I cannot figure out how to actually pass arguments to a fabric custom task.
I have a bunch of tasks that all need to do the same setup, so I was hoping to subclass the task and have the base class do the setup and then run the specific subtasks. Both the setup code and the subtasks need access to some arguments that are passed in from the command-line to the task. I also need to be able to set default values for the arguments.
Original Attempt
My original attempt shows what I am trying to do without any sub classes. This code works correctly. The code below is in file tmp1.py:
from fabric.api import task
def do_setup(myarg):
''' common setup for all tasks '''
print "in do_setup(myarg=%s)" % myarg
# do setup using myarg for something important
@task
def actual_task1(myarg='default_value', alias='at'):
print "In actual_task1(myarg=%s)" % myarg
do_setup(myarg)
# do rest of work ...
@task
def actual_task2(myarg='default_value', alias='at'):
print "In actual_task2(myarg=%s)" % myarg
do_setup(myarg)
# do rest of work ...
I run it from the command-line without any args and correctly see the default for myarg of 'default_value'
fab -f ./tmp1.py actual_task1
Prints:
In actual_task1(myarg=default_value)
in do_setup(myarg=default_value)
Done.
Then I call it with myarg='hello' and see that 'hello' gets passed through correctly
fab -f ./tmp1.py actual_task1:myarg='hello'
It outputs:
In actual_task1(myarg=hello)
in do_setup(myarg=hello)
Done.
Attempt with a custom task
My next attempt is to make a common task to encapsulate the setup part. This is copied from http://docs.fabfile.org/en/1.5/usage/tasks.html The code below is in the file tmp2.py:
from fabric.api import task
from fabric.tasks import Task
def do_setup(myarg):
''' common setup for all tasks '''
print "in do_setup(myarg=%s)" % myarg
# do setup using myarg for something important
'''
Attempt to make a common task to encapsulate the setup part
copied from http://docs.fabfile.org/en/1.5/usage/tasks.html
'''
class CustomTask(Task):
def init(self, func, myarg, args, *kwargs):
super(CustomTask, self).init(args, *kwargs)
print("=> init(myarg=%s, args=%s, kwargs=%s" % (myarg, args, kwargs))
self.func = func
self.myarg = myarg
print "in init: self.func=",self.func,"self.myarg=",self.myarg
def run(self, *args, **kwargs):
return self.func(self.myarg, *args, **kwargs)
@task(task_class=CustomTask, myarg='default_value', alias='at')
def actual_task1():
print "In actual_task1(myarg=%s)" % myarg
# do rest of work ...
When run, there are 2 problems:
__init__ gets "default_value" instead of "Hello"
It complains that actual_task1() expects 0 arguments
I run it this way:
fab -f ./tmp2.py actual_task1:myarg="Hello"
Prints:
=> init(myarg=default_value, args=(), kwargs={'alias': 'at'}
in init: self.func= self.myarg= default_value
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/xxx/Documents/pyenvs/xxx/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/fabric/main.py", line 743, in main args, *kwargs
File "/home/xxx/Documents/pyenvs/xxx/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/fabric/tasks.py", line 405, in execute results[''] = task.run(args, *new_kwargs)
File "/home/xxx/test_fab/tmp2.py", line 21, in run
return self.func(self.myarg, args, *kwargs)
TypeError: actual_task1() takes no arguments (1 given)
I spent quite a bit of time trying to make this work but I cannot seem to solve the default_value issue. I must be missing something?
I would appreciate some help figuring out how to make this sample program run. The second version with the custom task needs to behave just like the original version I showed.
Thank you for any help with this issue.