37 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
cf9b37fe99 Make default search paths available as util fn
It's the removed section from the get_config() function, but with an
extra Vec<_> creation. This is necessary here because the strings from
the environment variable don't live long enough for lazy evaluation.
2025-07-20 10:45:32 -05:00
ed76fa67ff Pass in search files rather than generating them
Now I can actually test the function!

The previous search locations are still what I'll want for normal
operation, though, so I'll be putting in a new util function to generate
them.
2025-07-20 10:24:45 -05:00
2e2c54d538 Complete the public get_config() function
"Now finish drawing the Owl."

I started assembling everything before realizing that I've been thinking
about the program backwards. The `WholeFile` struct is completely
unnecessary, as are several of the functions that help to create it.

I forgot that I don't need to collect all the project tables, only the
"[all]" table, and what ever the user is currently using. I want the
structure of a Map, not a list. I don't want this wrapper, I want the
toml::Value directly.
2025-07-19 21:09:09 -05:00
2b47460258 "Merge" method on PartialConfig
I'm going to roll the partial configurations together to get the most
complete version that I can. Add a function to make that easier.
2025-07-19 20:52:37 -05:00
b26a594cc8 Implement the load_from_file function
The implementation is dead simple, and pretty dumb. I'm not going to
figure out all the different IO errors I might see. Instead, the
function will report that it couldn't read the file and call it good.
2025-07-17 15:06:01 -05:00
246987fa68 Signature & tests for fn load_from_file()
This function almost writes itself. I need a thin layer to handle the
file IO errors and report them appropriately, and then all the magic is
a pass-through of the existing read_conf_str.

I've made basic unit tests for the most obvious scenarios. The test for
missing-file behavior is incomplete because I need to create a new error
variant.
2025-07-17 14:21:53 -05:00
551297f46b Remove some debug prints 2025-07-17 14:13:04 -05:00
912a7283fd Externalize the test table
I'm beginning work on the file reading functions, so I need some files
to read in my tests. I'll also need the WholeFile struct to compare
against.

The input string has been moved out into a file and put back into the
test fixture with `include_str!()`. The WholeFile construction has been
moved to a util function so I can reuse it in another test.
2025-07-17 14:04:17 -05:00
247c06dd9e Rename the config-string-reading function 2025-07-17 13:32:55 -05:00
cb314a8b4c Assert empty conf str is an error, TODO: semantics
The empty configuration string is some kind of an error, but I'm not
sure where and how to handle it. It should be treated as a soft error,
where I fall back to some hardcoded defaults.

There's a logic hole at the moment: The error I'm actually getting right
now is "NoSuchTable" because the "[all]" table doesn't exist. For a
totally empty config file, the above response should be used. But what
about a non-empty conf file? Is a missing "[all]" valid or not? For now,
assert the loader returns *an* error and leave behind a TODO for later.
2025-07-17 13:29:25 -05:00
277f638c60 Add a builder-pattern proj-path setter, for flavor
I like being able to chain methods instead of using a temporary variable
in between, so I've made one single function like I'm doing the builder
pattern.

But not really because there's nothing to build or finalize and such.
2025-07-17 12:13:14 -05:00
626973d2bc Extract PartCfg readers to a try_from impl
Don't repeat yourself. These property reading routines are actually
methods on the PartialConfig struct, so make them *actually* methods.

Because the table doesn't know it's own name, the path-specific config
needs to be updated with that external knowledge.
2025-07-17 12:08:35 -05:00
28539f54cc Use the get_table util to extract "[all]" table
I built the function for this purpose and then forgot to use it. I
remembered after doing the per-project bit, so here's the refactor.
2025-07-17 11:49:44 -05:00
5ce20adf2e Create-and-assign struct to whole.all
Minor refactor to make the "[all]" table read look like the per-project
table reads.
2025-07-17 11:47:18 -05:00
fc1e20185e Finish fn lconf(). Project-specific vals load
Loop over the keys (ignore the "all" one) and repeat the same property
extraction process.
2025-07-17 11:41:28 -05:00
15593204e0 Put the per-project test expects in for lconf()
Put all those per-project configs into the unit test. They're in the
input string, so we should expect to see them in the output struct.
2025-07-17 10:28:17 -05:00
330985940f Prototype load-config function
The `lconf()` function will eventually load the whole file, but for now
it reads in only the "[all]" table.

That "[all]" table will be used as the global fallback when per-project
settings are left unspecified.

The unit test "passes" but only because I've discarded those per-project
configs from the expected result. This is just so I can see clearly that
the all-table is loading properly.
2025-07-17 10:25:26 -05:00
213e0b4f4a Add partial- and whole- config structs 2025-07-17 10:23:00 -05:00
d27bea2c43 Util to get sometimes-empty config property
The get_property function needs to say that there is no property so that
the caller can respond appropriately. I'm going to need to frequently
respond to the "no such property" path by treating it as *not* an error.

If the config file doesn't specify a property, that's not an error, it's
just not specified and the default should be used instead. This util fn
makes that a bit more ergonomic.
2025-07-17 09:59:52 -05:00
30d8bcc6de Util fn's can use anything that impl's ToString
I don't want to remember to construct a `String` every single time I
want to call this function with a string literal. So I won't.

Make the functions generic over anything that implements the ToString
trait.
2025-07-17 09:57:49 -05:00
b2b9c8b9d9 Add a get-table util function 2025-07-16 19:16:43 -05:00
f6bab75644 Add property-get utility function
This function will look for a given property in a given table. It gives
back either the property, or an explanation of why it could not be
retrieved.
2025-07-14 21:43:08 -05:00
075a2ee921 Scaffold the new config module 2025-07-06 17:28:11 -05:00
8eacb510a2 Add a Cargo.toml & Git tag version comparison
I released the first couple versions without updating the value in
Cargo.toml. This will check for that happening again and abort the
build.
2025-07-06 12:54:52 -05:00
a23bdf3e34 Make the README title singular
It's not the "gt-tools" anymore, so maybe the README should match.
2025-07-05 17:21:59 -05:00
119831481e Bump to v2.2.0
All checks were successful
/ Compile and upload a release build (release) Successful in 44s
2025-07-03 18:13:09 -05:00
7246c7afb6 Oops, missed one 2025-07-03 18:05:18 -05:00
84eaaa1dbd Autoformat 2025-07-03 18:03:33 -05:00
c9dda5760c Prefix unused variables to quiet the linter 2025-07-03 17:56:07 -05:00
336f1453b9 Address most of the cargo-clippy lints 2025-07-03 17:56:07 -05:00
f068e8233e Release.colorized(), not std::fmt::Display
I don't know for sure if the string-ified version of a Release struct is
being printed to the terminal. As such, I don't know if the user wants,
does not want, or has mixed intentions for the stringification of this
thing.

No Display impl, instead just a `colorized()` method.
2025-07-03 17:47:50 -05:00
d4ef21e243 Change to free-fn intersperse for stdlib compat
Itertools warns that the standard library may be stabilizing the
intersperse method soon and recommends using this function instead.
2025-07-02 22:44:06 -05:00
d94c350cde Galaxy-brained newline intersperse function
Itertools already has an intersperse method for me. Why would I build my
own when I can do this? There's even a `fold()` over the units that come
out of the print routine.
2025-07-02 22:29:07 -05:00
8120cb0489 Remove trailing newline in Release item printout 2025-07-02 22:08:45 -05:00
b82cfdb822 Colorize the output! 2025-07-02 22:06:36 -05:00
ea046c929f Print releases in reverse order for easier reading
The result list has the newest item first, but I want to print them the
other way around. This way the newest (and presumably most interesting)
release is always the visible item, regardless of how many others have
printed and scrolled off screen.
2025-07-02 21:42:41 -05:00
135acf09b7 Basic impl Display for the Release struct
I'm not certain what info I want to present when listing the Releases.

The idea is that the release version is the most important, and that it
matches the git-tag associated with the release. I'll print that first.

Next, the name of the release followed by the body text. The list of
releases will become quite large for some projects, and the body text
may include a changelog. Both of these will cause the output to become
quite large. I will need to create a size limiter, but I'm ignoring that
for now.

Who created the release and when may be useful when searching for a
release, so I've included that as the final section.
2025-07-02 12:56:17 -05:00
11 changed files with 518 additions and 38 deletions

View File

@@ -8,6 +8,11 @@ jobs:
name: Compile and upload a release build
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Get Cargo version
run: echo "cargo_version=v$(grep "^version" Cargo.toml | cut -d \" -f2)" >> $GITHUB_ENV
- name: Abort if Cargo.toml & Git Tag versions don't match
if: ${{ env.cargo_version != github.ref_name }}
run: exit 1
- name: Install Rust Stable
uses: dtolnay/rust-toolchain@stable
- name: Build binary crate

View File

@@ -1,13 +1,16 @@
[package]
name = "gt-tool"
version = "1.0.0"
version = "2.2.0"
edition = "2024"
[dependencies]
clap = { version = "4.0.7", features = ["derive", "env"] }
colored = "2.0.0"
itertools = "0.10.0"
reqwest = { version = "0.11.13", features = ["json", "stream", "multipart"] }
serde = { version = "1.0.152", features = ["derive"] }
tokio = { version = "1.24.2", features = ["macros", "rt-multi-thread"] }
toml = "0.5"
# Packages available in Debian (Sid)
# clap = "4.5.23"

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
# gt-tools
# gt-tool
CLI tools for interacting with the Gitea API. Use interactively to talk to your Gitea instance, or automatically via a CI/CD pipeline.

View File

@@ -1,12 +1,9 @@
use crate::{
Result,
structs::{
release::{CreateReleaseOption, Release},
},
structs::release::{CreateReleaseOption, Release},
};
pub fn get_release(id: u64) -> Result<Release> {
pub fn get_release(_id: u64) -> Result<Release> {
todo!();
}
pub fn get_latest_release() -> Result<Release> {
@@ -20,7 +17,7 @@ pub async fn list_releases(
) -> Result<Vec<Release>> {
let request_url = format!("{gitea_url}/api/v1/repos/{repo}/releases/");
let req = client.get(request_url).send().await;
let response = req.map_err(|reqwest_err| crate::Error::WrappedReqwestErr(reqwest_err))?;
let response = req.map_err(crate::Error::WrappedReqwestErr)?;
if response.status().is_success() {
let release_list = response
.json::<Vec<Release>>()
@@ -50,22 +47,22 @@ pub async fn create_release(
.json(&submission)
.send()
.await
.map_err(|e| crate::Error::from(e))?;
.map_err(crate::Error::from)?;
if response.status().is_success() {
let new_release = response
.json::<Release>()
.await
.map_err(|e| crate::Error::from(e))?;
.map_err(crate::Error::from)?;
return Ok(new_release);
} else if response.status().is_client_error() {
let mesg = crate::decode_client_error(response).await?;
return Err(crate::Error::ApiErrorMessage(mesg))
return Err(crate::Error::ApiErrorMessage(mesg));
}
panic!("Reached end of create_release without matching a return path");
}
pub fn edit_release(id: u64) -> Result<Release> {
pub fn edit_release(_id: u64) -> Result<Release> {
todo!();
}
pub fn delete_release(id: u64) -> Result<()> {
pub fn delete_release(_id: u64) -> Result<()> {
todo!();
}

View File

@@ -22,8 +22,10 @@ pub async fn create_release_attachment(
Ok(false) => return Err(crate::Error::NoSuchFile),
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("Uh oh! The file-exists check couldn't be done: {e}");
panic!("TODO: Deal with scenario where the file's existence cannot be checked (e.g.: no permission)");
},
panic!(
"TODO: Deal with scenario where the file's existence cannot be checked (e.g.: no permission)"
);
}
}
println!("Uploading file {}", &file);
@@ -44,7 +46,7 @@ pub async fn create_release_attachment(
let attachment_desc = response
.json::<Attachment>()
.await
.map_err(|e| crate::Error::from(e))?;
.map_err(crate::Error::from)?;
return Ok(attachment_desc);
} else if response.status().is_client_error() {
let mesg = crate::decode_client_error(response).await?;

424
src/config.rs Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,424 @@
use std::path::PathBuf;
use toml::{Value, value::Table};
pub type Result<T> = core::result::Result<T, Error>;
#[derive(Debug)]
#[cfg_attr(test, derive(PartialEq))]
pub enum Error {
BadFormat,
NoSuchProperty,
NoSuchTable,
CouldntReadFile,
TomlWrap(toml::de::Error),
}
impl From<toml::de::Error> for Error {
fn from(value: toml::de::Error) -> Self {
Error::TomlWrap(value)
}
}
impl core::fmt::Display for Error{
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
// FIXME: Print a nice output, don't just reuse the Debug impl
write!(fmt, "{self:?}")
}
}
impl std::error::Error for Error {}
/// Creates an iterator of default (Linux) search paths. The iterator output
/// is a list of files named "gt-tool.toml" found in decreasingly specific
/// configuration folders.
///
/// - any dirs listed in env var `$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS`
/// - and the `/etc` dir
///
/// This is so that user-specific configs are used first, then machine-wide
/// ones.
pub fn default_paths() -> impl Iterator<Item = PathBuf> {
// Read env var `XDG_CONFIG_DIRS` and split on ":" to get highest-priority list
// TODO: Emit warning when paths aren't unicode
std::env::var("XDG_CONFIG_DIRS")
.unwrap_or(String::from(""))
.split(":")
// Set up the "/etc" list
// Which is pretty silly, in this case.
// Maybe a future version will scan nested folders and this will make
// more sense.
// glue on the "/etc" path
.chain(["/etc"])
.map(|path_str| {
let mut path = PathBuf::from(path_str);
path.push("gt-tool.toml");
path
})
.collect::<Vec<_>>()
.into_iter()
}
/// Searches through the files, `search_files`, for configuration related to a
/// project, `project`.
///
/// The project string is used as a map key and should match the real path of a
/// project on disk. These are the table names for each config section.
///
/// The search files iterator must produce *files* not *folders.* For now,
/// there is no mechanism to ensure correct usage. Files that can't be opened
/// will quietly be skipped, so there will be no warning when one gives a
/// folder.
///
/// Use `fn default_paths()` to get a reasonable (Linux) default.
///
/// TODO: Check for, and warn or error when given a dir.
pub fn get_config (
project: &str,
search_files: impl Iterator<Item=PathBuf>
) -> Result<PartialConfig> {
/*
1. Get conf search (from fn input)
2. Iterate config dirs
3. Try load toml::Value from file
4. Try-get proj-specific table
5. Try-get "[all]" table
6. (merge) Update `Option::None`s in proj-spec with `Some(_)`s from "[all]"
7. (merge, again) Fold the PartialConfigs into a finished one
*/
let file_iter = search_files;
let toml_iter = file_iter
.map(std::fs::read_to_string) // read text from file
.filter_map(|res| res.ok()) // remove any error messages
// TODO: Log warnings when files couldn't be read.
.map(|toml_text| toml_text.parse::<Value>()) // try convert to `toml::Value`
.filter_map(|res| res.ok()); // remove any failed parses
let config_iter = toml_iter
.map(|val| -> Result<PartialConfig> {
// Like `fn read_conf_str(...)`, but doesn't produce a `WholeFile`
// 1. Get the top-level table that is the config file
let cfg_table = val.as_table().ok_or(Error::BadFormat)?;
// 2. Get table
let maybe_proj = get_table(cfg_table, project)
// 3. convert to PartialConfig
.and_then(PartialConfig::try_from)
// 4. assemble a 2-tuple of PartialConfigs by...
.and_then(|proj| {
Ok((
// 4-1. Passing in the project-specific PartialConfig
proj.project_path(project),
// 4-2. Getting and converting to PartialConfig, or returning any Err() if one appears.
get_table(cfg_table, "all").and_then(PartialConfig::try_from)?,
))
})
// 5. Merge the PartialConfigs together, project-specific has higher priority
.and_then(|pair| {
Ok(pair.0.merge(pair.1))
});
maybe_proj
})
.filter_map(|res| res.ok())
.fold(PartialConfig::default(), |acc, inc|{
acc.merge(inc)
});
return Ok(config_iter);
}
#[derive(Debug, Default)]
#[cfg_attr(test, derive(PartialEq))]
pub struct PartialConfig {
project_path: Option<String>,
gitea_url: Option<String>,
owner: Option<String>,
repo: Option<String>,
token: Option<String>,
}
impl PartialConfig {
// One lonely builder-pattern function to set the project path.
// This is so I can do continuation style calls instead of a bunch of
// successive `let conf = ...` temporaries.
fn project_path(self, path: impl ToString) -> Self{
PartialConfig {
project_path: Some(path.to_string()),
..self
}
}
// Merges two `PartialConfig`'s together, producing a new one.
// Non-None values on the right-hand side are used to replace values
// in the left-hand side, even if they are Some(_).
fn merge(self, other: Self) -> Self {
Self {
project_path: other.project_path.or(self.project_path),
gitea_url: other.gitea_url.or(self.gitea_url),
owner: other.owner.or(self.owner),
repo: other.repo.or(self.repo),
token: other.token.or(self.token),
}
}
}
impl TryFrom<&Table> for PartialConfig {
type Error = crate::config::Error;
fn try_from(value: &Table) -> Result<Self> {
Ok(Self {
// can't get table name because that key is gone by this point.
project_path: None,
gitea_url: get_maybe_property(&value, "gitea_url")?.cloned(),
owner: get_maybe_property(&value, "owner")?.cloned(),
repo: get_maybe_property(&value, "repo")?.cloned(),
token: get_maybe_property(&value, "token")?.cloned(),
})
}
}
#[derive(Debug, Default)]
#[cfg_attr(test, derive(PartialEq))]
struct WholeFile {
all: PartialConfig,
project_overrides: Vec<PartialConfig>,
}
fn load_from_file(path: &str) -> Result<WholeFile> {
let res = std::fs::read_to_string(path);
match res {
Ok(s) => read_conf_str(s.as_str()),
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("->> file io err: {:?}", e);
Err(Error::CouldntReadFile)
}
}
}
fn read_conf_str(text: &str) -> Result<WholeFile> {
let mut whole = WholeFile::default();
let toml_val = text.parse::<Value>()?;
// The config file is one big table. If the string we decoded is
// some other toml::Value variant, it's not correct.
// Try getting it as a table, return Err(BadFormat) otherwise.
let cfg_table = toml_val.as_table().ok_or(Error::BadFormat)?;
// Get the global config out of the file
let table_all = get_table(cfg_table, "all")?;
whole.all = PartialConfig::try_from(table_all)?;
// Loop over the per-project configs, if any.
let per_project_keys = cfg_table
.keys()
.filter(|s| { // Discard the "[all]" table
*s != "all"
});
for path in per_project_keys {
let tab = get_table(cfg_table, path)?;
let part_cfg = PartialConfig::try_from(tab)?
.project_path(path.clone());
whole.project_overrides.push(part_cfg);
}
Ok(whole)
}
/// The outer value must be a Table so we can get the sub-table from it.
fn get_table<'outer>(outer: &'outer Table, table_name: impl ToString) -> Result<&'outer Table> {
Ok(outer
.get(&table_name.to_string())
.ok_or(Error::NoSuchTable)?
.as_table()
.ok_or(Error::BadFormat)?)
}
/// Similar to `get_property()` but maps the "Error::NoSuchProperty" result to
/// Option::None. Some properties aren't specified, and that's okay... sometimes.
fn get_maybe_property<'outer> (outer: &'outer Table, property: impl ToString) -> Result<Option<&'outer String>> {
let maybe_prop = get_property(outer, property);
match maybe_prop {
Ok(value) => Ok(Some(value)),
Err(e) => {
if let Error::NoSuchProperty = e {
return Ok(None);
} else {
return Err(e);
}
}
}
}
/// The config properties are individual strings. This gets the named property,
/// or an error explaining why it couldn't be fetched.
fn get_property<'outer>(outer: &'outer Table, property: impl ToString) -> Result<&'outer String> {
let maybe_prop = outer.get(&property.to_string()).ok_or(Error::NoSuchProperty)?;
if let Value::String(text) = maybe_prop {
Ok(text)
} else {
Err(Error::BadFormat)
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use toml::map::Map;
use super::*;
// Util for generating a reference struct
fn gen_expected_struct() -> WholeFile {
WholeFile {
all: PartialConfig {
project_path: None,
gitea_url: Some(String::from("http://localhost:3000")),
owner: None,
repo: None,
token: Some(String::from("fake-token"))
},
project_overrides: vec![
PartialConfig {
project_path: Some(String::from("/home/robert/projects/gt-tool")),
gitea_url: None,
owner: Some(String::from("robert")),
repo: Some(String::from("gt-tool")),
token: None,
},
PartialConfig {
project_path: Some(String::from("/home/robert/projects/rcalc")),
gitea_url: None,
owner: Some(String::from("jamis")),
repo: Some(String::from("rcalc")),
token: None,
},
PartialConfig {
project_path: Some(String::from("/home/robert/projects/rcalc-builders")),
gitea_url: None,
owner: Some(String::from("jamis")),
repo: Some(String::from("rcalc")),
token: None,
},
],
}
}
#[test]
fn read_single_prop() -> Result<()> {
let fx_input_str = "owner = \"dingus\"";
let fx_value = fx_input_str.parse::<Value>()?;
let fx_value = fx_value.as_table().ok_or(Error::NoSuchTable)?;
let expected = "dingus";
let res = get_property(&fx_value, String::from("owner"))?;
assert_eq!(res, expected);
Ok(())
}
// The property is given the value of empty-string `""`
#[test]
fn read_single_prop_empty_quotes() -> Result<()> {
let fx_input_str = "owner = \"\"";
let fx_value = fx_input_str.parse::<Value>()?;
let fx_value = fx_value.as_table().ok_or(Error::NoSuchTable)?;
let expected = "";
let res = get_property(&fx_value, String::from("owner"))?;
assert_eq!(res, expected);
Ok(())
}
#[test]
fn read_table() -> Result<()> {
let fx_input_str = "[tab]\nwith_a_garbage = \"value\"";
let fx_value = fx_input_str.parse::<Value>()?;
let fx_value = fx_value.as_table().ok_or(Error::BadFormat)?;
let mut expected: Map<String, Value> = Map::new();
expected.insert(String::from("with_a_garbage"), Value::String(String::from("value")));
let res = get_table(&fx_value, String::from("tab"))?;
assert_eq!(res, &expected);
Ok(())
}
#[test]
fn read_config_string_ok() -> Result<()> {
let fx_sample_config_string = include_str!("../test_data/sample_config.toml");
let fx_expected_struct = gen_expected_struct();
let conf = read_conf_str(fx_sample_config_string)?;
assert_eq!(conf, fx_expected_struct);
Ok(())
}
/* TODO: Improve semantics around reading an empty string
An empty config string will result in Error::NoSuchTable when "[all]"
is retrieved. But this will *also* happen when other configs are present,
but "[all]" isn't. Do I treat these as valid configurations, using some
hard-coded default as the fallback? Or do I reject configs that don't have
an all-table?
*/
#[test]
fn read_config_string_empty() {
let fx_sample_cfg = "";
let conf = read_conf_str(fx_sample_cfg);
assert!(conf.is_err());
}
#[test]
// File exists and has valid configuration.
fn load_from_file_ok() -> Result<()> {
let conf = load_from_file("test_data/sample_config.toml")?;
assert_eq!(conf, gen_expected_struct());
Ok(())
}
#[test]
// File does not exist.
fn load_from_file_missing() -> Result<()> {
let res = load_from_file("test_data/doesnt_exist.toml");
let err = res.unwrap_err();
assert_eq!(err, Error::CouldntReadFile);
Ok(())
}
#[test]
// File exists but has garbage inside.
// TODO: This bumps against the same semantic issue as the todo note on
// the 'read_config_string_empty' test
fn load_from_file_bad() {
let res = load_from_file("test_data/missing_all_table.toml");
assert!(res.is_err());
}
#[test]
// FIXME: Allow user-specified search paths, then update test to use them.
// This test can only work if there's a config file the program can find.
// Right now, that means a file called "gt-tool.toml" in
// 1. `/etc`
// 2. anything inside `$XDG_CONFIG_DIRS`
fn check_get_config() -> Result<()>{
let search_paths = ["./test_data/sample_config.toml"]
.into_iter()
.map(PathBuf::from);
let load_result = get_config(
"/home/robert/projects/gt-tool",
search_paths
)?;
let expected = PartialConfig {
project_path: Some(String::from("/home/robert/projects/gt-tool")),
owner: Some(String::from("robert")),
repo: Some(String::from("gt-tool")),
gitea_url: Some(String::from("http://localhost:3000")),
token: Some(String::from("fake-token")),
};
assert_eq!(load_result, expected);
Ok(())
}
}

View File

@@ -2,6 +2,7 @@ use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
pub mod api;
pub mod cli;
pub mod config;
pub mod structs;
#[derive(Debug, Deserialize, Serialize)]
@@ -10,13 +11,11 @@ pub struct ApiError {
url: String,
}
pub (crate) async fn decode_client_error(response: reqwest::Response) -> Result<ApiError> {
pub(crate) async fn decode_client_error(response: reqwest::Response) -> Result<ApiError> {
response
.json::<ApiError>()
.await
.map_err(|reqwest_err| {
crate::Error::WrappedReqwestErr(reqwest_err)
})
.map_err(crate::Error::WrappedReqwestErr)
}
#[derive(Debug)]

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,3 @@
use std::path;
use gt_tool::cli::Args;
@@ -22,10 +21,7 @@ async fn main() -> Result<(), gt_tool::Error> {
headers.append("Authorization", token.parse().unwrap());
}
let client = reqwest::Client::builder()
.user_agent(format!(
"gt-tools-agent-{}",
env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION")
))
.user_agent(format!("gt-tools-agent-{}", env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION")))
.default_headers(headers)
.build()?;
@@ -33,9 +29,15 @@ async fn main() -> Result<(), gt_tool::Error> {
gt_tool::cli::Commands::ListReleases => {
let releases =
gt_tool::api::release::list_releases(&client, &args.gitea_url, &args.repo).await?;
for release in releases {
println!("{:?}", release);
}
// Print in reverse order so the newest items are closest to the
// user's command prompt. Otherwise the newest item scrolls off the
// screen and can't be seen.
itertools::Itertools::intersperse(
releases.iter().rev().map(|release| release.colorized()),
String::from(""),
)
.map(|release| println!("{}", release))
.fold((), |_, _| ());
}
gt_tool::cli::Commands::CreateRelease {
name,
@@ -52,13 +54,8 @@ async fn main() -> Result<(), gt_tool::Error> {
tag_name,
target_commitish,
};
gt_tool::api::release::create_release(
&client,
&args.gitea_url,
&args.repo,
submission,
)
.await?;
gt_tool::api::release::create_release(&client, &args.gitea_url, &args.repo, submission)
.await?;
}
gt_tool::cli::Commands::UploadRelease {
tag_name,
@@ -88,8 +85,10 @@ async fn main() -> Result<(), gt_tool::Error> {
Ok(false) => return Err(gt_tool::Error::NoSuchFile),
Err(e) => {
eprintln!("Uh oh! The file-exists check couldn't be done: {e}");
panic!("TODO: Deal with scenario where the file's existence cannot be checked (e.g.: no permission)");
},
panic!(
"TODO: Deal with scenario where the file's existence cannot be checked (e.g.: no permission)"
);
}
}
}
for file in files {
@@ -143,5 +142,5 @@ fn match_release_by_tag(tag: &String, releases: Vec<Release>) -> Option<Release>
}
}
}
return release;
release
}

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
use colored::Colorize;
use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
#[derive(Debug, Deserialize, Serialize)]
@@ -19,6 +20,36 @@ pub struct Release {
author: Author,
}
impl Release {
pub fn colorized(&self) -> String {
let tag = "Tag:".green().bold();
let name = "Name:".green();
let published = "Published:".bright_green();
let created = "Created:".green().dimmed();
let author = "Author:".blue();
let body = if !self.body.is_empty() {
&self.body.white()
} else {
&String::from("(empty body)").dimmed()
};
format!(
"{tag} {}
{name} {}
{}
{published} {} ({created} {})
{author} {} ({})",
self.tag_name.bold(),
self.name,
body,
self.published_at,
self.created_at.dimmed(),
self.author.login,
self.author.email,
)
}
}
#[derive(Debug, Deserialize, Serialize)]
pub struct Author {
id: usize,

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# There must be an "[all]" table or the loader will reject the config file.
["/some/other/path"]
gitea_url = "fake-url"

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
[all]
gitea_url = "http://localhost:3000"
token = "fake-token"
["/home/robert/projects/gt-tool"]
owner = "robert"
repo = "gt-tool"
["/home/robert/projects/rcalc"]
owner = "jamis"
repo = "rcalc"
["/home/robert/projects/rcalc-builders"]
owner = "jamis"
repo = "rcalc"