--- title: "Re-Inventing Task Runner That I Actually Used Daily" url: re-inventing-task-runner-that-i-actually-used-daily.html date: 2023-05-31T12:21:10+02:00 type: post draft: true --- Couple of months ago I had this brilliant idea of re-inventing the wheel by making an alternative for make. And so I went. Boldly into the battle. And to my big surprise my attempt resulted in not a completely useless piece of software. My initial requirements were quite simple but soon grow into something more ambitious. And looking back I should have stuck to the simple version. My laziness was on my side this time though. Because I haven’t implemented some of the features I now realise I really didn’t need them and they would bog the whole program and make it be something it was never meant to be. My basic requirements were following: - Syntax should be a tiny bit inspired by Rake and Rakefiles. - Should borrow the overall feel of a unit test experience. - Using something like Python would be a bit of an overkill. - The program must be statically compiled, so it can run on same architecture without libc, musl dependencies or things like that. - Install ruby for rake is a bit overkill and can not be done with certain really lightweight distributions like Alpine Linux. This tool would be usable on such lightweight systems for remote debugging. - I want to use it for more than just compiling things. I want to use it as an entry-point into a project, and I want this to help me indirectly document the project as well. - It should be an abstraction over bash shell or the default system shell. - Each task essentially becomes its own shell instance. - Must work on Linux and macOS systems. - By default, running `erd` list all the available tasks (when I use make, I usually put a disclaimer that you should check Makefile to see all available target). - Should support passing arguments when you run it from a shell. - Normal variable as the same as environmental variables. There is no distinction. Every variable is also essentially an environment variable and can be used by other programs. - State between tasks is not shared, and this makes this “pure” shell instances. - Should be single-threaded for the start and later expanded with `@spawn` command. - Variables behave like macros and are preprocessed before evaluation. - Should support something like `assure` that would check if programs like C compiler or Python (whatever the project requires) are installed on a machine. Quite a reasonable list of requirements. I do this things already in my Makefiles or/and Bash scripts. But I would like to avoid repeating myself every time I start working on something new. So I started with the following syntax. ```ruby @env on # Override the default shell. @shell /bin/bash # Assure that program is installed. @assure docker-compose pip python3 # Load local dotenv files (these are then globally available). @dotenv .env @dotenv .env.sample @dotenv some_other_file # This are local variables but still accessible in tasks. @var HI = "hey" @var TOKEN = "sometoken" @var EMAIL = "m@m.com" @var PASSWORD = "pass" @var EDITOR = "vim" @task dev "Test chars .:'}{]!//" does echo "..." $HI end @task clean "Cleans the obj files" does rm .obj end @task greet "Greets the user" does echo "Hi user $TOKEN or $WINDOWID $EMAIL" end @task stack "Starts Docker stack" does docker-compose -f stack.yml up end @task todo "Shows all todos in source files and count them" does grep -ir "TODO|FIXME" . | wc -l end @task test1 "For testing 1" does unknown-command echo "test1" ls -lha end @task test2 "For testing 2" does echo "test1" ls -lha docker-compose -f samples/stack.yml up end ``` One thing that I really like about Errand. Yes, this is what it is called. And it is available at https://git.mitjafelicijan.com/errand.git/about/. Moving on. One thing that I really like is that a task is a persistent shell. By that I mean, that the whole task, even if it contains multiple command in one shell. In make each line in a target is that and you need to combine lines or add `\` at the end of the line. ```bash # How you do this things in make. target: source .venv/bin/activate \ python script.py ``` This solves this problem. Consider each task and what is being executed in that task a shell that will only close when all the tasks are completed. By self-documenting I mean that if you are in a directory with `Errandfile` in, if you only type `erd` and press enter it should by default display all the possible targets. In make i was doing this by having a first target be something like `default` that echos the message “Check Makefile for all available target.” Because all of the tasks in Errand require a message I use that to display let’s call it table of contents. Because I don’t use any external dependencies this whole thing can be statically compiled. So that also checked one of the boxes. It works on Linux and on a Mac so that’s also a bonus. I don’t believe this would work on Windows machines because of the way that I use shell instances. By you could use something like Windows Subsystem for Linux and run it in there. That is a valid option. To finish this essay off, how was it to use it in “real life”. I have to be honest. Some of the missing features still bother me. `@dotenv` directive is still missing and I need to implement this ASAP. Another thing that needs to happen is support for streaming output. Currently commands like `docker-compose` that runs in foreground mode is not compatible with Errand. So commands that stream output are an issue. I need to revisit how I initiate shell and how I read stdout and stderr. But that shouldn’t be a problem. I have been very satisfied with this thing. I am pleasantly surprised by how useful it is. I really wanted to test this in the wild before I commit to it. I have more abandoned project than Google and it’s bringing a massive shame to my family at this point. So I wanted to be sure that this is even useful. And it actually is. Quite surprised at myself. I really need to package this now and write proper docs. And maybe rewrite tokeniser. Its atrocious right now. Site to behold! But that is an issue for another time.