61

I have a Rakefile with a Rake task that I would normally call from the command line:

rake blog:post Title

I'd like to write a Ruby script that calls that Rake task multiple times, but the only solution I see is shelling out using `` (backticks) or system.

What's the right way to do this?

4 Answers 4

45

from timocracy.com:

require 'rake'

def capture_stdout
  s = StringIO.new
  oldstdout = $stdout
  $stdout = s
  yield
  s.string
ensure
  $stdout = oldstdout
end

Rake.application.rake_require 'metric_fetcher', ['../../lib/tasks']
results = capture_stdout {Rake.application['metric_fetcher'].invoke}
3
  • 1
    With Rails 3.1 the rake/rdoctask has been deprecated and tasks/rails is missing. The above works just fine with just the first require statement.
    – jwadsack
    Jan 9, 2012 at 21:07
  • For changing stdout, I suggest saving the original stream via #dup, then #reopen to a Tempfile which is read after reopening to the original. Merely assigning $stdout won't work if the task uses the STDOUT constant, or runs an external program.
    – Kelvin
    Mar 6, 2013 at 22:29
  • Be aware that rake_require always joins the given path with each path from the $LOAD_PATH array and checks for existence of a file. So the first argument should be a relative path. It will be treated as relative even if it contains a leading slash (or backslash on non-Unix systems).
    – siefca
    Dec 4, 2013 at 15:55
23

This works with Rake version 10.0.3:

require 'rake'
app = Rake.application
app.init
# do this as many times as needed
app.add_import 'some/other/file.rake'
# this loads the Rakefile and other imports
app.load_rakefile

app['sometask'].invoke

As knut said, use reenable if you want to invoke multiple times.

2
  • 1
    Hi @JasonFB, you can access the gem with something like app.add_import "#{Gem::Specification.find_by_name('statesman').gem_dir}/lib/tasks/statesman.rake"
    – spikeheap
    Feb 17, 2017 at 15:07
  • somehow my rake task is executing twice . i have puts "hello" in rake task and hello is printing twice... Jan 4, 2023 at 16:40
17

You can use invoke and reenable to execute the task a second time.

Your example call rake blog:post Title seems to have a parameter. This parameter can be used as a parameter in invoke:

Example:

require 'rake'
task 'mytask', :title do |tsk, args|
  p "called #{tsk} (#{args[:title]})"
end



Rake.application['mytask'].invoke('one')
Rake.application['mytask'].reenable
Rake.application['mytask'].invoke('two')

Please replace mytask with blog:post and instead the task definition you can require your rakefile.

This solution will write the result to stdout - but you did not mention, that you want to suppress output.


Interesting experiment:

You can call the reenable also inside the task definition. This allows a task to reenable himself.

Example:

require 'rake'
task 'mytask', :title do |tsk, args|
  p "called #{tsk} (#{args[:title]})"
  tsk.reenable  #<-- HERE
end

Rake.application['mytask'].invoke('one')
Rake.application['mytask'].invoke('two')

The result (tested with rake 10.4.2):

"called mytask (one)"
"called mytask (two)"
2
  • @JasonFB Do you have an example why not?
    – knut
    May 31, 2015 at 20:49
  • @JasonFB See also my edited answer. Perhaps this is an alternative for your problem..
    – knut
    May 31, 2015 at 20:54
4

In a script with Rails loaded (e.g. rails runner script.rb)

def rake(*tasks)
  tasks.each do |task|
    Rake.application[task].tap(&:invoke).tap(&:reenable)
  end
end

rake('db:migrate', 'cache:clear', 'cache:warmup')

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.