Module: RequireAll

Defined in:
lib/external/require_all.rb

Overview

– Copyright ©2009 Tony Arcieri You can redistribute this under the terms of the MIT license See file LICENSE for details ++

Constant Summary collapse

LoadError =
Class.new(::LoadError)

Instance Method Summary collapse

Instance Method Details

#autoload_all(*paths) ⇒ Object

Performs Kernel#autoload on all of the files rather than requiring immediately.

Note that all Ruby files inside of the specified directories should have same module name as the directory itself and file names should reflect the class/module names. For example if there is a my_file.rb in directories dir1/dir2/ then there should be a declaration like this in my_file.rb:

 module Dir1
   module Dir2
     class MyFile
       ...
     end
   end
end

If the filename and namespaces won’t match then my_file.rb will be loaded into wrong module! Better to fix these files.

Set $DEBUG=true to see how files will be autoloaded if experiencing any problems.

If trying to perform autoload on some individual file or some inner module, then you’d have to always specify :base_dir option to specify where top-level namespace resides. Otherwise it’s impossible to know the namespace of the loaded files.

For example loading only my_file.rb from dir1/dir2 with autoload_all:

autoload_all File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/dir1/dir2/my_file',
             base_dir: File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/dir1'

WARNING: All modules will be created even if files themselves aren’t loaded yet, meaning that all the code which depends of the modules being loaded or not will not work, like usages of define? and it’s friends.

Also, normal caveats of using Kernel#autoload apply - you have to remember that before applying any monkey-patches to code using autoload, you’ll have to reference the full constant to load the code before applying your patch!



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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 175

def autoload_all(*paths)
  paths.flatten!
  return false if paths.empty?
  require "pathname"

  options = {method: :autoload}
  options.merge!(paths.pop) if paths.last.is_a?(Hash)

  paths.each do |path|
    require_all path, {base_dir: path}.merge(options)
  end
end

#autoload_rel(*paths) ⇒ Object

Performs autoloading relatively from the caller instead of using current working directory



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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 189

def autoload_rel(*paths)
  paths.flatten!
  return false if paths.empty?
  require "pathname"

  options = {method: :autoload}
  options.merge!(paths.pop) if paths.last.is_a?(Hash)

  source_directory = File.dirname caller.first.sub(/:\d+$/, '')
  paths.each do |path|
    file_path = Pathname.new(source_directory).join(path).to_s
    require_all file_path, {method: :autoload,
                            base_dir: source_directory}.merge(options)
  end
end

#load_all(*paths) ⇒ Object

Loads all files like require_all instead of requiring



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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 123

def load_all(*paths)
  require_all paths, method: :load
end

#load_rel(*paths) ⇒ Object

Loads all files by using relative paths of the caller rather than the current working directory



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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 129

def load_rel(*paths)
  paths.flatten!
  return false if paths.empty?

  source_directory = File.dirname caller.first.sub(/:\d+$/, '')
  paths.each do |path|
    require_all File.join(source_directory, path), method: :load
  end
end

#require_all(*args) ⇒ Object

A wonderfully simple way to load your code.

The easiest way to use require_all is to just point it at a directory containing a bunch of .rb files. These files can be nested under subdirectories as well:

require_all 'lib'

This will find all the .rb files under the lib directory and load them.

If a file required by require_all references a constant that is not yet loaded, a RequireAll::LoadError will be thrown.

You can also give it a glob, which will enumerate all the matching files:

require_all 'lib/**/*.rb'

It will also accept an array of files:

require_all Dir.glob("blah/**/*.rb").reject { |f| stupid_file(f) }

Or if you want, just list the files directly as arguments:

require_all 'lib/a.rb', 'lib/b.rb', 'lib/c.rb', 'lib/d.rb'


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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 35

def require_all(*args)
  # Handle passing an array as an argument
  args.flatten!

  options = {method: :require}
  options.merge!(args.pop) if args.last.is_a?(Hash)

  if args.empty?
    puts "no files were loaded due to an empty Array" if $DEBUG
    return false
  end

  if args.size > 1
    # Expand files below directories
    files = args.map do |path|
      if File.directory? path
        Dir[File.join(path, '**', '*.rb')]
      else
        path
      end
    end.flatten
  else
    arg = args.first
    begin
      # Try assuming we're doing plain ol' require compat
      stat = File.stat(arg)

      if stat.file?
        files = [arg]
      elsif stat.directory?
        files = Dir.glob File.join(arg, '**', '*.rb')
      else
        raise ArgumentError, "#{arg} isn't a file or directory"
      end
    rescue SystemCallError
      # If the stat failed, maybe we have a glob!
      files = Dir.glob arg

      # Maybe it's an .rb file and the .rb was omitted
      if File.file?(arg + '.rb')
        file = arg + '.rb'
        options[:method] != :autoload ? __require(options[:method], file) : __autoload(file, file, options)
        return true
      end

      # If we ain't got no files, the glob failed
      #raise LoadError, "no such file to load -- #{arg}" if files.empty?
    end
  end

  return if files.empty?

  if options[:method] == :autoload
    files.map! { |file_| [file_, File.expand_path(file_)] }
    files.each do |file_, full_path|
      __autoload(file_, full_path, options)
    end

    return true
  end

  files.map { |file_| File.expand_path file_ }.sort.each do |file_|
    begin
      __require(options[:method], file_)
    rescue NameError => e
      # Only wrap NameError exceptions for uninitialized constants
      #raise e unless e.instance_of?(NameError) && e.message.include?('uninitialized constant')
      #raise LoadError, "Could not require #{file_} (#{e}). Please require the necessary files"
    end
  end

  true
end

#require_rel(*paths) ⇒ Object

Works like require_all, but paths are relative to the caller rather than the current working directory



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# File 'lib/external/require_all.rb', line 111

def require_rel(*paths)
  # Handle passing an array as an argument
  paths.flatten!
  return false if paths.empty?

  source_directory = File.dirname caller.first.sub(/:\d+$/, '')
  paths.each do |path|
    require_all File.join(source_directory, path)
  end
end