A compromise between the speed of make and the ease of use of a build script
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README.md

Moonbuild

Because make is painful to use, and build scripts are too slow. Moonbuild aims to be a good compromise.

You should probably use tup instead if you want a good build system.

How does it work?

Basically like make, but in Moonscript and with explicit ordering. See its Build.moon for examples (and you can compare it with the Makefile, both do the same thing).

Why moonscript?

It's fast, based on lua, and it's easy to write DSLs with it, so the build instructions can be readable. Also, it's a full programming language, so there are no arbitrary restrictions.

How do I install it?

  • First, you'll need Lua 5.2 (untested) or 5.3 and LuaRocks
  • Then, you'll need moonscript, argparse, luafilesystem and luastatic, which you can get from luarocks
  • Now, you can simply make Moonbuild, or build it with itself with moon moonbuild.moon
  • You're now ready to install it, with sudo make install or sudo ./moonbuild install

Now, how do I use it?

First, you'll need a Build.moon, Buildfile.moon, Build or Buildfile in the root of your project. Then, you'll need a few targets, and ideally a default target (or the default target will be all). public targets will be listed by moonbuild -l. To execute a command, you can use either -cmd or #cmd (the former will print it before executing it, the later won't).

[default] [public] target <name> [deps: <deps>] [in: <inputs>] [out: <outputs>] [from: <from>] [fn: <code>]

Define a new target, and give it a list of depenancies, inputs, outputs and a function to run to build it.

deps, in and out can be either strings or tables. from acts like both in and deps. name must be a string and code must be a function, that will be given a table with the following fields:

  • name: the name of the target
  • ins: the table of inputs
  • infile: the first input
  • outs: the table of outputs
  • outfile: the first output

If name is a glob, the target becomes a glob target. Glob targets can be used with name that matches them (with a limit of one glob target per name, and no ordering is specified). Glob targets will have their name substituted for their inputs, outputs and dependancies.

-cmd [<args>...]

Prints and executes the command cmd with the given args. See run for how args works.

#cmd [<args>...]

Executes without printing the command cmd with the given args. See run for how args works.

wildcard <wc>

Returns a table with all the matching files. Valid wildcards contain either **, which can be expanded by any characters, including '/', or *, which cannot be expanded by /. Wildcards can only contain one ** or *.

wc must be a string

exclude <list> [<exclusions>...]

Removes all exclusions from the given list, and returns it.

list must be a table, and exclusions can be any type

patsubst <str> <patt> <subst>

If the string matches patt, makes it match subst instead. If str is a table, it is recursively applied to all array values.

Patterns are in the format [prefix]%[suffix], with the % representing any sequence of characters, including /.

str, pat and subst must be strings

foreach <table> <code>

Applies code to every element of table, and returns the resulting table.

table must be a table, and code a function.

min|max <table>

Returns either the min or max value of the given table.

table must be a table

first <table> <code>

Returns the first value of the table that verifies the given condition.

table must be a table, and code a function

flatten <table>

Flattens a table so that it has exactly one dimension.

table can be anything

insert|unpack|concat

The functions, imported from the table library.

mtime <file>

Returns the modification time of file, or nil if it doesn't exist.

file must be a string

exists <file>

Returns true if the file exists, false otherwise.

file must be a string

run <cmd> [<args> [print: <print>] [error: <error>]]

Runs the given command with the given arguments. If print is truthy, prints the command before executing it, and if error is truthy, crashes if the command fails. Returns a boolean which is true if the command ended with success, and a number which is the return code.

cmd must be a string, args must be a table, which can contain either strings or other tables. raw: <val> is a special kind of argument that will not be escaped. print and error can be anything, but booleans or nil are recommended

popen <cmd> [<args> [print: <print>]]

Same as run, but returns a io.popen handle.

License

MIT