Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Avery Pennarun
b2411fe483 redo-log: capture and linearize the output of redo builds.
redo now saves the stderr from every .do script, for every target, into
a file in the .redo directory.  That means you can look up the logs
from the most recent build of any target using the new redo-log
command, for example:

	redo-log -r all

The default is to show logs non-recursively, that is, it'll show when a
target does redo-ifchange on another target, but it won't recurse into
the logs for the latter target.  With -r (recursive), it does.  With -u
(unchanged), it does even if redo-ifchange discovered that the target
was already up-to-date; in that case, it prints the logs of the *most
recent* time the target was generated.

With --no-details, redo-log will show only the 'redo' lines, not the
other log messages.  For very noisy build systems (like recursing into
a 'make' instance) this can be helpful to get an overview of what
happened, without all the cruft.

You can use the -f (follow) option like tail -f, to follow a build
that's currently in progress until it finishes.  redo itself spins up a
copy of redo-log -r -f while it runs, so you can see what's going on.

Still broken in this version:

- No man page or new tests yet.

- ANSI colors don't yet work (unless you use --raw-logs, which gives
  the old-style behaviour).

- You can't redirect the output of a sub-redo to a file or a
  pipe right now, because redo-log is eating it.

- The regex for matching 'redo' lines in the log is very gross.
  Instead, we should put the raw log files in a more machine-parseable
  format, and redo-log should turn that into human-readable format.

- redo-log tries to "linearize" the logs, which makes them
  comprehensible even for a large parallel build.  It recursively shows
  log messages for each target in depth-first tree order (by tracing
  into a new target every time it sees a 'redo' line).  This works
  really well, but in some specific cases, the "topmost" redo instance
  can get stuck waiting for a jwack token, which makes it look like the
  whole build has stalled, when really redo-log is just waiting a long
  time for a particular subprocess to be able to continue.  We'll need to
  add a specific workaround for that.
2018-11-17 10:27:43 -05:00
Avery Pennarun
e40dc5bad2 redo-whichdo: fix a bug where the last dir was checked twice, and add tests.
When we can't find a .do file, we walk all the way back to the root
directory.  When that happens, the root directory is actually searched
twice.  This is harmless (since a .do file doesn't exist there anyway)
but causes redo-whichdo to produce the wrong output.

Also, add a test, which I forgot to do when writing whichdo in the
first place.

To make the test work from the root directory, we need a way to
initialize redo without actually creating a .redo directory.  Add a
init_no_state() function for that purpose, and split the necessary path
functions into their own module so we can avoid importing builder.py.
2018-11-02 02:20:52 -04:00
Avery Pennarun
f6ea1fd76b log.py, minimal/do: don't use ansi colour codes if $TERM is blank or 'dumb'
Apparently emacs sets TERM=dumb in its tty simulator, so even though
isatty() returns true, we shouldn't use colour codes.  (emacs is therefore
lame. But we knew that.)
2011-01-04 14:11:29 -08:00
Tim Allen
cb1512b14b Use named constants for terminal control codes.
(apenwarr slightly changed the minimal/do tty detection.)
2011-01-04 14:10:20 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
e18fa85d58 The only thing in helpers.py that needed vars.py was the log stuff.
So put it in its own file.  Now it's safer to import and use helpers even if
you can't safely touch vars.
2010-12-11 18:34:02 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
fc27b19108 Merge libdo.py and log.py into helpers.py. 2010-11-13 00:53:55 -08:00
Avery Pennarun
63c596ac61 Move log stuff into a separate log.py. 2010-11-13 00:11:34 -08:00