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Nom Taille Révision Âge Auteur Commentaire
  contrib 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
  tests 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
EXAMPLE.make 3,02 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
INSTALL.txt 742 octets 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
LICENSE.txt 14,6 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
README.txt 11,9 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.download.inc 22,9 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.drush.inc 12,5 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.generate.inc 5,25 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.project.inc 10,5 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.test.inc 6,07 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git
drush_make.utilities.inc 21,1 ko 85ad3d82 plus de 10 ans Assos Assos Append of all multiassos project to git

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85ad3d82 07/01/2014 22:05 Assos Assos

Append of all multiassos project to git

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README


$Id: README.txt,v 1.1.2.19 2010/09/09 06:43:06 dmitrig01 Exp $

Drush make

Drush make is an extension to drush that can create a ready-to-use drupal site,
pulling sources from various locations. It does this by parsing a flat text file
(similar to a drupal .info file) and downloading the sources it describes. In
practical terms, this means that it is possible to distribute a complicated
Drupal distribution as a single text file.

Among drush make's capabilities are:

  • Downloading Drupal core, as well as contrib modules from drupal.org.
  • Checking code out from CVS, SVN, git, and bzr repositories.
  • Getting plain .tar.gz and .zip files (particularly useful for libraries that can not be distributed directly with drupal core or modules).
  • Fetching and applying patches.
  • Fetching modules, themes, and installation profiles, but also external libraries.

Usage

The drush make command can be executed from a path within a Drupal codebase or
independent of any Drupal sites entirely. See the examples below for instances
where drush make can be used within an existing Drupal site.

drush make [-options] [filename.make] [build path]

Options

--contrib-destination=path

  Specify a path under which modules and themes should be
  placed. Defaults to sites/all.

--force-complete

  Force a complete build even if errors occur.

--md5

  Output an md5 hash of the current build after completion.

--no-clean

  Leave temporary build directories in place instead of
  cleaning up after completion.

--no-core

  Do not require a Drupal core project to be specified.

--no-patch-txt

  Do not write a PATCHES.txt file in the directory of
  each patched project.

--prepare-install

  Prepare the built site for installation. Generate a
  properly permissioned settings.php and files directory.

--tar

  Generate a tar archive of the build. The output filename
  will be [build path].tar.gz.

--test

  Run a temporary test build and clean up.

--translations=languages

  Retrieve translations for the specified comma-separated list
  of language(s) if available for all projects.

--working-copy

  Where possible, retrieve a working copy of projects from
  their respective repositories.

Examples

  1. Build a Drupal site at example/ including Drupal core and any projects
    defined in the makefile:

    drush make example.make example
    
  2. Build a tarball of the platform above as example.tar.gz:

    drush make --tar example.make example
    
  3. Build an installation profile within an existing Drupal site:

    drush make --no-core --contrib-destination=. installprofile.make
    

The .make file format

Each makefile is a plain text file that adheres to the Drupal .info file
syntax. See the included example.make for an example of a working makefile.

Core version

The make file always begins by specifying the core version of Drupal for which
each package must be compatible. Example:

core = 6.x

Projects

An array of the projects to be retrieved. Each project name can be specified as
a single string value. If further options need to be provided for a project, the
project should be specified as the key.

Project with no further options:

projects[] = drupal

Project using options (see below):

projects[drupal][version] = 6.15

Do not use both types of declarations for a single project in your makefile.

Project options

  • version

Specifies the version of the project to retrieve.
This can be as loose as the major branch number or
as specific as a particular point release.

    projects[views][version] = 3
    projects[views][version] = 2.8
    projects[views][version] = 3.0-alpha2

    ; Shorthand syntax for versions if no other options are to be specified
    projects[views] = 3.0-alpha2
  • patch

One ore more patches to apply to this project. An array of URLs from which
each patch should be retrieved.

    projects[adminrole][patch][] = "http://drupal.org/files/issues/adminrole_exceptions.patch"
  • subdir

Place a project within a subdirectory of the --contrib-destination
specified. In the example below, cck will be placed in
sites/all/modules/contrib instead of the default sites/all/modules.

    projects[cck][subdir] = "contrib"
  • location

URL of an alternate project update XML server to use. Allows project XML data
to be retrieved from sites other than updates.drupal.org.

    projects[tao][location] = "http://code.developmentseed.com/fserver"
  • type

The project type. Must be provided if an update XML source is not specified
and/or using version control or direct retrieval for a project. May be one of
the following values: core, module, profile, theme.

    projects[mytheme][type] = "theme"
  • directory_name

Provide an alternative directory name for this project. By default, the
project name is used.

    projects[mytheme][directory_name] = "yourtheme"
  • l10n_path

Specific URL (can include tokens) to a translation. Allows translations to be
retrieved from l10n servers other than localize.drupal.org.

    projects[mytheme][l10n_path] = "http://myl10nserver.com/files/translations/%project-%core-%version-%language.po"
  • l10n_url

URL to an l10n server XML info file. Allows translations to be retrieved from
l10n servers other than localize.drupal.org.

    projects[mytheme][l10n_url] = "http://myl10nserver.com/l10n_server.xml"

Project download options

Use an alternative download method instead of retrieval through update XML.
The following methods are available:

  • download[type][get]

Retrieve a project as a direct download. Options:

url - the URL of the file. Required.

  • download[type][post]

Retrieve a project as a direct download using an HTTP POST request. Options:

url - the URL of the file. Required.

post_data - The post data to be submitted with the request. Should be a
valid URL query string. Required.

file_type - A file type extension to use for the retrieved file. Optional.

 projects[mytheme][download][type] = "post"
 projects[mytheme][download][url] = "http://example.com/download/mytheme"
 projects[mytheme][download][post_data] = "format=zip&version=1.0"
  • download[type][bzr]

Use a bazaar repository as the source for this project. Options:

url - the URL of the repository. Required.

  • download[type][cvs]

Use a CVS repository as the source for this project. Options:

date - use the latest revision no later than specified date. See the CVS
man page for more about how to use the date flag.

root - the CVS repository to use for this project. Optional. If unspecified,
the CVSROOT environment value will first be used and finally Drupal contrib
CVS is used as a last resort fallback.

module - the CVS module to retrieve. Required.

revision - a specific tag or revision to check out. Optional.

 projects[mytheme][download][type] = "cvs"
 projects[mytheme][download][module] = "mytheme"
  • download[type][git]

Use a git repository as the source for this project. Options:

url - the URL of the repository. Required.

branch - the branch to be checked out. Optional.

revision - a specific revision identified by commit to check out. Optional.

tag - the tag to be checked out. Optional.

 projects[mytheme][download][type] = "git"
 projects[mytheme][download][url] = "git://github.com/jane_doe/mytheme.git"
  • download[type][svn]

Use an SVN repository as the source for this project. Options:

url - the URL of the repository. Required.

username - the username to use when retrieving an SVN project as a working
copy or from a private repository. Optional.

password - the password to use when retrieving an SVN project as a working
copy or from a private repository. Optional.

 projects[mytheme][download][type] = "svn"
 projects[mytheme][download][url] = "http://example.com/svnrepo/cool-theme/"

Libraries

An array of non-Drupal-specific libraries to be retrieved (e.g. js, PHP or other
Drupal-agnostic components). Each library should be specified as the key of an
array of options in the libraries array.

Example:

libraries[jquery_ui][download][type] = "get"
libraries[jquery_ui][download][url] = "http://jquery- ui.googlecode.com/files/jquery.ui-1.6.zip"

Library options

Libraries share the download, destination and directory_name options with
projects. Additionally, they may specify a destination:

  • destination

The target path to which this library should be moved. The path is relative to
that specified by the --contrib-destination option. By default, libraries
are placed in the libraries directory.

    libraries[jquery_ui][destination] = "modules/contrib/jquery_ui

Includes

An array of makefiles to include. Each include may be a local path or a direct
URL to the makefile. Includes are appended in order with the source makefile
appended last, allowing latter makefiles to override the keys/values of former
makefiles.

Example:

includes[example] = "example.make"
includes[remote] = "http://www.example.com/remote.make"

Recursion

If a project that is part of a build contains a .make itself, drush make will
automatically parse it and recurse into a derivative build.

For example, a full build tree may look something like this:

drush make distro.make distro

distro.make FOUND
- Drupal core
- Foo bar install profile
  + foobar.make FOUND
    - CCK
    - Token
    - Module x
      + x.make FOUND
        - External library x.js
    - Views
    - etc.

Recursion can be used to nest an install profile build in a Drupal site, easily
build multiple install profiles on the same site, fetch library dependencies for
a given module, or bundle a set of module and its dependencies together.

Build a full Drupal site with the Managing News install profile:

core = 6.x
projects[] = drupal
projects[] = managingnews

Testing

Drush make also comes with testing capabilities, designed to test drush make
itself. Writing a new test is extremely simple. The process is as follows:

  1. Figure out what you want to test. Write a makefile that will test this out. You can refer to existing test makefiles for examples.
  2. Drush make your makefile, and use the --md5 option. You may also use other options, but be sure to take note of which ones for step 4.
  3. Verify that the result you got was in fact what you expected. If so, continue. If not, tweak it and re-run step 2 until it's what you expected.
  4. Using the md5 hash that was spit out from step 2, make a new entry in the tests array in drush_make.test.inc, following the example below. 'machine-readable-name' => array( 'name' => 'Human readable name', 'makefile' => 'tests/yourtest.make', 'messages' => array( 'Build hash: f68e6510-your-hash-e04fbb4ed', ), 'options' => array('any' => TRUE, 'other' => TRUE, 'options' => TRUE), ),
  5. Test! Run drush make-test machine-readable-name to see if the test passes.

You can check for any messages you want in the message array, but the most
basic tests would just check the build hash.

Generate

Drush make has a primitive makefile generation capability. To use it, simply
change your directory to the Drupal installation from which you would like to
generate the file, and run the following command:

drush generate makefile /path/to/make-file.make

This will generate a basic makefile. If you have code from other repositories,
the makefile will not complete - you'll have to fill in some information before
it is fully functional.

Maintainer

  • Dmitri Gaskin (dmitrig01)

Co-maintainers

  • Adrian Rossouw (adrian)
  • Antoine Beaupré (anarcat)
  • Chad Phillips (hunmonk)
  • Jeff Miccolis (jmiccolis)
  • Young Hahn (yhahn)

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