CKReleaser"

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If you downloaded the latest editor source code from [http://dev.ckeditor.com/browser/CKEditor/trunk CKEditor trunk], you can also run the existing CKReleaser script. Go to the <code>_dev/releaser</code> folder and run the <code>release.bat</code> (for Windows) or <code>release.sh</code> for Linux to trigger CKReleaser.
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If you downloaded the latest editor source code from [http://dev.ckeditor.com/browser/CKEditor/trunk CKEditor trunk], you can also run the existing CKReleaser script. Go to the <code>_dev/releaser</code> folder and run the <code>release.bat</code> (for Windows) or <code>release.sh</code> (for Linux) to trigger CKReleaser.
  
 
== Configuration File  ==
 
== Configuration File  ==

Latest revision as of 16:11, 6 December 2011

CKReleaser is an application that exports CKEditor code, making all changes, replacements, and compilations necessary to build a public release of CKEditor. It is a command line program, with the following execution syntax:

ckreleaser release_file source_dir target_dir version file_name [--run-before-release=script] [-v | --verbose]
  • release_name – path to the CKReleaser configuration file.
  • source_dir – the path to the development code of CKEditor.
  • target_dir – the path to the output directory.
  • version – the version string used to replace the %VERSION% directive.
  • file_name – name of the release file to create (without the extension).
  • --run-before-release=script – (optional) the path to a script that is to be run on source files.
  • -v (or --verbose) – (optional) enables verbose output and displays detailed exception information when an error occurs.

At the end of the process, the target_dir directory will be created and it will contain a directory named release, with the uncompressed version of the release files as well as the distribution files (in .zip and .tar.gz formats).

important note

The execution fails if the target_dir already exists.


If you downloaded the latest editor source code from CKEditor trunk, you can also run the existing CKReleaser script. Go to the _dev/releaser folder and run the release.bat (for Windows) or release.sh (for Linux) to trigger CKReleaser.

Configuration File

CKReleaser uses a configuration file that contains precise information about the tasks to be performed to build a release. The default configuration file for CKEditor is called ckeditor.release. The following are its contents:

fixLineEnds : true,

ignore :
[
	'_dev',
	'.svn',
	'.settings',
	'.project',
	'.idea'
],

copy :
[
	{
		source : '_source/lang',
		target : 'lang',
		minify : true
	},

	{
		source : '_source/adapters',
		target : 'adapters',
		minify : true
	},

	{
		source : '_source/plugins',
		target : 'plugins',
		minify : true,
		ignore :
		{
			sourcePackage : 'ckeditor.pack',
			files : 'packages[1].files'
		}
	},

	{
		source : '_source/themes',
		target : 'themes',
		minify : true
	}
],

rename :
[
],

packages :
[
	'ckeditor.pack'
],

skins :
{
	source : '_source/skins',
	target : 'skins',
	minify : true
}

Note that the configuration file uses the syntax of a JavaScript literal object declaration. This is intentional, and actually it is also possible to use JavaScript code inside the file. The entire file will then be loaded as a literal object declaration and interpreted as JavaScript code.

The following are the main entries available in the configuration:

  • fixLineEnds – indicates that the fixlineends application is to be run in the *output* folder at the end of the process.
  • ignore – a list of files and folder paths that are to be ignored by CKReleaser.
  • copy – a list of objects identifying files and folders to be copied to different directories in the release package. The minify argument specifies whether .js and .css files are to be minified when outputting (see "Minification" below).
  • packages – a list of configuration files to be executed by CKPackager.
  • skins – information about the skins location (see "Skins" below).

Minification

The process of reducing the size of JavaScript and CSS files by removing spaces, comments, etc. from it is called minification. Several files are to be minified on the output. We are using CKPackager to minify our source code.

Skins

CKEditor skin files consist of a set of CSS, JavaScript, and graphic files, grouped for each skin inside the skins folder.

Other than the JavaScript files minification, there is a particular processing procedure that needs to be performed on the skin files. All @import directives found in the files must be replaced with the effective contents of the imported files, and those imported files are not to be released.

For example, the release of the default skin should end up with only two CSS files: editor.css and dialog.css. The former is actually a combination of reset.css, mainui.css, toolbar.css and elementspath.css, which are not released directly.

Directives

CKReleaser makes a "file by file" copy from the source to the target. As part of this task, it searches for special character combinations (directives) in text files and processes them accordingly.

The following list contains the directives that can be processed:

  • %VERSION% – the version string passed to the CKReleaser execution command.
  • %TIMESTAMP% – a four-character string with the concatenation of the "Base 36" value of each of the following components of the program execution date and time: year + month + day + hour.
  • %REMOVE_LINE% – removes the line.
  • %REMOVE_START% and %REMOVE_END% – removes all lines starting from %REMOVE_START% and ending with %REMOVE_END%, declaration line inclusive.
This page was last edited on 6 December 2011, at 16:11.