buildplan
Description
plan = buildplan
creates a plan and returns it as a matlab.buildtool.Plan
object. You can then configure the plan by adding tasks to
plan
.
To add a Task
object
t
to plan
, use the
plan("
syntax. taskName
") = t
plan = buildplan(
creates a plan with
tasks corresponding to the list of task functions
fcns
)fcns
. You can use this syntax only within a build file.
Examples
Create Plan Using Built-In Tasks
Create a plan with no tasks, and then add built-in tasks from the matlab.buildtool.tasks
namespace to the plan.
Open the example and then navigate to the buildplan_example1
folder, which contains a build file.
cd buildplan_example1
This code shows the contents of the build file. Note that adding a Task
object t
to plan
requires the plan("
taskName
") = t
syntax.
function plan = buildfile import matlab.buildtool.tasks.CodeIssuesTask import matlab.buildtool.tasks.TestTask % Create a plan with no tasks plan = buildplan; % Add the "check" task to identify code issues plan("check") = CodeIssuesTask; % Add the "test" task to run tests plan("test") = TestTask; % Make the "test" task the default task in the plan plan.DefaultTasks = "test"; end
List the tasks in the plan returned by the build file.
buildtool -tasks
check - Identify code issues test - Run tests
Run the default task in the plan. The build tool runs the "test"
task. In this example, all the tests pass, and the task runs successfully.
buildtool
** Starting test ... Test Summary: Total Tests: 3 Passed: 3 Failed: 0 Incomplete: 0 Duration: 0.52064 seconds testing time. ** Finished test
Create Plan Using Task Functions
Create a plan with tasks corresponding to local task functions in a build file.
Open the example and then navigate to the buildplan_example
folder, which contains a build file.
cd buildplan_example
This code shows the contents of the build file. The task functions in this example are only for illustrative purposes. To define your build more efficiently, use the built-in tasks from the matlab.buildtool.tasks
namespace instead.
function plan = buildfile % Create a plan from task functions plan = buildplan(localfunctions); % Make the "test" task the default task in the plan plan.DefaultTasks = "test"; end function checkTask(~) % Identify code issues issues = codeIssues; assert(isempty(issues.Issues),formattedDisplayText( ... issues.Issues(:,["Location" "Severity" "Description"]))) end function testTask(~) % Run unit tests results = runtests(IncludeSubfolders=true,OutputDetail="terse"); assertSuccess(results); end
List the tasks in the plan returned by the main function of the build file.
buildtool -tasks
check - Identify code issues test - Run unit tests
Run the default task in the plan. The build tool runs the "test"
task. In this example, all the tests pass, and the task runs successfully.
buildtool
** Starting test ... ** Finished test
Input Arguments
fcns
— List of task functions
cell vector of function handles
List of task functions, specified as a cell vector of function handles. A task
function is a local function in the build file whose name ends with the word "Task",
which is case insensitive. The build tool takes into account only the elements of
fcns
that follow the task function naming convention.
To automatically generate a cell vector of function handles from all the task
functions in your build file, specify fcns
as localfunctions
.
Example: localfunctions
Example: {@compileTask,@testTask}
More About
Task Functions
Task functions are local functions in the build file whose names end
with the word "Task", which is case insensitive. A task function must accept a TaskContext
object
as its first input, even if the task ignores it. The build tool automatically creates this
object, which includes information about the plan as well as the task being run.
The build tool generates task names from task function names by removing the "Task"
suffix. For example, a task function testTask
results in a task named
"test"
. Additionally, the build tool treats the first help text line,
often called the H1 line, of the task function as the task description. The code in the task
function corresponds to the action performed when the task runs.
Version History
Introduced in R2022b
See Also
Functions
Classes
Namespaces
MATLAB Command
You clicked a link that corresponds to this MATLAB command:
Run the command by entering it in the MATLAB Command Window. Web browsers do not support MATLAB commands.
Select a Web Site
Choose a web site to get translated content where available and see local events and offers. Based on your location, we recommend that you select: .
You can also select a web site from the following list
How to Get Best Site Performance
Select the China site (in Chinese or English) for best site performance. Other MathWorks country sites are not optimized for visits from your location.
Americas
- América Latina (Español)
- Canada (English)
- United States (English)
Europe
- Belgium (English)
- Denmark (English)
- Deutschland (Deutsch)
- España (Español)
- Finland (English)
- France (Français)
- Ireland (English)
- Italia (Italiano)
- Luxembourg (English)
- Netherlands (English)
- Norway (English)
- Österreich (Deutsch)
- Portugal (English)
- Sweden (English)
- Switzerland
- United Kingdom (English)
Asia Pacific
- Australia (English)
- India (English)
- New Zealand (English)
- 中国
- 日本Japanese (日本語)
- 한국Korean (한국어)