?(pat, fn, File::FNM_PATHNAME) else fn == pat end end @exclude_procs.any? { |p| p.call(fn) } end DEFAULT_IGNORE_PATTERNS = [ /(^|[\/\\])CVS([\/\\]|$)/, /(^|[\/\\])\.svn([\/\\]|$)/, /\.bak$/, /~$/ ] DEFAULT_IGNORE_PROCS = [ proc { |fn| fn =~ /(^|[\/\\])core$/ && ! File.directory?(fn) } ] def import(array) @items = array self end class << self # Create a new file list including the files listed. Similar to: # # FileList.new(*args) def [](*args) new(*args) end # Get a sorted list of files matching the pattern. This method # should be prefered to Dir[pattern] and Dir.glob(pattern) because # the files returned are guaranteed to be sorted. def glob(pattern, *args) Dir.glob(pattern, *args).sort end end end end module Rake class << self # Yield each file or directory component. def each_dir_parent(dir) # :nodoc: old_length = nil while dir != '.' && dir.length != old_length yield(dir) old_length = dir.length dir = File.dirname(dir) end end end end # module Rake