Trigger custom commands from filesystem events.
Project description
Patrol
Trigger methods from changed files - e.g. selectively rebuild your project or run tests as soon as you hit the save button on your text editor or IDE.
Patrol works well with ProjectKey.
Use
To install:
pip install patrol
Example code:
import patrol
def build(filenames):
touch("output/build_started")
time.sleep(2)
touch("output/build_finished")
def run_test(filenames):
touch("output/test_started")
time.sleep(30)
touch("output/test_finished")
patrol.watch([
patrol.Trigger(
build,
includes=["data/*", ],
excludes=['data/exclude/*', 'output/*', ],
),
patrol.Trigger(
run_test,
includes=["data/*", ],
excludes=['data/exclude/*', 'output/*', ],
reaper=patrol.Reaper(), # If triggered while method is in progress, this will stop it and start it again.
fire_on_initialization=True, # When the watch is initiated, this trigger will also fire.
),
],
directory=os.getcwd(), # By default it patrols the present working directory.
lockfiles=[".git/index.lock", ], # This will wait until git has finished its operations before firing any triggers
)
Features
Patrol does not use polling to detect file changes. It uses libuv, which creates event driven hooks to filesystem events using epoll, kqueue or IOCP.
You can queue up triggers when a specified lockfile is present - e.g. you can use to prevent triggers from firing until git operations are done.
Patrol comes with a customized Reaper class that can be used to specify how a process is stopped.
Project details
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