This makes them more reliable to parse. redo-log can parse each line, format and print it, then recurse if necessary. This got a little ugly because I wanted 'redo --raw-logs' to work, which we want to format the output nicely, but not call redo-log. (As a result, --raw-logs has a different meaning to redo and redo-log, which is kinda dumb. I should fix that.) As an added bonus, redo-log now handles indenting of recursive logs, so if the build was a -> a/b -> a/b/c, and you look at the log for a/b, it can still start at the top level indentation.
18 lines
431 B
Python
Executable file
18 lines
431 B
Python
Executable file
#!/usr/bin/env python2
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import sys, os
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import vars, state
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from logs import err
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try:
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me = os.path.join(vars.STARTDIR,
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os.path.join(vars.PWD, vars.TARGET))
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f = state.File(name=me)
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f.add_dep('m', state.ALWAYS)
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always = state.File(name=state.ALWAYS)
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always.stamp = state.STAMP_MISSING
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always.set_changed()
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always.save()
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state.commit()
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except KeyboardInterrupt:
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sys.exit(200)
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