A good enough build system.
To run a build, call codeglue
.
To run the build server, call codeglue --mode=server
.
You can optionally add either --stage=development
or --stage=production
.
├── source
│ ├── index.html
│ ├── index.css
│ └── index.js
├── package.json
├── .gitignore
└── .eslintrc
Will build from source. It starts with the indexes, like "./source/index.js", and compiles together any and all dependencies (and all dependencies of those dependencies). To declare a dependency in JS, use import
, or in CSS, use @import
. If an error is found in any of the sources, the build is aborted, and the error is reported. When the build is done, the files are put in the "./build/web" directory.
Will build from source and host the build at localhost:8080. The sources are compiled as detailed above. If, after that, any of the sources are changed, the script will automatically rebuild them, and automatically refresh the build that the server is hosting.
Will build from source and bundle them into executables. The executables support Windows, Mac, and Linux. The executables also include an inlined webpage, or web1
, which can be run in Chrome, Firefox, Opera, and Safari.
Will build from source for a specific stage, like --stage=development
or --stage=production
. If neither is specified, the stage defaults to development. A variable named STAGE
is injected into the code, which will return either PRODUCTION
or DEVELOPMENT
. During a production build, the sources are minified and uglified and concatenated.
Codeglue is just a bunch of other build tools setup together:
This project is licensed under the MIT license.