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Rake Task Management Essentials

You're reading from   Rake Task Management Essentials Deploy, test, and build software to solve real-world automation challenges using Rake.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783280773
Length 122 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Andrey Koleshko Andrey Koleshko
Author Profile Icon Andrey Koleshko
Andrey Koleshko
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Rake Task Management Essentials
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. The Software Task Management Tool – Rake FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Files 3. Working with Rules 4. Cleaning Up a Build 5. Running Tasks in Parallel 6. Debugging Rake Tasks 7. Integration with Rails 8. Testing Rake Tasks 9. Continuous Integration 10. Relentless Automation Index

Multiple task definitions with a common prerequisite


Assume that we have rake tasks that have a common prerequisite and at the same time, these tasks are prerequisites for a multitask. Which order will we get for the task execution when we run the multitask? You may think that the multitask's prerequisites will be run in parallel and the common prerequisite will run as many times as the number of the multitask's prerequisites. However, this is not true; actually, the multitask's prerequisites will wait until the common prerequisite gets completed. As a result, the common prerequisite will be run only once.

The following example will demonstrate the idea clearly:

task :copy_src => [:prepare_for_copy] do
  puts 'In the #copy_src'
end

task :copy_bin => [:prepare_for_copy] do
  puts 'In the #copy_bin'
end

task :prepare_for_copy do
  puts 'In the #prepare_for_copy'
end

multitask :all_copy => [:copy_src, :copy_bin] do
  puts 'In the #all_copy'
end

We get the following output as a result...

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