Foy
A simple, light-weight and modern task runner for general purpose.
Contents
- Foy
- Contents
- Features
- Install
- Write a Foyfile
- Using with built-in promised-based API
- Using with other packages
- Using dependencies
- Using namespaces
- Useful utils
- Using in CI servers
- Using lifecycle hooks
- run task in task
- Watch and build
- Using with custom compiler
- zsh/bash auto completion (New!!!)
- API documentation
- License
Features
- Promise-based tasks and built-in utilities.
<a href="https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs" target="_blank">
shelljs</a>
-like commands- Easy to learn, stop spending hours for build tools.
- Small install size
Install
yarn add -D foy # or npm i -D foy
Or install globally with
yarn add -g foy # or npm i -g foy
Write a Foyfile
You need to add a Foyfile.js(or Foyfile.ts with tsx or @swc-node/register or ts-node installed) to your project root.
Also, you can simply generate a Foyfile.js via:
foy --init
which will create a simple Foyfile.js
in the current folder:
// Foyfile.js
const { task } = require('foy')
task('build', async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('tsc')
})
You can also generate a Foyfile.ts
via
foy --init ts
Then we can run foy build
to execute the build
task.
foy build
You can also add some options and a description to your tasks:
import { task, desc, option, strict } from 'foy'
desc('Build ts files with tsc')
option('-w, --watch', 'watch file changes')
strict() // This will throw an error if you passed some options that doesn't defined via `option()`
task('build', async ctx => {
await ctx.exec(`tsc ${ctx.options.watch ? '-w' : ''}`)
})
And, if using TypeScript, add types to your options through the task
generic:
import { task, desc, option, strict } from 'foy'
type BuildOptions = {
watch: boolean
}
desc('Build ts files with tsc')
option('-w, --watch', 'watch file changes')
strict() // This will throw an error if you passed some options that doesn't defined via `option()`
task<BuildOptions>('build', async ctx => { // ctx.options now has type BuildOptions instead of unknown
await ctx.exec(`tsc ${ctx.options.watch ? '-w' : ''}`)
})
foy build -w
Warning! If you want to set flags like strict for all tasks, please use setGlobalOptions
:
import { setGlobalOptions } from 'foy'
setGlobalOptions({ strict: true }) // all tasks' options will be strict.
option('-aa') // strict via default
task('dev', async ctx => {
})
option('-bb') // strict via default
task('build', async ctx => {
})
Using with built-in promised-based API
import { fs, task } from 'foy'
task('some task', async ctx => {
await fs.rmrf('/some/dir/or/file') // Remove directory or file
await fs.copy('/src', '/dist') // Copy folder or file
let json = await fs.readJson('./xx.json')
await ctx
.env('NODE_ENV', 'production')
.env('NODE_ENV=production')
.cd('./src')
.exec('some command') // Execute an command
let { stdout } = await ctx.exec('ls', { stdio: 'pipe' }) // Get the stdout, default is empty because it's redirected to current process via `stdio: 'inherit'`.
})
Using with other packages
import { task, logger } from 'foy'
import * as axios from 'axios'
task('build', async ctx => {
let res = await axios.get('https://your.server/data.json')
logger.info(res.data)
})
Using dependencies
import { task } from 'foy'
import * as axios from 'axios'
task('test', async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('mocha')
})
task('build', async ctx => {
let res = await axios.get('https://your.server/data.json')
console.log(res.data)
await ctx.exec('build my awesome project')
})
task(
'publish:patch',
['test', 'build'], // Run test and build before publish
async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('npm version patch')
await ctx.exec('npm publish')
}
)
Dependencies run serially by default but you can specify when a task should be run concurrently.
Example: Passing running options to dependencies:
task(
'publish:patch',
[{
name: 'test',
async: true, // run test parallelly
force: true, // force rerun test whether it has been executed before or not.
}, {
name: 'build',
async: true,
force: true,
},],
async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('npm version patch')
await ctx.exec('npm publish')
}
)
/* Sugar version */
task(
'publish:patch',
[ 'test'.async().force(),
'build'.async().force() ],
async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('npm version patch')
await ctx.exec('npm publish')
}
)
/*
Priority for async tasks
Default is 0, higher values will be run earlier; so, in this next example, `build` will be run before `test`.
(Note: If you have multiple async dependencies with same priority, they will be executed in parallel.)
*/
task(
'publish:patch',
[ 'test'.async(0).force(),
'build'.async(1).force() ],
async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('npm version patch')
await ctx.exec('npm publish')
}
)
You can also pass options to dependencies:
task('task1', async ctx => {
console.log(ctx.options) // "{ forceRebuild: true, lazyOptions: 1 }"
console.log(ctx.global.options) // options from command line "{ a: 1 }"
})
task('task2', [{
name: 'task1',
options: {
forceRebuild: true,
},
// Some options that rely on ctx or asynchronization,
// it will be merged to options.
resolveOptions: async ctx => {
return { lazyOptions: 1 }
}
}])
// foy task2 -a 1
Using namespaces
To avoid name collisions, Foy provides namespaces to group tasks via the namespace
function:
import { task, namespace } from 'foy'
namespace('client', ns => {
before(() => {
logger.info('before')
})
after(() => {
logger.info('after')
})
onerror(() => {
logger.info('onerror')
})
task('start', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // client:start
task('build', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // client:build
task('watch', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // client:watch
namespace('proj1', ns => { // nested namespace
onerror(() => {
logger.info('onerror', ns)
})
task('start', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // client:proj1:start
})
})
namespace('server', ns => {
task('build', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // server:build
task('start', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // server:start
task('watch', async ctx => { /* ... */ }) // server:watch
})
task('start', ['client:start'.async(), 'server:start'.async()]) // start
// foy start
// foy client:build
Useful utils
fs
Foy wraps the NodeJS's fs
(file system) module with a promise-based API, so you can easily use async/await patterns, if you prefer. Foy also implements some useful utility functions for build scripts not present in NodeJS's built-in modules.
import { fs } from 'foy'
task('build', async ctx => {
let f = await fs.readFileSync('./assets/someFile')
// copy file or directory
await fs.copy('./fromPath', './toPath')
// watch a directory
await fs.watchDir('./src', (event, filename) => {
logger.info(event, filename)
})
// make directory with parent directories
await fs.mkdirp('./some/directory/with/parents/not/exists')
// write file will auto create missing parent directories
await fs.outputFile('./some/file/with/parents/not/exists', 'file data')
// write json file will auto create missing parent directories
await fs.outputJson('./some/file/with/parents/not/exists', {text: 'json data'})
let file = await fs.readJson('./some/jsonFile')
// iterate directory tree
await fs.iter('./src', async (path, stat) => {
if (stat.isDirectory()) {
logger.info('directory:', path)
// skip scan node_modules
if (path.endsWith('node_modules')) {
return true
}
} else if (stat.isFile()) {
logger.warn('file:', path)
}
})
})
logger
Foy includes a light-weight built-in logger
import { logger } from 'foy'
task('build', async ctx => {
logger.debug('debug', { aa: 1})
logger.info('info')
logger.warn('warn')
logger.error('error')
})
exec command
A simple wrapper for sindresorhus's lovely module execa
import { logger } from 'foy'
task('build', async ctx => {
await ctx.exec('tsc')
// run multiple commands synchronously
await ctx.exec([
'tsc --outDir ./lib',
'tsc --module es6 --outDir ./es',
])
// run multiple commands concurrently
await Promise.all([
ctx.exec('eslint'),
ctx.exec('tsc'),
ctx.exec('typedoc'),
])
// restart process when file changes
ctx.monitor('./src', 'node ./dist')
ctx.monitor('./src', ['rm -rf dist', 'tsc', 'node dist'])
ctx.monitor('./src', async () => {
await ctx.run('build:server')
await ctx.exec('node ./dist') // auth detect long-running process when using ctx.exec
})
ctx.monitor('./src', async (p) => {
// manually point out the process need to be killed when restart
p.current = require('child_process').exec('node dist')
})
})
Using in CI servers
If you use Foy in CI servers, you won't want the loading spinners as most CI servers will log stdout and stderr in discreet frames not meant for continuous streaming animations. Luckily, Foy has already considered this! You can simply disable the loading animation like this:
import { task, setGlobalOptions } from 'foy'
setGlobalOptions({ loading: false }) // disable loading animations
task('test', async cyx => { /* ... */ })
/*
$ foy test
DependencyGraph for task [test]:
─ test
Task: test
...
*/
Using lifecycle hooks
You can add lifecycle hooks via the before
, after
, and onerror
functions.
import { before, after, onerror } from 'foy'
before(() => { // do something before all tasks tree start
// ...
})
after(() => { // do something after all tasks tree finished
// ...
})
onerror((err) => { // do something when error happens
// ...
})
run task in task
task('task1', async ctx => { /* ... */ })
task('task2', async ctx => {
// do things before task1
// run task1 manually, so we can
// do things before or after it
await ctx.run('task1')
// do things after task1
})
Watch and build
task('build', async ctx => { /* build your project */ })
let p = null
task('watch', async ctx => {
ctx.monitor('./src', async ()=> {
ctx.exec('node ./src/server.ts')
})
})
Using with custom compiler
# Write Foyfile in ts, enabled by default
foy -r ts-node/register -c ./some/Foyfile.ts build
# Write Foyfile in coffee
foy -r coffeescript/register -c ./some/Foyfile.coffee build
zsh/bash auto completion (New!!!)
Add foy auto completion in zsh/bash:
# for bash
foy --completion-profile >> ~/.bashrc
# for zsh
foy --completion-profile >> ~/.zshrc
API documentation
https://zaaack.github.io/foy/api
License
MIT