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)"