mmake - modern make
mmake
takes the best ideas from make
and pulls them into the 21st century. mmake
does away with the archaic syntax and hacky workarounds required for modern Makefile-based workflows.
make | mmake |
---|
❌ dummy files | ✅ directory targets and prerequisites |
❌ PHONY targets | ✅ register commands like any other target |
❌ terse, limited syntax | ✅ familiar RegExp and callback functions |
❌ magic | ✅ explicit and discoverable |
❌ no rebuild on source file deletion | ✅ rebuild on source file deletion (future release) |
❌ println debugging | ✅ advanced observability tools (future release) |
Installation
npm install --save-dev mmake
Usage
Define and invoke build rules
Here is an example rule that writes the md5 checksum of a JSON file to a sibling text file.
import { invoke, register } from 'mmake';
register(
/^hash-(foo|bar)\.txt$/,
async ([_, fooOrBar]) => [`${fooOrBar}.json`],
async (targetPath, [sourcePath]) => {
const hash = await calculateHash(sourcePath);
await writeFile(targetPath, hash);
},
);
await invoke('hash-foo.txt');
Directories can be used as targets or prerequisites, too. In the case of a directory target, mmake
will recurse the directory to find the oldest file's timestamp, which will be used to determine whether or not the recipe needs to be run (and for directory prerequisites: the newest file).
Any JavaScript can be run as part of a target's recipe. The recipe doesn't have to create the target file, either; this can be useful for executing commands that should always run each time they are requested (like PHONY
targets in a traditional Makefile).
Build targets using a command-line interface
A simple CLI can be fashioned by making the rule script executable and passing command-line arguments to invoke()
:
#!/usr/bin/env node
import { invoke, register } from 'mmake';
register(...);
register(...);
register(...);
for (const requisite of process.argv.slice(2)) {
await invoke(requisite);
}