grunt-execier

0.4.7 • Public • Published

build status grunt-exec

Grunt plugin for executing shell commands.

Installation

Install grunt-exec using npm:

$ npm install grunt-exec

Then add this line to your project's Gruntfile.js:

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-exec');

Usage

This plugin is a multi task, meaning that grunt will automatically iterate over all exec targets if a target is not specified.

If the exit code generated by the specified shell command is greater than 0, grunt-exec will assume an error has occurred and will abort grunt immediately.

Properties

  • command (alias: cmd): The shell command to be executed. Must be a string or a function that returns a string.
  • stdout: If true, stdout will be printed. Defaults to true.
  • stderr: If true, stderr will be printed. Defaults to true.
  • cwd: Current working directory of the shell command. Defaults to the directory containing your Gruntfile.
  • exitCode (alias: exitCodes): The expected exit code(s), task will fail if the actual exit code doesn't match. Defaults to 0. Can be an array for multiple allowed exit codes.
  • callback: The callback function passed child_process.exec. Defaults to a noop.

If the configuration is instead a simple string, it will be interpreted as a full command itself:

exec: {
  echo_something: 'echo "This is something"'
}

Command Functions

If you plan on doing advanced stuff with grunt-exec, you'll most likely be using functions for the command property of your exec targets. This section details a couple of helpful tips about command functions that could help make your life easier.

Passing arguments from the command line

Command functions can be called with arbitrary arguments. Let's say we have the following exec target that echoes a formatted name:

exec: {
  echo_name: {
    cmd: function(firstName, lastName) {
      var formattedName = [
        lastName.toUpperCase(),
        firstName.toUpperCase()
      ].join(', ');

      return 'echo ' + formattedName;
    }
  }
}

In order to get SIMPSON, HOMER echoed, you'd run grunt exec:echo_name:homer:simpson from the command line.

Accessing grunt object

All command functions are called in the context of the grunt object that they are being ran with. This means you can access the grunt object through this.

Example

The following examples are available in grunt-exec's Gruntfile.

grunt.initConfig({
  exec: {
    remove_logs: {
      command: 'rm -f *.log',
      stdout: false,
      stderr: false
    },
    list_files: {
      cmd: 'ls -l **'
    },
    list_all_files: 'ls -la',
    echo_grunt_version: {
      cmd: function() { return 'echo ' + this.version; }
    },
    echo_name: {
      cmd: function(firstName, lastName) {
        var formattedName = [
          lastName.toUpperCase(),
          firstName.toUpperCase()
        ].join(', ');

        return 'echo ' + formattedName;
      }
    }
  }
});

Testing

$ cd grunt-exec
$ npm test

Issues

Found a bug? Create an issue on GitHub.

https://github.com/jharding/grunt-exec/issues

Versioning

For transparency and insight into the release cycle, releases will be numbered with the follow format:

<major>.<minor>.<patch>

And constructed with the following guidelines:

  • Breaking backwards compatibility bumps the major
  • New additions without breaking backwards compatibility bumps the minor
  • Bug fixes and misc changes bump the patch

For more information on semantic versioning, please visit http://semver.org/.

License

Copyright (c) 2012-2014 Jake Harding
Licensed under the MIT License.

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npm i grunt-execier

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Version

0.4.7

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  • furchin