xcodebuild-rb is a RubyGem that provides a Ruby interface to the xcodebuild
utility that ships with Xcode in the form of a series of Rake tasks. This gem only supports Xcode 4 (you can try it with 3.x, but YMMV). It makes it simple to run your builds from the command line, especially on remote machines such as Continuous Integration servers.
In addition, it provides configurable output parsing that enables better formatting of Xcode build results and eventually, test results. This is done through a series of output translations, reporters and formatters. All of this can be extended with a bit of Ruby knowledge (more on that soon).
This library is still under development but it should be more or less usable out of the box.
After installing the gem, you need to create a Rakefile
in the root of your project if you don't already have one. If you aren't familiar with rake
, you can think of it as a Ruby equivalent to make
. You can find out more about rake
here.
A simple Rakefile will look like this:
require 'rubygems'
require 'xcodebuild'
XcodeBuild::Tasks::BuildTask.new
With only those three lines, you will now have access to a variety of tasks such as clean and build. A full list of tasks can be viewed by running rake -T
:
$ rake -T
rake xcode:build # Builds the specified target(s).
rake xcode:clean # Cleans the build using the same build settings.
rake xcode:cleanbuild # Builds the specified target(s) from a clean slate.
When you run rake xcode:build
, xcodebuild
will be invoked without any arguments, which will in turn cause the default build to run. For this to be more useful, we need to configure the task. We could, for instance, configure the target and configuration:
XcodeBuild::Tasks::BuildTask.new do |t|
t.target = "MyApp"
t.configuration = "Release"
end
Note that in order to be able to use the xcode:archive
task, a scheme has to be provided
When you run the rake tasks provided, the default behaviour is to simply output the exact output from xcodebuild
. However, xcodebuild-rb
can go one better and allow you to configure custom formatters that change the way the build output is displayed. Some formatters are built-in, or you can write your own.
For instance, we could use the "progress" formatter that ships with xcodebuild-rb
. Anybody who is used to the output of Ruby's Test::Unit library or RSpec library will be familiar with this.
XcodeBuild::Tasks::BuildTask.new do |t|
t.formatter = XcodeBuild::Formatters::ProgressFormatter.new
end
Now when you run your build, your output will look something like this:
Building target: ExampleProject (in ExampleProject.xcproject)
=============================================================
Configuration: Release
..............
Finished in 2.226883 seconds.
Build succeeded.
This library is licensed under the MIT license.