# # Example trigger to enforce a rule "submissions must have a job associated # with them." # # This script will do the following: # 1. Return "success" (exit code 0) if the change has # at least one "job" associated with it; # 2. Otherwise, reports an error. # # Unix usage: # perl /whatever/Jobs.pl %changelist% %serverport% %client% # NT usage: # c:/perl/bin/perl c:/whatever/Jobs.pl %changelist% %serverport% %client% # (Note that the name of this script might need to be an "8.3" filename, # depending on the version of Perl you're running.) # # Example 'triggers' section: # Triggers: # exJobs //... "c:/perl/bin/perl c:/whatever/Jobs.pl %changelist% %serverport% %client%" # # Tested on Platforms: FreeBSD, NT (as program, not service). # # Known bugs: # 1. Perforce triggers have problems [at the moment] running when the # Perforce server is running as an NT server. # $ChangeNum = $ARGV[0]; $ServerPort = $ARGV[1]; $ClientName = $ARGV[2]; $p4 = "p4 -p $ServerPort -c $ClientName"; $MaxErrs = 10; $OptimizeErrorOutput = "yes"; #-------- enter the suffixes for the pairs, here ----------------------------------- $listpairs{"cpp"} = "h"; # x.cpp must have x.h checked in, and also vice versa. $listpairs{"txt"} = "html"; # x.txt must have x.html checked in, and also vice versa. #----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fatal("Changelist $ChangeNum (1st arg) needs to be numeric!\n") unless ($ChangeNum =~ /^\d+$/); Fatal("\%serverport\% (2nd arg) wasn't specified.\n") if ($ServerPort eq ""); Fatal("\%clientname\% (3rd arg) wasn't specified.\n") if ($ClientName eq ""); @ChangeInfo = `$p4 describe -s $ChangeNum`; foreach $c (@ChangeInfo) { exit(0) if ($c =~ /Jobs fixed/); }; # # Note that errors are sent to <stdout> because the NT server copies THAT to # the user's output. # if ($#ChangeInfo == -1) { Fatal("Cannot get 'p4 describe -s $ChangeNum' output. Refusing submission\n"); } else { Fatal("No job associated with change $ChangeNum - refusing submission\n"); } # end of 'main' segment ############################################################################### # Note that all messages (warning/fatal/info) go to STDOUT, not STDERR. Trigger # output to standard output is sent to the user; standard error isn't. ############################################################################### sub TellUser { my($str, $msgtype) = @_; print "$str"; print "\n" unless ($str =~ /\n$/); exit(1) if ($msgtype eq fatal); } sub Warn { TellUser(@_, warning); } sub Fatal { TellUser(@_, fatal); } sub Inform { TellUser(@_, inform); }
# | Change | User | Description | Committed | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | 95 | Laura Wingerd | Pull in new triggers stuff. | ||
//guest/perforce_software/triggers/Jobs.pl | |||||
#1 | 94 | Laura Wingerd |
Re-org "triggers" directory -- it's now part of the "Perforce Utilities" project. |
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//public/perforce/triggers/Jobs.pl | |||||
#1 | 92 | Laura Wingerd | Publishing Jeff's trigger examples | ||
//guest/jeff_bowles/perforce-triggers/Jobs.pl | |||||
#2 | 91 | Jeff Bowles | Making sure that all output goes to <stdout> not <stderr> | ||
#1 | 81 | Jeff Bowles | adding some trigger examples.... |