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I have a Rake task which accepts multiple command-line arguments. I prefer to support the key=value syntax for passing parameters to the task, such as:

rake deploy verbose=true environment=production dry-run=true

The problem I have is that "dry-run" argument. After running that Rake task, I get the message:

Don't know how to build task 'dry-run=true'

It doesn't matter if "dry-run" is the first, middle or last argument on the command-line. I could accept the arguments using the "array" style:

rake deploy[true,production,true]

But I don't like that, and I could remove the hypen:

rake deploy verbose=true environment=production dryrun=true

But I was hoping there was some way of allowing a hyphen in the argument name but I haven't been able to find anything, anywhere that discusses this.

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Those variables are managed by your shell. When rake does ENV['verbose'] he's just asking the shell, "hey, do you have any value called 'verbose'? If yes, give it to me".

Shells are generally not able to handle hypens in their variable names; like in most programming languages, the hypen is reserved for the substraction operation.

The simplest fix would be replacing the hyphen by an underscore:

rake deploy verbose=true environment=production dry_run=true

EDIT:

Another option would be using something more suited for command line management. thor should allow you to define a command like so:

deploy --verbose --environment=production --dry-run

EDIT2:

It turns out that the values are passed verbatim to rake, not handled by the shell as I thought - see first comment on this answer for details. The solutions proposed on this answer work nevertheless.

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    This isn’t quite right. Key value pairs specified before the command name are handled by the shell, but those added after are just passed as command line args to the process. Rake checks its args for any matching a key=value pattern, and adds any it finds to the environment. The pattern doesn’t allow -, so dry-run=true doesn’t match and is added as a task. The effect is basically the same (I suspect Rake deliberately mirrored the shell behaviour), but the explanation is a bit more involved.
    – matt
    Oct 2, 2012 at 12:37
  • @matt thanks for the clarification, I've chosen to go with dry_run for now.
    – codecraig
    Oct 2, 2012 at 14:48

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