I hereby declare thee built.
hereby
is a simple task runner.
$ npm i -D hereby
$ yarn add -D hereby
Tasks are defined in Herebyfile.mjs
. Exported tasks are available to run at
the CLI, with support for export default
.
For example:
import { execa } from "execa";
import { task } from "hereby";
export const build = task({
name: "build",
run: async () => {
await execa("tsc", ["-b", "./src"]);
},
});
export const test = task({
name: "test",
dependencies: [build],
run: async () => {
await execa("node", ["./out/test.js"]);
},
});
export const lint = task({
name: "lint",
run: async () => {
await runLinter(...);
},
});
export const testAndLint = task({
name: "testAndLint",
dependencies: [test, lint],
});
export default testAndLint;
export const bundle = task({
name: "bundle",
dependencies: [build],
run: async () => {
await execa("esbuild", [
"--bundle",
"./out/index.js",
"--outfile=./out/bundled.js",
]);
},
});
Given the above Herebyfile:
$ hereby build # Run the "build" task
$ hereby test # Run the "test" task, which depends on "build".
$ hereby # Run the default exported task.
$ hereby test bundle # Run the "test" and "bundle" tasks in parallel.
hereby
also supports a handful of flags:
-h, --help Display this usage guide.
--herebyfile path A path to a Herebyfile. Optional.
-T, --tasks Print a listing of the available tasks.
hereby
is implemented in ES modules. But, don't fret! This does not mean that
your project must be ESM-only, only that your Herebyfile
must be ESM module so
that hereby
's task
function can be imported. It's recommended to use the
filename Herebyfile.mjs
to ensure that it is treated as ESM. This will work in
a CommonJS project; ES modules can import CommonJS modules.
If your package already sets "type": "module"
, Herebyfile.js
will work as
well.
hereby
does not support running tasks in series; specifying multiple tasks at
the CLI or as dependencies of another task will run them in parallel. This
matches the behavior of tools like make
, which like hereby
intend to encode
a dependency graph of tasks, not act as a script.
In general, if you're trying to emulate a serial task, you will likely be better served by writing out explicit dependencies for your tasks.
hereby
will only run each task once during its execution. This means that
tasks which consist of other tasks run in order like a script cannot be
constructed. For example, it's not possible to run "build", then "clean", then
"build" again within the same invocation of hereby
, since "build" will only be
executed once (and the lack of serial tasks prevents such a construction
anyway).
To run tasks in a specific order and more than once, run hereby
multiple
times:
$ hereby build
$ hereby clean
$ hereby build