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CI tool to test your project across multiple versions of rails/dependencies
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garlic¶ ↑

lightweight continuous integration for rails using git

This is not a CI server, use cruisecontrol.rb or integrity for that. This is a simple set of commands (or rake tasks) that let you specify a bunch of rails builds to run against, and dependencies to install.

This is aimed at testing plugins (or apps) against multiple versions of rails, and allows specifying other plugin dependencies (and their versions and any setup requried).

If you want to run your specs (or whatever) against different versions of gems that you have installed, then check out ginger by Pat Allen

Garlic works by cloning git repos for all your dependencies (so they all must be git repos), and then using git to checkout various tags and branches to build your app against.

Here’s an example of running a plugin against 3 different rails verisons and 3 different rspec versions: gist 28786

It’s still new, and not shiny yet¶ ↑

Please feel free to make it shinier. I’m successfully using it on most of my plugins, and I test with rspec and cucumber.

Check out the TODO LIST

Get up and running quickly¶ ↑

You have a plugin and you want it tested against different versions of rails?

1. install garlic as a gem (see below)

2. cd into your (say, rspec tested) plugin directory

garlic generate rspec > garlic.rb
garlic install_repos
garlic

3. See what happens, edit garlic.rb to change rails versions and other stuff.

garlic --help # will probably help

Installing¶ ↑

Install the garlic gem

# from rubyforge or gemcutter
sudo gem install garlic

# from github
sudo gem install ianwhite-garlic --source=http://gems.github.com

(if you want the very latest version)

git clone git://github.com/ianwhite/garlic
cd garlic
rake package
sudo gem install pkg/garlic-<code>*</code>.gem

Example¶ ↑

To see garlic in action, download resources_controller_, a rails plugin that uses garlic for CI.

git clone git://github.com/ianwhite/resources_controller

run garlic

garlic all

This will clone all the required git repos (done only once), set up the target railses (done once), then run the targets.

Once you’ve committed some changes¶ ↑

You can prepare and run all the targets again (without fetching remote repos) by doing

garlic

This will prepare all the targets, using the current HEAD of the repos, and run the CI task again.

Specifying particular targets¶ ↑

If you just want to run against a particular target or targets, you can use the -t option, or if using Rake, the TARGET or TARGETS env var.

garlic -t edge

Running Shell commands across multiple targets¶ ↑

Check dis out

garlic shell  # {Example output}[http://gist.github.com/28795]

You can pipe any thing into garlic shell and it will execute across all of your garlic targets

Rake tasks¶ ↑

If you prefer to use garlic via rake tasks, then just require ‘garlic/tasks’ and you’ll get a bunch of em. Once required, do rake -T to see descriptions.

garlic workflow shell commands¶ ↑

If you add the following line to your .profile

source `garlic --path`/sh/garlic.sh

Then you’ll get these 4 new shell commands:

gcd [target]    cds into the specified target working repo
gcdp [target]   cds into the specified target plugin in the working repo
gup             cds back up to the garlic'd repo from within a working path
gpush [branch]  from within a working repo, pushes changes back to the local garlic target, and resets
                local changes in that target to HEAD.

This means you might have a workflow as follows (example is for a plugin):

# run garlic, see probs in '2-2-stable'

gcdp 2-2  # => takes you into the working repo in the '2-2-stable' target

# fix the changes, make some commits

gpush     # => pushes the changes back to the enclosing garlic'd repo
gup       # => go back up there
garlic    # => rerun garlic to see how the changes affect the other targets

Lend a hand¶ ↑

This is an early release, so there is plenty of scope for changes and improvement If you want to lend a hand, get in touch.

© Ian White 2008-2009 - ian.w.white@gmail.com MIT Licence

Lent a hand¶ ↑

Thanks very much to:

  • Pat Allan

  • Dr Nic Williams (API suggestions)