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#!/usr/bin/perl -w
#========================================================================
#
# ttree
#
# DESCRIPTION
# Script for processing all directory trees containing templates.
# Template files are processed and the output directed to the
# relvant file in an output tree. The timestamps of the source and
# destination files can then be examined for future invocations
# to process only those files that have changed. In other words,
# it's a lot like 'make' for templates.
#
# AUTHOR
# Andy Wardley <abw@wardley.org>
#
# COPYRIGHT
# Copyright (C) 1996-2013 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
# Copyright (C) 1998-2003 Canon Research Centre Europe Ltd.
#
# This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
#
#========================================================================
use strict;
use Template;
use AppConfig qw( :expand );
use File::Copy;
use File::Path;
use File::Spec;
use File::Basename;
use Text::ParseWords qw(quotewords);
my $NAME = "ttree";
my $VERSION = 2.90;
my $HOME = $ENV{ HOME } || '';
my $RCFILE = $ENV{"\U${NAME}rc"} || "$HOME/.${NAME}rc";
my $TTMODULE = 'Template';
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# configuration options
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# offer create a sample config file if it doesn't exist, unless a '-f'
# has been specified on the command line
unless (-f $RCFILE or grep(/^(-f|-h|--help)$/, @ARGV) ) {
print("Do you want me to create a sample '.ttreerc' file for you?\n",
"(file: $RCFILE) [y/n]: ");
my $y = <STDIN>;
if ($y =~ /^y(es)?/i) {
write_config($RCFILE);
exit(0);
}
}
# read configuration file and command line arguments - I need to remember
# to fix varlist() and varhash() in AppConfig to make this nicer...
my $config = read_config($RCFILE);
my $dryrun = $config->nothing;
my $verbose = $config->verbose || $dryrun;
my $colour = $config->colour;
my $summary = $config->summary;
my $recurse = $config->recurse;
my $preserve = $config->preserve;
my $all = $config->all;
my $libdir = $config->lib;
my $ignore = $config->ignore;
my $copy = $config->copy;
my $link = $config->link;
my $accept = $config->accept;
my $absolute = $config->absolute;
my $relative = $config->relative;
my $suffix = $config->suffix;
my $binmode = $config->binmode;
my $depends = $config->depend;
my $depsfile = $config->depend_file;
my ($n_proc, $n_unmod, $n_skip, $n_copy, $n_link, $n_mkdir) = (0) x 6;
my $srcdir = $config->src
|| die "Source directory not set (-s)\n";
my $destdir = $config->dest
|| die "Destination directory not set (-d)\n";
die "Source and destination directories may not be the same:\n $srcdir\n"
if $srcdir eq $destdir;
# unshift any perl5lib directories onto front of INC
unshift(@INC, @{ $config->perl5lib });
# get all template_* options from the config and fold keys to UPPER CASE
my %ttopts = $config->varlist('^template_', 1);
my $ttmodule = delete($ttopts{ module });
my $ucttopts = {
map { my $v = $ttopts{ $_ }; defined $v ? (uc $_, $v) : () }
keys %ttopts,
};
# get all template variable definitions
my $replace = $config->get('define');
# now create complete parameter hash for creating template processor
my $ttopts = {
%$ucttopts,
RELATIVE => $relative,
ABSOLUTE => $absolute,
INCLUDE_PATH => [ $srcdir, @$libdir ],
OUTPUT_PATH => $destdir,
};
# load custom template module
if ($ttmodule) {
my $ttpkg = $ttmodule;
$ttpkg =~ s[::][/]g;
$ttpkg .= '.pm';
require $ttpkg;
}
else {
$ttmodule = $TTMODULE;
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# inter-file dependencies
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
if ($depsfile or $depends) {
$depends = dependencies($depsfile, $depends);
}
else {
$depends = { };
}
my $global_deps = $depends->{'*'} || [ ];
# add any PRE_PROCESS, etc., templates as global dependencies
foreach my $ttopt (qw( PRE_PROCESS POST_PROCESS PROCESS WRAPPER )) {
my $deps = $ucttopts->{ $ttopt } || next;
my @deps = ref $deps eq 'ARRAY' ? (@$deps) : ($deps);
next unless @deps;
push(@$global_deps, @deps);
}
# remove any duplicates
$global_deps = { map { ($_ => 1) } @$global_deps };
$global_deps = [ keys %$global_deps ];
# update $depends hash or delete it if there are no dependencies
if (@$global_deps) {
$depends->{'*'} = $global_deps;
}
else {
delete $depends->{'*'};
$global_deps = undef;
}
$depends = undef
unless keys %$depends;
my $DEP_DEBUG = $config->depend_debug();
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# pre-amble
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
if ($colour) {
no strict 'refs';
*red = \&_red;
*green = \&_green;
*yellow = \&_yellow;
*blue = \&_blue;
}
else {
no strict 'refs';
*red = \&_white;
*green = \&_white;
*yellow = \&_white;
*blue = \&_white;
}
if ($verbose) {
local $" = ', ';
print "$NAME $VERSION (Template Toolkit version $Template::VERSION)\n\n";
my $sfx = join(', ', map { "$_ => $suffix->{$_}" } keys %$suffix);
print(" Source: $srcdir\n",
" Destination: $destdir\n",
"Include Path: [ @$libdir ]\n",
" Ignore: [ @$ignore ]\n",
" Copy: [ @$copy ]\n",
" Link: [ @$link ]\n",
" Accept: [ @$accept ]\n",
" Suffix: [ $sfx ]\n");
print(" Module: $ttmodule ", $ttmodule->module_version(), "\n")
unless $ttmodule eq $TTMODULE;
if ($depends && $DEP_DEBUG) {
print "Dependencies:\n";
foreach my $key ('*', grep { !/\*/ } keys %$depends) {
printf( " %-16s %s\n", $key,
join(', ', @{ $depends->{ $key } }) )
if defined $depends->{ $key };
}
}
print "\n" if $verbose > 1;
print red("NOTE: dry run, doing nothing...\n")
if $dryrun;
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# main processing loop
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
my $template = $ttmodule->new($ttopts)
|| die $ttmodule->error();
if (@ARGV) {
# explicitly process files specified on command lines
foreach my $file (@ARGV) {
my $path = $srcdir ? File::Spec->catfile($srcdir, $file) : $file;
if ( -d $path ) {
process_tree($file);
}
else {
process_file($file, $path, force => 1);
}
}
}
else {
# implicitly process all file in source directory
process_tree();
}
if ($summary || $verbose) {
my $format = "%13d %s %s\n";
print "\n" if $verbose > 1;
print(
" Summary: ",
$dryrun ? red("This was a dry run. Nothing was actually done\n") : "\n",
green(sprintf($format, $n_proc, $n_proc == 1 ? 'file' : 'files', 'processed')),
green(sprintf($format, $n_copy, $n_copy == 1 ? 'file' : 'files', 'copied')),
green(sprintf($format, $n_link, $n_link == 1 ? 'file' : 'files', 'linked')),
green(sprintf($format, $n_mkdir, $n_mkdir == 1 ? 'directory' : 'directories', 'created')),
yellow(sprintf($format, $n_unmod, $n_unmod == 1 ? 'file' : 'files', 'skipped (not modified)')),
yellow(sprintf($format, $n_skip, $n_skip == 1 ? 'file' : 'files', 'skipped (ignored)'))
);
}
exit(0);
#========================================================================
# END
#========================================================================
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# process_tree($dir)
#
# Walks the directory tree starting at $dir or the current directory
# if unspecified, processing files as found.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub process_tree {
my $dir = shift;
my ($file, $path, $abspath, $check);
my $target;
local *DIR;
my $absdir = join('/', $srcdir ? $srcdir : (), defined $dir ? $dir : ());
$absdir ||= '.';
opendir(DIR, $absdir) || do { warn "$absdir: $!\n"; return undef; };
FILE: while (defined ($file = readdir(DIR))) {
next if $file eq '.' || $file eq '..';
$path = defined $dir ? "$dir/$file" : $file;
$abspath = "$absdir/$file";
next unless -e $abspath;
# check against ignore list
foreach $check (@$ignore) {
if ($path =~ /$check/) {
printf yellow(" - %-32s (ignored, matches /$check/)\n"), $path
if $verbose > 1;
$n_skip++;
next FILE;
}
}
if (-d $abspath) {
if ($recurse) {
my ($uid, $gid, $mode);
(undef, undef, $mode, undef, $uid, $gid, undef, undef,
undef, undef, undef, undef, undef) = stat($abspath);
# create target directory if required
$target = "$destdir/$path";
unless (-d $target || $dryrun) {
mkpath($target, $verbose, $mode) or
die red("Could not mkpath ($target): $!\n");
# commented out by abw on 2000/12/04 - seems to raise a warning?
# chown($uid, $gid, $target) || warn "chown($target): $!\n";
$n_mkdir++;
printf green(" + %-32s (created target directory)\n"), $path
if $verbose;
}
# recurse into directory
process_tree($path);
}
else {
$n_skip++;
printf yellow(" - %-32s (directory, not recursing)\n"), $path
if $verbose > 1;
}
}
else {
process_file($path, $abspath);
}
}
closedir(DIR);
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# process_file()
#
# File filtering and processing sub-routine called by process_tree()
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub process_file {
my ($file, $absfile, %options) = @_;
my ($dest, $destfile, $filename, $check,
$srctime, $desttime, $mode, $uid, $gid);
my ($old_suffix, $new_suffix);
my $is_dep = 0;
my $copy_file = 0;
my $link_file = 0;
$absfile ||= $file;
$filename = basename($file);
$destfile = $file;
# look for any relevant suffix mapping
if (%$suffix) {
if ($filename =~ m/\.(.+)$/) {
$old_suffix = $1;
if ($new_suffix = $suffix->{ $old_suffix }) {
$destfile =~ s/$old_suffix$/$new_suffix/;
}
}
}
$dest = $destdir ? "$destdir/$destfile" : $destfile;
# print "proc $file => $dest\n";
# check against link list
foreach my $link_pattern (@$link) {
if ($filename =~ /$link_pattern/) {
$link_file = $copy_file = 1;
$check = $link_pattern;
last;
}
}
unless ($copy_file) {
# check against copy list
foreach my $copy_pattern (@$copy) {
if ($filename =~ /$copy_pattern/) {
$copy_file = 1;
$check = $copy_pattern;
last;
}
}
}
# check against acceptance list
if (not $copy_file and @$accept) {
unless (grep { $filename =~ /$_/ } @$accept) {
printf yellow(" - %-32s (not accepted)\n"), $file
if $verbose > 1;
$n_skip++;
return;
}
}
# stat the source file unconditionally, so we can preserve
# mode and ownership
( undef, undef, $mode, undef, $uid, $gid, undef,
undef, undef, $srctime, undef, undef, undef ) = stat($absfile);
# test modification time of existing destination file
if (! $all && ! $options{ force } && -f $dest) {
$desttime = ( stat($dest) )[9];
if (defined $depends and not $copy_file) {
my $deptime = depend_time($file, $depends);
if (defined $deptime && ($srctime < $deptime)) {
$srctime = $deptime;
$is_dep = 1;
}
}
if ($desttime >= $srctime) {
printf yellow(" - %-32s (not modified)\n"), $file
if $verbose > 1;
$n_unmod++;
return;
}
}
# check against link list
if ($link_file) {
unless ($dryrun) {
if (link($absfile, $dest) == 1) {
$copy_file = 0;
}
else {
warn red("Could not link ($absfile to $dest) : $!\n");
}
}
unless ($copy_file) {
$n_link++;
printf green(" > %-32s (linked, matches /$check/)\n"), $file
if $verbose;
return;
}
}
# check against copy list
if ($copy_file) {
$n_copy++;
unless ($dryrun) {
copy($absfile, $dest) or die red("Could not copy ($absfile to $dest) : $!\n");
if ($preserve) {
chown($uid, $gid, $dest) || warn red("chown($dest): $!\n");
chmod($mode, $dest) || warn red("chmod($dest): $!\n");
}
}
printf green(" > %-32s (copied, matches /$check/)\n"), $file
if $verbose;
return;
}
$n_proc++;
if ($verbose) {
printf(green(" + %-32s"), $file);
print(green(" (changed suffix to $new_suffix)")) if $new_suffix;
print "\n";
}
# process file
unless ($dryrun) {
$template->process($file, $replace, $destfile,
$binmode ? {binmode => $binmode} : {})
|| print(red(" ! "), $template->error(), "\n");
if ($preserve) {
chown($uid, $gid, $dest) || warn red("chown($dest): $!\n");
chmod($mode, $dest) || warn red("chmod($dest): $!\n");
}
}
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# dependencies($file, $depends)
#
# Read the dependencies from $file, if defined, and merge in with
# those passed in as the hash array $depends, if defined.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub dependencies {
my ($file, $depend) = @_;
my %depends = ();
if (defined $file) {
my ($fh, $text, $line);
open $fh, $file or die "Can't open $file, $!";
local $/ = undef;
$text = <$fh>;
close($fh);
$text =~ s[\\\n][]mg;
foreach $line (split("\n", $text)) {
next if $line =~ /^\s*(#|$)/;
chomp $line;
my ($file, @files) = quotewords('\s*:\s*', 0, $line);
$file =~ s/^\s+//;
@files = grep(defined, quotewords('(,|\s)\s*', 0, @files));
$depends{$file} = \@files;
}
}
if (defined $depend) {
foreach my $key (keys %$depend) {
$depends{$key} = [ quotewords(',', 0, $depend->{$key}) ];
}
}
return \%depends;
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# depend_time($file, \%depends)
#
# Returns the mtime of the most recent in @files.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub depend_time {
my ($file, $depends) = @_;
my ($deps, $absfile, $modtime);
my $maxtime = 0;
my @pending = ($file);
my @files;
my %seen;
# push any global dependencies onto the pending list
if ($deps = $depends->{'*'}) {
push(@pending, @$deps);
}
print " # checking dependencies for $file...\n"
if $DEP_DEBUG;
# iterate through the list of pending files
while (@pending) {
$file = shift @pending;
next if $seen{ $file }++;
if (File::Spec->file_name_is_absolute($file) && -f $file) {
$modtime = (stat($file))[9];
print " # $file [$modtime]\n"
if $DEP_DEBUG;
}
else {
$modtime = 0;
foreach my $dir ($srcdir, @$libdir) {
$absfile = File::Spec->catfile($dir, $file);
if (-f $absfile) {
$modtime = (stat($absfile))[9];
print " # $absfile [$modtime]\n"
if $DEP_DEBUG;
last;
}
}
}
$maxtime = $modtime
if $modtime > $maxtime;
if ($deps = $depends->{ $file }) {
push(@pending, @$deps);
print " # depends on ", join(', ', @$deps), "\n"
if $DEP_DEBUG;
}
}
return $maxtime;
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# read_config($file)
#
# Handles reading of config file and/or command line arguments.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub read_config {
my $file = shift;
my $verbose = 0;
my $verbinc = sub {
my ($state, $var, $value) = @_;
$state->{ VARIABLE }->{ verbose } = $value ? ++$verbose : --$verbose;
};
my $config = AppConfig->new(
{
ERROR => sub { die(@_, "\ntry `$NAME --help'\n") }
},
'help|h' => { ACTION => \&help },
'src|s=s' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'dest|d=s' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'lib|l=s@' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'cfg|c=s' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL, DEFAULT => '.' },
'verbose|v' => { DEFAULT => 0, ACTION => $verbinc },
'recurse|r' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'nothing|n' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'preserve|p' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'absolute' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'relative' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'colour|color'=> { DEFAULT => 0 },
'summary' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'all|a' => { DEFAULT => 0 },
'define=s%',
'suffix=s%',
'binmode=s',
'ignore=s@',
'copy=s@',
'link=s@',
'accept=s@',
'depend=s%',
'depend_debug|depdbg',
'depend_file|depfile=s' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'template_module|module=s',
'template_anycase|anycase',
'template_encoding|encoding=s',
'template_eval_perl|eval_perl',
'template_load_perl|load_perl',
'template_interpolate|interpolate',
'template_pre_chomp|pre_chomp|prechomp',
'template_post_chomp|post_chomp|postchomp',
'template_trim|trim',
'template_pre_process|pre_process|preprocess=s@',
'template_post_process|post_process|postprocess=s@',
'template_process|process=s',
'template_wrapper|wrapper=s',
'template_recursion|recursion',
'template_expose_blocks|expose_blocks',
'template_default|default=s',
'template_error|error=s',
'template_debug|debug=s',
'template_strict|strict',
'template_start_tag|start_tag|starttag=s',
'template_end_tag|end_tag|endtag=s',
'template_tag_style|tag_style|tagstyle=s',
'template_compile_ext|compile_ext=s',
'template_compile_dir|compile_dir=s' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'template_plugin_base|plugin_base|pluginbase=s@' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
'perl5lib|perllib=s@' => { EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL },
);
# add the 'file' option now that we have a $config object that we
# can reference in a closure
$config->define(
'file|f=s@' => {
EXPAND => EXPAND_ALL,
ACTION => sub {
my ($state, $item, $file) = @_;
$file = $state->cfg . "/$file"
unless $file =~ /^[\.\/]|(?:\w:)/;
$config->file($file) }
}
);
# process main config file, then command line args
$config->file($file) if -f $file;
$config->args();
$config;
}
sub ANSI_escape {
my $attr = shift;
my $text = join('', @_);
return join("\n",
map {
# look for an existing escape start sequence and add new
# attribute to it, otherwise add escape start/end sequences
s/ \e \[ ([1-9][\d;]*) m/\e[$1;${attr}m/gx
? $_
: "\e[${attr}m" . $_ . "\e[0m";
}
split(/\n/, $text, -1) # -1 prevents it from ignoring trailing fields
);
}
sub _red(@) { ANSI_escape(31, @_) }
sub _green(@) { ANSI_escape(32, @_) }
sub _yellow(@) { ANSI_escape(33, @_) }
sub _blue(@) { ANSI_escape(34, @_) }
sub _white(@) { @_ } # nullop
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# write_config($file)
#
# Writes a sample configuration file to the filename specified.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub write_config {
my $file = shift;
open(CONFIG, ">$file") || die "failed to create $file: $!\n";
print(CONFIG <<END_OF_CONFIG);
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# sample .ttreerc file created automatically by $NAME version $VERSION
#
# This file originally written to $file
#
# For more information on the contents of this configuration file, see
#
# perldoc ttree
# ttree -h
#
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# The most flexible way to use ttree is to create a separate directory
# for configuration files and simply use the .ttreerc to tell ttree where
# it is.
#
# cfg = /path/to/ttree/config/directory
# print summary of what's going on
verbose
# recurse into any sub-directories and process files
recurse
# regexen of things that aren't templates and should be ignored
ignore = \\b(CVS|RCS)\\b
ignore = ^#
# ditto for things that should be copied rather than processed.
copy = \\.png\$
copy = \\.gif\$
# ditto for things that should be linked rather than copied / processed.
# link = \\.flv\$
# by default, everything not ignored or copied is accepted; add 'accept'
# lines if you want to filter further. e.g.
#
# accept = \\.html\$
# accept = \\.tt2\$
# options to rewrite files suffixes (htm => html, tt2 => html)
#
# suffix htm=html
# suffix tt2=html
# options to define dependencies between templates
#
# depend *=header,footer,menu
# depend index.html=mainpage,sidebar
# depend menu=menuitem,menubar
#
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# The following options usually relate to a particular project so
# you'll probably want to put them in a separate configuration file
# in the directory specified by the 'cfg' option and then invoke tree
# using '-f' to tell it which configuration you want to use.
# However, there's nothing to stop you from adding default 'src',
# 'dest' or 'lib' options in the .ttreerc. The 'src' and 'dest' options
# can be re-defined in another configuration file, but be aware that 'lib'
# options accumulate so any 'lib' options defined in the .ttreerc will
# be applied every time you run ttree.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# # directory containing source page templates
# src = /path/to/your/source/page/templates
#
# # directory where output files should be written
# dest = /path/to/your/html/output/directory
#
# # additional directories of library templates
# lib = /first/path/to/your/library/templates
# lib = /second/path/to/your/library/templates
END_OF_CONFIG
close(CONFIG);
print "$file created. Please edit accordingly and re-run $NAME\n";
}
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# help()
#
# Prints help message and exits.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
sub help {
print<<END_OF_HELP;
$NAME $VERSION (Template Toolkit version $Template::VERSION)
usage: $NAME [options] [files]
Options:
-a (--all) Process all files, regardless of modification
-r (--recurse) Recurse into sub-directories
-p (--preserve) Preserve file ownership and permission
-n (--nothing) Do nothing, just print summary (enables -v)
-v (--verbose) Verbose mode. Use twice for more verbosity: -v -v
-h (--help) This help
-s DIR (--src=DIR) Source directory
-d DIR (--dest=DIR) Destination directory
-c DIR (--cfg=DIR) Location of configuration files
-l DIR (--lib=DIR) Library directory (INCLUDE_PATH) (multiple)
-f FILE (--file=FILE) Read named configuration file (multiple)
Display options:
--colour / --color Enable colo(u)rful verbose output.
--summary Show processing summary.
File search specifications (all may appear multiple times):
--ignore=REGEX Ignore files matching REGEX
--copy=REGEX Copy files matching REGEX
--link=REGEX Link files matching REGEX
--accept=REGEX Process only files matching REGEX
File Dependencies Options:
--depend foo=bar,baz Specify that 'foo' depends on 'bar' and 'baz'.
--depend_file FILE Read file dependancies from FILE.
--depend_debug Enable debugging for dependencies
File suffix rewriting (may appear multiple times)
--suffix old=new Change any '.old' suffix to '.new'
File encoding options
--binmode=value Set binary mode of output files
--encoding=value Set encoding of input files
Additional options to set Template Toolkit configuration items:
--define var=value Define template variable
--interpolate Interpolate '\$var' references in text
--anycase Accept directive keywords in any case.
--pre_chomp Chomp leading whitespace
--post_chomp Chomp trailing whitespace
--trim Trim blank lines around template blocks
--eval_perl Evaluate [% PERL %] ... [% END %] code blocks
--load_perl Load regular Perl modules via USE directive
--absolute Enable the ABSOLUTE option
--relative Enable the RELATIVE option
--pre_process=TEMPLATE Process TEMPLATE before each main template
--post_process=TEMPLATE Process TEMPLATE after each main template
--process=TEMPLATE Process TEMPLATE instead of main template
--wrapper=TEMPLATE Process TEMPLATE wrapper around main template
--default=TEMPLATE Use TEMPLATE as default
--error=TEMPLATE Use TEMPLATE to handle errors
--debug=STRING Set TT DEBUG option to STRING
--start_tag=STRING STRING defines start of directive tag
--end_tag=STRING STRING defined end of directive tag
--tag_style=STYLE Use pre-defined tag STYLE
--plugin_base=PACKAGE Base PACKAGE for plugins
--compile_ext=STRING File extension for compiled template files
--compile_dir=DIR Directory for compiled template files
--perl5lib=DIR Specify additional Perl library directories
--template_module=MODULE Specify alternate Template module
See 'perldoc ttree' for further information.
END_OF_HELP
exit(0);
}
__END__
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
# IMPORTANT NOTE
# This documentation is generated automatically from source
# templates. Any changes you make here may be lost.
#
# The 'docsrc' documentation source bundle is available for download
# from http://www.template-toolkit.org/docs.html and contains all
# the source templates, XML files, scripts, etc., from which the
# documentation for the Template Toolkit is built.
#------------------------------------------------------------------------
=head1 NAME
Template::Tools::ttree - Process entire directory trees of templates
=head1 SYNOPSIS
ttree [options] [files]
=head1 DESCRIPTION
The F<ttree> script is used to process entire directory trees containing
template files. The resulting output from processing each file is then
written to a corresponding file in a destination directory. The script
compares the modification times of source and destination files (where
they already exist) and processes only those files that have been modified.
In other words, it is the equivalent of 'make' for the Template Toolkit.
It supports a number of options which can be used to configure
behaviour, define locations and set Template Toolkit options. The
script first reads the F<.ttreerc> configuration file in the HOME
directory, or an alternative file specified in the TTREERC environment
variable. Then, it processes any command line arguments, including
any additional configuration files specified via the C<-f> (file)
option.
=head2 The F<.ttreerc> Configuration File
When you run F<ttree> for the first time it will ask you if you want
it to create a F<.ttreerc> file for you. This will be created in your
home directory.
$ ttree
Do you want me to create a sample '.ttreerc' file for you?
(file: /home/abw/.ttreerc) [y/n]: y
/home/abw/.ttreerc created. Please edit accordingly and re-run ttree
The purpose of this file is to set any I<global> configuration options
that you want applied I<every> time F<ttree> is run. For example, you
can use the C<ignore> and C<copy> / C<link> options to provide regular
expressions that specify which files should be ignored and which
should be copied or linked rather than being processed as templates.
You may also want to set flags like C<verbose> and C<recurse>
according to your preference.
A minimal F<.ttreerc>:
# ignore these files
ignore = \b(CVS|RCS)\b
ignore = ^#
ignore = ~$
# copy these files
copy = \.(gif|png|jpg|pdf)$
# recurse into directories
recurse
# provide info about what's going on
verbose
In most cases, you'll want to create a different F<ttree> configuration
file for each project you're working on. The C<cfg> option allows you
to specify a directory where F<ttree> can find further configuration
files.
cfg = /home/abw/.ttree
The C<-f> command line option can be used to specify which configuration
file should be used. You can specify a filename using an absolute or
relative path:
$ ttree -f /home/abw/web/example/etc/ttree.cfg
$ ttree -f ./etc/ttree.cfg
$ ttree -f ../etc/ttree.cfg
If the configuration file does not begin with C</> or C<.> or something
that looks like a MS-DOS absolute path (e.g. C<C:\\etc\\ttree.cfg>) then
F<ttree> will look for it in the directory specified by the C<cfg> option.
$ ttree -f test1 # /home/abw/.ttree/test1
The C<cfg> option can only be used in the F<.ttreerc> file. All the
other options can be used in the F<.ttreerc> or any other F<ttree>
configuration file. They can all also be specified as command line
options.
Remember that F<.ttreerc> is always processed I<before> any
configuration file specified with the C<-f> option. Certain options
like C<lib> can be used any number of times and accumulate their values.
For example, consider the following configuration files:
F</home/abw/.ttreerc>:
cfg = /home/abw/.ttree
lib = /usr/local/tt2/templates
F</home/abw/.ttree/myconfig>:
lib = /home/abw/web/example/templates/lib
When F<ttree> is invoked as follows:
$ ttree -f myconfig
the C<lib> option will be set to the following directories:
/usr/local/tt2/templates
/home/abw/web/example/templates/lib
Any templates located under F</usr/local/tt2/templates> will be used
in preference to those located under
F</home/abw/web/example/templates/lib>. This may be what you want,
but then again, it might not. For this reason, it is good practice to
keep the F<.ttreerc> as simple as possible and use different
configuration files for each F<ttree> project.
=head2 Directory Options
The C<src> option is used to define the directory containing the
source templates to be processed. It can be provided as a command
line option or in a configuration file as shown here:
src = /home/abw/web/example/templates/src
Each template in this directory typically corresponds to a single
web page or other document.
The C<dest> option is used to specify the destination directory for the
generated output.
dest = /home/abw/web/example/html
The C<lib> option is used to define one or more directories containing
additional library templates. These templates are not documents in
their own right and typically comprise of smaller, modular components
like headers, footers and menus that are incorporated into pages templates.
lib = /home/abw/web/example/templates/lib
lib = /usr/local/tt2/templates
The C<lib> option can be used repeatedly to add further directories to
the search path.
A list of templates can be passed to F<ttree> as command line arguments.
$ ttree foo.html bar.html
It looks for these templates in the C<src> directory and processes them
through the Template Toolkit, using any additional template components
from the C<lib> directories. The generated output is then written to
the corresponding file in the C<dest> directory.
If F<ttree> is invoked without explicitly specifying any templates
to be processed then it will process every file in the C<src> directory.
If the C<-r> (recurse) option is set then it will additionally iterate
down through sub-directories and process and other template files it finds
therein.
$ ttree -r
If a template has been processed previously, F<ttree> will compare the
modification times of the source and destination files. If the source
template (or one it is dependant on) has not been modified more
recently than the generated output file then F<ttree> will not process
it. The F<-a> (all) option can be used to force F<ttree> to process
all files regardless of modification time.
$ tree -a
Any templates explicitly named as command line argument are always
processed and the modification time checking is bypassed.
=head2 File Options
The C<ignore>, C<copy>, C<link> and C<accept> options are used to
specify Perl regexen to filter file names. Files that match any of the
C<ignore> options will not be processed. Remaining files that match
any of the C<copy> or C<link> regexen will be copied or linked to the
destination directory. Remaining files that then match any of the
C<accept> criteria are then processed via the Template Toolkit. If no
C<accept> parameter is specified then all files will be accepted for
processing if not already copied or ignored.
# ignore these files
ignore = \b(CVS|RCS)\b
ignore = ^#
ignore = ~$
# copy these files
copy = \.(gif|png|jpg|pdf)$
# accept only .tt2 templates
accept = \.tt2$
The C<suffix> option is used to define mappings between the file
extensions for source templates and the generated output files. The
following example specifies that source templates with a C<.tt2>
suffix should be output as C<.html> files:
suffix tt2=html
Or on the command line,
--suffix tt2=html
You can provide any number of different suffix mappings by repeating
this option.
The C<binmode> option is used to set the encoding of the output file.
For example use C<--binmode=:utf8> to set the output format to unicode.
=head2 Template Dependencies
The C<depend> and C<depend_file> options allow you to specify
how any given template file depends on another file or group of files.
The C<depend> option is used to express a single dependency.
$ ttree --depend foo=bar,baz
This command line example shows the C<--depend> option being used to
specify that the F<foo> file is dependant on the F<bar> and F<baz>
templates. This option can be used many time on the command line:
$ ttree --depend foo=bar,baz --depend crash=bang,wallop
or in a configuration file:
depend foo=bar,baz
depend crash=bang,wallop
The file appearing on the left of the C<=> is specified relative to
the C<src> or C<lib> directories. The file(s) appearing on the right
can be specified relative to any of these directories or as absolute
file paths.
For example:
$ ttree --depend foo=bar,/tmp/baz
To define a dependency that applies to all files, use C<*> on the
left of the C<=>.
$ ttree --depend *=header,footer
or in a configuration file:
depend *=header,footer
Any templates that are defined in the C<pre_process>, C<post_process>,
C<process> or C<wrapper> options will automatically be added to the
list of global dependencies that apply to all templates.
The C<depend_file> option can be used to specify a file that contains
dependency information.
$ ttree --depend_file=/home/abw/web/example/etc/ttree.dep
Here is an example of a dependency file:
# This is a comment. It is ignored.
index.html: header footer menubar
header: titlebar hotlinks
menubar: menuitem
# spanning multiple lines with the backslash
another.html: header footer menubar \
sidebar searchform
Lines beginning with the C<#> character are comments and are ignored.
Blank lines are also ignored. All other lines should provide a
filename followed by a colon and then a list of dependant files
separated by whitespace, commas or both. Whitespace around the colon
is also optional. Lines ending in the C<\> character are continued
onto the following line.
Files that contain spaces can be quoted. That is only necessary
for files after the colon (':'). The file before the colon may be
quoted if it contains a colon.
As with the command line options, the C<*> character can be used
as a wildcard to specify a dependency for all templates.
* : config,header
=head2 Template Toolkit Options
F<ttree> also provides access to the usual range of Template Toolkit
options. For example, the C<--pre_chomp> and C<--post_chomp> F<ttree>
options correspond to the C<PRE_CHOMP> and C<POST_CHOMP> options.
Run C<ttree -h> for a summary of the options available.
=head1 AUTHORS
Andy Wardley E<lt>abw@andywardley.comE<gt>
L<http://www.andywardley.com/|http://www.andywardley.com/>
With contributions from Dylan William Hardison (support for
dependencies), Bryce Harrington (C<absolute> and C<relative> options),
Mark Anderson (C<suffix> and C<debug> options), Harald Joerg and Leon
Brocard who gets everywhere, it seems.
=head1 VERSION
2.68, distributed as part of the
Template Toolkit version 2.19, released on 27 April 2007.
=head1 COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1996-2007 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<tpage|Template::Tools::tpage>
Zerion Mini Shell 1.0