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@cplace/cli

This package provides some CLI tools for working with cplace code.

  • 0.13.1
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cplace CLI tools

This package provides some CLI tools for working with cplace code.

Usage

This package should be installed globally:

# Fetches the latest release from a repo
$ npm install -g @cplace/cli

# Or clone this repo, build it and install the latest development version:
$ npm install && npm run prod
$ npm install -g .

After installation you can just execute:

$ cplace-cli --help

to get the available commands and help:

$ cplace-cli --help

  Usage:
      $ cplace-cli <command>

  Commands:
      release-notes (--from <from> [--to <to>] [--lang <lang>] [--force]) | (--check [--size <size>])
          Generates release notes between the two given commits (excluding <from>, including <to>).
          If <to> is not given "HEAD" is used.
          If <lang> is not given "en" is used.
        
          If <force> is set then release notes will also be generated if commits are commented out or in conflict.
        
          If --check is set then no release notes will be generated but the last <size> (default: 100) commits
          will be checked for message, i.e. the command will fail if the last <size> commits contain any messages
          that are not contained in all messages files or at least one entry in a messages file is commented out
          or in conflict.
        
          The release notes command can also be used to automatically merge two messages files in git:
          1. Add the following section to your .git/config file or global .gitconfig:
              [merge "cplace-msgs"]
                  name = cplace Release Notes Messages DB merger
                  driver = cplace-cli release-notes --merge --current %A --other %B --base %O
          2. Make sure that the .gitattributes file in your repository contains the following lines:
              release-notes/messages_*.db merge=cplace-msgs
              release-notes/explicits_*.db merge=cplace-msgs
    
      repos <subcommand> [--force]
          Handles repo specific actions where <subcommand> is one of the following:
          --update|-u [--nofetch]:
              Updates all parent repos.
              If <force> is set the update will take place even if the working copies of the parent repos are not clean.
          --write|-w [--freeze]:
              Write the states of the parent repos to parent-repos.json.
              If <freeze> is set the exact commit hashes of the currently checked out parent repos will be written regardless
              whether there already was a commit hash in the descriptor or not.
              If <force> is set the update will take place even if the working copies of the parent repos are not clean.
          --clone|-c:
              Clones all parent repos if missing. <force> has no effect for this command.
          --branch|-b <name> [--parent <parent-repo-name>] [--push] [--from <branch-name>]
              Creates a new branch <name> on the topmost repo and all its child repos. All affected repos will checkout the new branch and their
              parent-repos.json will be updated to match the branch name. The topmost repo must be named 'main'. This can be overridden by providing
              the --parent parameter. If --push is provided, the new branches are pushed after creation.
              You can provide a remote-branch name using the --from <branch-name> parameter. This determines the remote branch based on which
              the new branches are created. If this parameter is missing, the local branches currently checked out are used.
          --add-dependency|-d <name> [--all]
              Adds a new dependency to another plugin or repository.
              If <name> is another sub-repository, the parent-repos.json will be updated to include this repository as a new dependency. If the
              flag --all is given then also all modules of this repository will be added to the IDEA project. 
              Otherwise <name> is treated as the name of a plugin and cplace-cli will try to resolve the corresponding IDEA module among all
              currently known referenced repositories. When --all is given, all dependencies of the plugin will also be added as dependencies.
    
      visualize [--regex-for-exclusion <regexForExclusion>] [--regex-for-inclusion <regexForInclusion>] [--pdf]
          Creates a visualization of the remote branches and their dependencies of the repository. The output is a .dot file.
          If <regexForExclusion> is not given "HEAD|attic/.*" is used. Use quotes if you want to use the | symbol.
          Use --pdf to create a PDF from the .dot file. Requires Graphviz to be installed and the dot binary to be on the path.


      flow --upmerge [--no-push] [--release <version>] [--all-customers | --customer <customer>] [--show-files]
          Merge changes upwards into all releases. This needs a clean workspace, however it will not touch your local
          branches. All merges will be done on new, temporary local branches and will then be pushed to 

          --no-push
              Will not push changes, dry run only to check for conflicts

          --release <version>
              Merge from this release version upwards (e.g. "4.38"). If not specified and the current branch is tracking
              a release branch, this release version will be used.
        
          --all-customers
              Also merges into all customer-branches. This applies to customer branches named 'customer/$customerName/$version', where
              $version must merge the pattern mentioned for --release.
        
          --customer <customer>
              Also merge into the branches of the given customer. The customer name must match the same pattern as mentioned in --all-customers.
        
          --show-files
              List files to be merged
              
      flow --splitRepository --pathToTargetRepo <path-to-local-target-repo> [--directories <"space separated directory names">]
          Iterates through the complete history of current branch and recreate the commits which only affects the mentioned directories.
          It is highly suggested to use --verbose while running this option as it takes considerable time to finish and you can 
          see how much time is left. 
          At the end the script, it will create a branch with the same name in the target repo(except master,
          for master it will create master_<current_date>).
          
          --pathToTargetRepo
            Your local path to target repo eg. (/Users/shariqhaque/cplace-dev/repos/cplace-project-planning)
           
          --directories (OPTIONAL, required only if refactor is not for project planning related plugins)
            Space separated names of directories to be split to new repository, remember to add double quotes before and at the end. 
            If not provided it means the splitting is happening for project planning related plugins.
          
            
      refactor <subcommand> --plugin|-p <plugin>
          Handles plugin specific refactorings where <subcommand> is one of the following:
          --test-sources
              Will refactor an old plugin source structure like 'src/classes' or 'src/java' to a proper Maven-like structure with
              'src/main/java' and 'src/test/java'

  Global options:
      --verbose
          Print verbose information to console

Building and Running

Building is done via npm package commands, but dependencies must first be installed through npm:

$ npm install
$ npm run prod

After building, the local version can be run using node:

$ node dist/cli.js

In order to just run the TypeScript compiler and tslint use:

$ npm run dev

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Package last updated on 16 Jul 2019

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