It's time to start preparing for a version of redo that doesn't work unless we build it first (because it will rely on C modules, and eventually be rewritten in C altogether). To get rolling, remove the old-style symlinks to the main programs, and rename those programs from redo-*.py to redo/cmd_*.py. We'll also move all library functions into the redo/ dir, which is a more python-style naming convention. Previously, install.do was generating wrappers for installing in /usr/bin, which extend sys.path and then import+run the right file. This made "installed" redo work quite differently from running redo inside its source tree. Instead, let's always generate the wrappers in bin/, and not make anything executable except those wrappers. Since we're generating wrappers anyway, let's actually auto-detect the right version of python for the running system; distros can't seem to agree on what to call their python2 binaries (sigh). We'll fill in the right #! shebang lines. Since we're doing that, we can stop using /usr/bin/env, which will a) make things slightly faster, and b) let us use "python -S", which tells python not to load a bunch of extra crap we're not using, thus improving startup times. Annoyingly, we now have to build redo using minimal/do, then run the tests using bin/redo. To make this less annoying, we add a toplevel ./do script that knows the right steps, and a Makefile (whee!) for people who are used to typing 'make' and 'make test' and 'make clean'.
3.4 KiB
NAME
redo-stamp - detect if the current target has meaningfully changed
SYNOPSIS
redo-stamp <$3
DESCRIPTION
Normally, when redo(1) builds a target T, all the other
targets that depend on T are marked as out of date. Even
if the rebuilt T is identical to the old one, all its
dependents need to be rebuilt.
By calling redo-stamp from your .do script, you can tell
redo that even though the current target is building, its
output may turn out to be unchanged. If it hasn't, redo
may then be able to avoid building other targets that
depend on this target.
redo-stamp marks the current target as changed or unchanged by comparing its stdin to the input that was provided last time redo-stamp was called for this target.
The stamp data can be anything you want. Some possibilities are:
-
the actual target file contents:
redo-stamp <$3 -
a list of filenames:
find -name '*.[ch]' | sort | redo-stamp -
the contents of a web page:
curl http://example.org | redo-stamp
To ensure that your target gets checked every time, you
might want to use redo-always(1).
DISCUSSION
While using redo-stamp is simple, the way it
works is harder to explain. Deciding if a target is
up to date or not is the job of redo-ifchange(1).
Normally, a target is considered out of date when any of its
dependencies (direct or indirect) have changed. When that
happens, redo-ifchange runs the .do script for the
target, which regenerates the entire dependency list,
including rebuilding any dependencies as necessary.
Imagine that we have the following dependency chain:
T -> X -> Y -> Z
T depends on X, which depends on Y, which depends on Z. Now imagine someone has changed Z.
If someone runs redo-ifchange T, then redo-ifchange
checks if X is up to date; to do that, it checks if Y
is up to date; and to do that, it checks whether Z is up to
date - which it isn't. Thus, Y is not up to date, which
means X isn't, which means T isn't either, and so we need
to run T.do. redo-ifchange won't directly redo X just
because X is dirty; it redoes T, and T.do might eventually
call redo-ifchange X if it needs to.
When using redo-stamp, the behaviour is different. Let's
say Y has used redo-stamp. In the above sequence, Y is
outdated because Z has changed. However, we don't know yet
if Y's stamp has changed, so we don't yet know if we need
to redo X, and thus we don't know if we need to redo T. We
can't just run redo T, because that could waste a lot of
time if it turns out T didn't need to be rebuilt after all.
What we do instead is note whether the only dependencies of T that are out of date are 'stamped' targets. If any dependencies of T are normal, out-of-date redo targets, then T needs to be rebuilt anyway; we don't have to do anything special.
If the only dependency of T that has changed is Y (a
'stamped' target), then we need to redo Y automatically
in order to determine if T needs to be rebuilt. This is
the only time that redo ever rebuilds a target that
hasn't been explicitly asked for as part of a running .do
script.
REDO
Part of the redo(1) suite.
CREDITS
The original concept for redo was created by D. J.
Bernstein and documented on his web site
(http://cr.yp.to/redo.html). This independent implementation
was created by Avery Pennarun and you can find its source
code at http://github.com/apenwarr/redo.
SEE ALSO
redo(1), redo-ifcreate(1), redo-ifchange(1), redo-always(1)