diff options
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | python/mach/docs/commands.rst | 129 |
1 files changed, 129 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/python/mach/docs/commands.rst b/python/mach/docs/commands.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..7547193000 --- /dev/null +++ b/python/mach/docs/commands.rst @@ -0,0 +1,129 @@ +.. _mach_commands: + +===================== +Implementing Commands +===================== + +Mach commands are defined via Python decorators. + +All the relevant decorators are defined in the *mach.decorators* module. +The important decorators are as follows: + +:py:func:`Command <mach.decorators.Command>` + A function decorator that denotes that the function should be called when + the specified command is requested. The decorator takes a command name + as its first argument and a number of additional arguments to + configure the behavior of the command. The decorated function must take a + ``command_context`` argument as its first. + ``command_context`` is a properly configured instance of a ``MozbuildObject`` + subclass, meaning it can be used for accessing things like the current config + and running processes. + +:py:func:`CommandArgument <mach.decorators.CommandArgument>` + A function decorator that defines an argument to the command. Its + arguments are essentially proxied to ArgumentParser.add_argument() + +:py:func:`SubCommand <mach.decorators.SubCommand>` + A function decorator that denotes that the function should be a + sub-command to an existing ``@Command``. The decorator takes the + parent command name as its first argument and the sub-command name + as its second argument. + + ``@CommandArgument`` can be used on ``@SubCommand`` instances just + like they can on ``@Command`` instances. + + +Here is a complete example: + +.. code-block:: python + + from mach.decorators import ( + CommandArgument, + Command, + ) + + @Command('doit', help='Do ALL OF THE THINGS.') + @CommandArgument('--force', '-f', action='store_true', + help='Force doing it.') + def doit(command_context, force=False): + # Do stuff here. + +When the module is loaded, the decorators tell mach about all handlers. +When mach runs, it takes the assembled metadata from these handlers and +hooks it up to the command line driver. Under the hood, arguments passed +to the decorators are being used to help mach parse command arguments, +formulate arguments to the methods, etc. See the documentation in the +:py:mod:`mach.base` module for more. + +The Python modules defining mach commands do not need to live inside the +main mach source tree. + +Conditionally Filtering Commands +================================ + +Sometimes it might only make sense to run a command given a certain +context. For example, running tests only makes sense if the product +they are testing has been built, and said build is available. To make +sure a command is only runnable from within a correct context, you can +define a series of conditions on the +:py:func:`Command <mach.decorators.Command>` decorator. + +A condition is simply a function that takes an instance of the +:py:func:`mozbuild.base.MachCommandBase` class as an argument, and +returns ``True`` or ``False``. If any of the conditions defined on a +command return ``False``, the command will not be runnable. The +docstring of a condition function is used in error messages, to explain +why the command cannot currently be run. + +Here is an example: + +.. code-block:: python + + from mach.decorators import ( + Command, + ) + + def build_available(cls): + """The build needs to be available.""" + return cls.build_path is not None + + @Command('run_tests', conditions=[build_available]) + def run_tests(command_context): + # Do stuff here. + +By default all commands without any conditions applied will be runnable, +but it is possible to change this behaviour by setting +``require_conditions`` to ``True``: + +.. code-block:: python + + m = mach.main.Mach() + m.require_conditions = True + +Minimizing Code in Commands +=========================== + +Mach command modules, classes, and methods work best when they are +minimal dispatchers. The reason is import bloat. Currently, the mach +core needs to import every Python file potentially containing mach +commands for every command invocation. If you have dozens of commands or +commands in modules that import a lot of Python code, these imports +could slow mach down and waste memory. + +It is thus recommended that mach modules, classes, and methods do as +little work as possible. Ideally the module should only import from +the :py:mod:`mach` package. If you need external modules, you should +import them from within the command method. + +To keep code size small, the body of a command method should be limited +to: + +1. Obtaining user input (parsing arguments, prompting, etc) +2. Calling into some other Python package +3. Formatting output + +Of course, these recommendations can be ignored if you want to risk +slower performance. + +In the future, the mach driver may cache the dispatching information or +have it intelligently loaded to facilitate lazy loading. |