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Ken 2022-11-10 11:35:01 -08:00
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This package is concerned about the target graph. The target is a unit of work that gets spawned in a child process eventually be a scheduler + target runner. The main focus of this package are:
1. Target interface
2. converter that changes from target ID to package + task, and vice versa
3. A `TargetGraphBuilder` that will take in `PackageInfos` object with some task (dependency) configuration and builds a direct-acyclic graph of the targets.
1. `Target` interface.
2. converter that changes from target ID to package + task, and vice versa.
3. A simple `TargetGraphBuilder` that handles prioritization, cycle detection, subgraph generation.
4. A workspace-aware `WorkspaceTargetGraphBuilder` that will take in `PackageInfos` object with some task (dependency) configuration and builds a direct-acyclic graph of the targets.
5. A `TargetFactory` that can generate "global" or "package" level `Target`s.
## TargetGraphBuilder usage
## WorkspaceTargetGraphBuilder usage
For the case (the typical `lage` CLI case) where we want to use the shorthand syntax to specify a task graph combining with a package dependency graph, this is the right Builder implementation.
```typescript
const rootDir = getWorkspaceRoot(process.cwd());
const packageInfos = getPackageInfos(rootDir);
const builder = new TargetGraphBuilder(rootDir, packageInfos);
const builder = new WorkspaceTargetGraphBuilder(rootDir, packageInfos);
const tasks = ["build", "test"];
const packages = ["package-a", "package-b"];
const targetGraph = builder.buildTargetGraph(tasks, packages);
builder.addTargetConfig("build", {
dependsOn: ["^build"],
});
const targetGraph = builder.build(tasks, packages);
```
## TargetGraphBuilder usage
```typescript
const builder = new TargetGraphBuilder();
const target1 = {...};
const target2 = {...};
const target3 = {...};
builder.addTarget(target1);
builder.addTarget(target2);
builder.addTarget(target3);
builder.addDependency(target1.id, target2.id);
const graph = builder.build();
```
The resultant `targetGraph` will have a signature of this shape:
@ -29,6 +55,21 @@ interface TargetGraph {
}
```
### TargetFactory usage
```typescript
const root = "/some/repo/root";
const resolver = (packageName: string) => {
return `packages/${packageName}`;
};
const factory = new TargetFactory({ root, resolver });
const target = factory.createPackageTarget("a", "build", {
... // `TargetConfig`
});
```
### `Target`
This is merely an interface that contains enough information to let the runner & scheduler know what to run. The "how" of how to run a target resides in the scheduler and a separate runner implementation.
This is merely an interface that contains enough information to let the runner & scheduler know what to run. The "how" of how to run a target resides in the scheduler and a separate runner implementation.