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Direktori : /proc/thread-self/root/opt/alt/ruby26/lib64/ruby/2.6.0/bundler/vendor/thor/lib/thor/ |
Current File : //proc/thread-self/root/opt/alt/ruby26/lib64/ruby/2.6.0/bundler/vendor/thor/lib/thor/invocation.rb |
class Bundler::Thor module Invocation def self.included(base) #:nodoc: base.extend ClassMethods end module ClassMethods # This method is responsible for receiving a name and find the proper # class and command for it. The key is an optional parameter which is # available only in class methods invocations (i.e. in Bundler::Thor::Group). def prepare_for_invocation(key, name) #:nodoc: case name when Symbol, String Bundler::Thor::Util.find_class_and_command_by_namespace(name.to_s, !key) else name end end end # Make initializer aware of invocations and the initialization args. def initialize(args = [], options = {}, config = {}, &block) #:nodoc: @_invocations = config[:invocations] || Hash.new { |h, k| h[k] = [] } @_initializer = [args, options, config] super end # Make the current command chain accessible with in a Bundler::Thor-(sub)command def current_command_chain @_invocations.values.flatten.map(&:to_sym) end # Receives a name and invokes it. The name can be a string (either "command" or # "namespace:command"), a Bundler::Thor::Command, a Class or a Bundler::Thor instance. If the # command cannot be guessed by name, it can also be supplied as second argument. # # You can also supply the arguments, options and configuration values for # the command to be invoked, if none is given, the same values used to # initialize the invoker are used to initialize the invoked. # # When no name is given, it will invoke the default command of the current class. # # ==== Examples # # class A < Bundler::Thor # def foo # invoke :bar # invoke "b:hello", ["Erik"] # end # # def bar # invoke "b:hello", ["Erik"] # end # end # # class B < Bundler::Thor # def hello(name) # puts "hello #{name}" # end # end # # You can notice that the method "foo" above invokes two commands: "bar", # which belongs to the same class and "hello" which belongs to the class B. # # By using an invocation system you ensure that a command is invoked only once. # In the example above, invoking "foo" will invoke "b:hello" just once, even # if it's invoked later by "bar" method. # # When class A invokes class B, all arguments used on A initialization are # supplied to B. This allows lazy parse of options. Let's suppose you have # some rspec commands: # # class Rspec < Bundler::Thor::Group # class_option :mock_framework, :type => :string, :default => :rr # # def invoke_mock_framework # invoke "rspec:#{options[:mock_framework]}" # end # end # # As you noticed, it invokes the given mock framework, which might have its # own options: # # class Rspec::RR < Bundler::Thor::Group # class_option :style, :type => :string, :default => :mock # end # # Since it's not rspec concern to parse mock framework options, when RR # is invoked all options are parsed again, so RR can extract only the options # that it's going to use. # # If you want Rspec::RR to be initialized with its own set of options, you # have to do that explicitly: # # invoke "rspec:rr", [], :style => :foo # # Besides giving an instance, you can also give a class to invoke: # # invoke Rspec::RR, [], :style => :foo # def invoke(name = nil, *args) if name.nil? warn "[Bundler::Thor] Calling invoke() without argument is deprecated. Please use invoke_all instead.\n#{caller.join("\n")}" return invoke_all end args.unshift(nil) if args.first.is_a?(Array) || args.first.nil? command, args, opts, config = args klass, command = _retrieve_class_and_command(name, command) raise "Missing Bundler::Thor class for invoke #{name}" unless klass raise "Expected Bundler::Thor class, got #{klass}" unless klass <= Bundler::Thor::Base args, opts, config = _parse_initialization_options(args, opts, config) klass.send(:dispatch, command, args, opts, config) do |instance| instance.parent_options = options end end # Invoke the given command if the given args. def invoke_command(command, *args) #:nodoc: current = @_invocations[self.class] unless current.include?(command.name) current << command.name command.run(self, *args) end end alias_method :invoke_task, :invoke_command # Invoke all commands for the current instance. def invoke_all #:nodoc: self.class.all_commands.map { |_, command| invoke_command(command) } end # Invokes using shell padding. def invoke_with_padding(*args) with_padding { invoke(*args) } end protected # Configuration values that are shared between invocations. def _shared_configuration #:nodoc: {:invocations => @_invocations} end # This method simply retrieves the class and command to be invoked. # If the name is nil or the given name is a command in the current class, # use the given name and return self as class. Otherwise, call # prepare_for_invocation in the current class. def _retrieve_class_and_command(name, sent_command = nil) #:nodoc: if name.nil? [self.class, nil] elsif self.class.all_commands[name.to_s] [self.class, name.to_s] else klass, command = self.class.prepare_for_invocation(nil, name) [klass, command || sent_command] end end alias_method :_retrieve_class_and_task, :_retrieve_class_and_command # Initialize klass using values stored in the @_initializer. def _parse_initialization_options(args, opts, config) #:nodoc: stored_args, stored_opts, stored_config = @_initializer args ||= stored_args.dup opts ||= stored_opts.dup config ||= {} config = stored_config.merge(_shared_configuration).merge!(config) [args, opts, config] end end end