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I am new to Gerrit and Prolog, and am having difficulty creating my rule. With the rules.pl I currently have, it stalls when I try to open the Gerrit window after running the push command.

What I'd like is to make a rule that at each push to the remote, a .txt file needs to be present in the list of changed files. I saw a similar rule in the Prolog cookbook, but mine is not correct yet. Here's what I have currently (have made some changes in the last 24hours):

    submit_rule(S) :-
            gerrit:default_submit(X),
            X = .. [submit | Ls],
            my_rule(Ls,R),
            S = .. [submit | R].

    my_rule(S1,T) :-
            gerrit:commit_delta('\\.txt$),
            T = label('Text-File-Must-Be-Present',ok(T)).

    my_rule(S1,[label('Text-File-Must-Be-Present',need(_)) | S1]).

I think I am still missing something in my_rule. I need to be sure that commit_delta returned true. If not, then it should return false and block the push to the remote repo. Do I need something more like this?

    gerrit:commit_delta('\\.txt$),
    T \= false, !,
    T = label('Text-File-Must-Be-Present',ok(T)).

in order to return if false is returned? Thanks again!

1 Answer 1

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Don't know gerrit, but you have several syntax problems, maybe induced by some buggy text processing step:

gerrit:commit_delta('\\.txt$),

left the atom unterminated, hiding the subsequent bug (at least in Prologs not supporting SWI-Prolog extensions of compounds with 0 arity)

T = label('Text-File-Must-Be-Present',need()).

need() should have at least 1 argument, or should be written down as need.

If gerrit implements its own Prolog interpreter, it should be able to show somewhere an error report...

BTW, the first rule is more complex than needed. I would write

submit_rule(submit(R)) :-
    gerrit:default_submit(R,submit(Ls)),
    my_rule(R).

clearly showing you're forgetting to process Ls

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  • Thank you for your comments. I have updated the original post with some changes that a Prolog-familiar friend suggested. I don't understand your first comment though. Doesn't the comma say to continue checking?
    – tennis
    Sep 18, 2015 at 17:32
  • no, the comma it's either - an argument separator - the 'and' operator (when used in a predicate) - list elements separator. I cannot recall other usage ...
    – CapelliC
    Sep 18, 2015 at 17:36

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