1. grunt-run
Invite external commands into your grunt process with three tasks `run`, `wait` and `stop`.
grunt-run
Package: grunt-run
Created by: spalger
Last modified: Sat, 18 Jun 2022 15:52:57 GMT
Version: 0.8.1
Downloads: 165,577
Repository: https://github.com/spalger/grunt-run

Install

npm install grunt-run
yarn add grunt-run

grunt-run

Invite external commands into your grunt process with three tasks run, wait and stop.

Getting Started

This plugin requires Grunt ~0.4.1

If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:

 npm install grunt-run --save-dev

Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:

 grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-run');

The "run" task

Overview

In your project's Gruntfile, add a section named run to the data object passed into grunt.initConfig().

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    options: {
      // Task-specific options go here.
    },
    your_target: {
      cmd: 'executable',
      args: [
        'arg1',
        'arg2'
      ]
    }
  }
})

Src/files/etc

Since this task doesn't operate on "files" it also doesn't use the standard src/files options. Instead, specify a cmd: and args: key to your test's config (see examples). cmd: defaults to "node".

If you would like to specify your command as a single string, usefull for specifying multiple commands in one task, use the exec: key

Options

options.wait

Type: Boolean
Default value: true

Should this task wait until the script exits before finishing? If you set this to false because you want to start a service of some sort before running another task, you can override this setting by passing the "keepalive" argument to the task call.

Example:

 # start a testing instance of Elasticsearch and run some tests, `wait: false`
$ grunt run:es mocha:test

# override `wait` to keep Elasticsearch running
$ grunt run:es:keepalive

options.cwd

Type: String
Default value: process.cwd()

Should we change the working directory for the command runs in?

options.quiet

Type: Boolean, Infinity
Default value: false

Set to true to ignore stdout from the process, Infinity to ignore stderr as well (opts.failOnError will still work)

options.ready

Type: RegExp, Number, or false
Default value: 1000

If we are not waiting for the process to complete, then how do we know the process is ready?

A RegExp will test the lines from stdout and stderr and complete the task once the test succeeds, a Number will just set a timeout, and anything else will complete the task on nextTick

options.failOnError

Type: Boolean
Default value: false

If the process outputs anything on stderr then the process will be killed. If wait is true it will cause the task to fail as well.

options.passArgs

Type: Array
Default value: []

Before running the command, look for these options using grunt.option(). The syntax supported for specifying command line args in grunt is --option1=myValue.

Usage Examples

Default

Want to just run some command line tool? With this config calling grunt run:tool will run that tool.

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    tool: {
      cmd: './some-bash-script',
    }
  }
});

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-run');

Multiple scripts

Want to run a few commands. With this config calling grunt run:commands will run them.

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    commands: {
      exec: './some-bash-script && ./some-other-script',
    }
  }
});

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-run');

waiting

In this example, we are starting a small server that will serve our mocha tests to a browser. We will then open that page in the browser and tell grunt to wait until the process is exited, which probably won't happen so the process will just run until the user ends the process manually.

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    integration_server: {
      options: {
        wait: false
      },
      // cmd: "node", // but that's the default
      args: [
        'test/integration_server.js'
      ]
    }
  },
  // https://github.com/jsoverson/grunt-open
  open: {
    integration_suite: {
      path: 'http://localhost:8888',
      app: 'Google Chrome'
    }

  }
});

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-run');
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-open');

grunt.registerTask('test', [
  'run:integration_server',
  'open:integration_tests',
  'wait:integration_server'
]);

stoping

We can do something similar using grunt-mocha to run the tests inside phantomjs, but instead of waiting for the process we will just stop it once mocha is done.

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    integration_server: {
      options: {
        wait: false
      },
      args: [
        'test/integration_server.js'
      ]
    }
  },
  // https://github.com/kmiyashiro/grunt-mocha
  mocha: {
    integration_suite: {
      urls: 'http://localhost:8888',
      app: 'Google Chrome'
    }
  }
});

grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-run');
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-mocha');

grunt.registerTask('test', [
  'run:integration_server',
  'mocha:integration_suite',
  'stop:integration_server'
]);

passing args

When you execute a command, sometimes you want to modify the script form the call to grunt.

 grunt.initConfig({
  run: {
    server: {
      args: ['./server.js'],
      options: {
        passArgs: [
          'port'
        ]
      }
    }
  }
})

Then you can specify a --port option when calling grunt and it will be sent to the other process.

$ grunt run:server --port=8888
# calls "node ./server.js --port=8888"

Contributing

Please lint and test your code with the included jshint config, or just run grunt.

Dependencies

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