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All mach modules are now explicitly listed in the mach driver. --HG-- rename : python/mozbuild/mach/commands/build.py => python/mozbuild/mozbuild/mach_commands.py
176 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
176 lines
6.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
The mach Driver
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===============
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The *mach* driver is the command line interface (CLI) to the source tree.
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The *mach* driver is invoked by running the *mach* script or from
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instantiating the *Mach* class from the *mach.main* module.
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Implementing mach Commands
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--------------------------
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The *mach* driver follows the convention of popular tools like Git,
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Subversion, and Mercurial and provides a common driver for multiple
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subcommands.
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Subcommands are implemented by decorating a class and by decorating
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methods that act as subcommand handlers.
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Relevant decorators are defined in the *mach.decorators* module. There are
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the *Command* and *CommandArgument* decorators, which should be used
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on methods to denote that a specific method represents a handler for
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a mach subcommand. There is also the *CommandProvider* decorator,
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which is applied to a class to denote that it contains mach subcommands.
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Classes with the *@CommandProvider* decorator *must* have an *__init__*
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method that accepts 1 or 2 arguments. If it accepts 2 arguments, the
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2nd argument will be a *MachCommandContext* instance. This is just a named
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tuple containing references to objects provided by the mach driver.
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Here is a complete example:
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from mach.decorators import (
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CommandArgument,
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CommandProvider,
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Command,
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)
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@CommandProvider
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class MyClass(object):
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@Command('doit', help='Do ALL OF THE THINGS.')
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@CommandArgument('--force', '-f', action='store_true',
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help='Force doing it.')
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def doit(self, force=False):
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# Do stuff here.
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When the module is loaded, the decorators tell mach about all handlers.
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When mach runs, it takes the assembled metadata from these handlers and
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hooks it up to the command line driver. Under the hood, arguments passed
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to the decorators are being used as arguments to
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*argparse.ArgumentParser.add_parser()* and
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*argparse.ArgumentParser.add_argument()*. See the documentation in the
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*mach.base* module for more.
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The Python modules defining mach commands do not need to live inside the
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main mach source tree.
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Minimizing Code in Mach
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-----------------------
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Mach is just a frontend. Therefore, code in this package should pertain to
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one of 3 areas:
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1. Obtaining user input (parsing arguments, prompting, etc)
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2. Calling into some other Python package
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3. Formatting output
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Mach should not contain core logic pertaining to the desired task. If you
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find yourself needing to invent some new functionality, you should implement
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it as a generic package outside of mach and then write a mach shim to call
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into it. There are many advantages to this approach, including reusability
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outside of mach (others may want to write other frontends) and easier testing
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(it is easier to test generic libraries than code that interacts with the
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command line or terminal).
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Keeping Frontend Modules Small
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------------------------------
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The frontend modules providing mach commands are currently all loaded when
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the mach CLI driver starts. Therefore, there is potential for *import bloat*.
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We want the CLI driver to load quickly. So, please delay load external modules
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until they are actually required. In other words, don't use a global
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*import* when you can import from inside a specific command's handler.
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Structured Logging
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==================
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One of the features of mach is structured logging. Instead of conventional
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logging where simple strings are logged, the internal logging mechanism logs
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all events with the following pieces of information:
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* A string *action*
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* A dict of log message fields
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* A formatting string
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Essentially, instead of assembling a human-readable string at
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logging-time, you create an object holding all the pieces of data that
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will constitute your logged event. For each unique type of logged event,
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you assign an *action* name.
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Depending on how logging is configured, your logged event could get
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written a couple of different ways.
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JSON Logging
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------------
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Where machines are the intended target of the logging data, a JSON
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logger is configured. The JSON logger assembles an array consisting of
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the following elements:
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* Decimal wall clock time in seconds since UNIX epoch
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* String *action* of message
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* Object with structured message data
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The JSON-serialized array is written to a configured file handle.
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Consumers of this logging stream can just perform a readline() then feed
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that into a JSON deserializer to reconstruct the original logged
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message. They can key off the *action* element to determine how to
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process individual events. There is no need to invent a parser.
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Convenient, isn't it?
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Logging for Humans
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------------------
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Where humans are the intended consumer of a log message, the structured
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log message are converted to more human-friendly form. This is done by
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utilizing the *formatting* string provided at log time. The logger
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simply calls the *format* method of the formatting string, passing the
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dict containing the message's fields.
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When *mach* is used in a terminal that supports it, the logging facility
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also supports terminal features such as colorization. This is done
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automatically in the logging layer - there is no need to control this at
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logging time.
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In addition, messages intended for humans typically prepends every line
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with the time passed since the application started.
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Logging HOWTO
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-------------
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Structured logging piggybacks on top of Python's built-in logging
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infrastructure provided by the *logging* package. We accomplish this by
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taking advantage of *logging.Logger.log()*'s *extra* argument. To this
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argument, we pass a dict with the fields *action* and *params*. These
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are the string *action* and dict of message fields, respectively. The
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formatting string is passed as the *msg* argument, like normal.
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If you were logging to a logger directly, you would do something like:
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logger.log(logging.INFO, 'My name is {name}',
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extra={'action': 'my_name', 'params': {'name': 'Gregory'}})
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The JSON logging would produce something like:
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[1339985554.306338, "my_name", {"name": "Gregory"}]
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Human logging would produce something like:
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0.52 My name is Gregory
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Since there is a lot of complexity using logger.log directly, it is
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recommended to go through a wrapping layer that hides part of the
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complexity for you. The easiest way to do this is by utilizing the
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LoggingMixin:
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import logging
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from mach.mixin.logging import LoggingMixin
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class MyClass(LoggingMixin):
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def foo(self):
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self.log(logging.INFO, 'foo_start', {'bar': True},
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'Foo performed. Bar: {bar}')
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