Register, run and load external tasks.
See the task lib source and task util lib source for more information.
While a task is running, Grunt exposes many task-specific utility properties and methods inside the task function via the this
object. See the [[Inside tasks]] guide for a list of these properties and methods.
Many utility properties and methods are available inside of tasks via the this
object.
Note that any method marked with a ☃ (unicode snowman) is also available directly on the grunt
object. Just so you know. See the API main page for more usage information.
Register an "alias task" or a task function. This method supports the following two signatures:
Alias task
If a task list is specified, the new task will be an alias for one or more other tasks. Whenever this "alias task" is run, every specified task in taskList
will be run, in the order specified. The taskList
argument must be an array of tasks.
grunt.task.registerTask(taskName, taskList)
When the optional description
string is passed it will be displayed when grunt --help
is run:
grunt.task.registerTask(taskName, description, taskList)
This example alias task defines a "default" task whereby the "jshint", "qunit", "concat" and "uglify" tasks are run automatically if Grunt is executed without any tasks specified:
task.registerTask('default', ['jshint', 'qunit', 'concat', 'uglify']);
Task arguments can be specified as well. In this example, the alias "dist" runs both the "concat" and "uglify" tasks, each with the "dist" argument:
task.registerTask('dist', ['concat:dist', 'uglify:dist']);
Function task
If a description
and taskFunction
are passed, the specified function will be executed whenever the task is run. In addition, the specified description will be shown when grunt --help
is run. Task-specific properties and methods are available inside the task function as properties of the this
object. The task function can return false
to indicate that the task has failed.
Note that the grunt.task.registerMultiTask
method, explained below, can be used to define a special type of task known as a "multi task."
grunt.task.registerTask(taskName, description, taskFunction)
This example task logs foo, testing 123
if Grunt is run via grunt foo:testing:123
. If the task is run without arguments as grunt foo
the task logs foo, no args
.
grunt.task.registerTask('foo', 'A sample task that logs stuff.', function(arg1, arg2) {
if (arguments.length === 0) {
grunt.log.writeln(this.name + ", no args");
} else {
grunt.log.writeln(this.name + ", " + arg1 + " " + arg2);
}
});
See the creating tasks documentation for more examples of tasks and alias tasks.
This method is also available as grunt.registerTask.
Register a "multi task." A multi task is a task that implicitly iterates over all of its named sub-properties (AKA targets) if no target was specified. In addition to the default properties and methods, extra multi task-specific properties are available inside the task function as properties of the this
object.
Many of the contrib tasks, including the jshint task, concat task and uglify task are multi tasks.
grunt.task.registerMultiTask(taskName, description, taskFunction)
Given the specified configuration, this example multi task would log foo: 1,2,3
if Grunt was run via grunt log:foo
, or it would log bar: hello world
if Grunt was run via grunt log:bar
. If Grunt was run as grunt log
however, it would log foo: 1,2,3
then bar: hello world
then baz: false
.
grunt.initConfig({
log: {
foo: [1, 2, 3],
bar: 'hello world',
baz: false
}
});
grunt.task.registerMultiTask('log', 'Log stuff.', function() {
grunt.log.writeln(this.target + ': ' + this.data);
});
See the creating tasks documentation for more examples of multi tasks.
This method is also available as grunt.registerMultiTask.
Fail the task if some other task failed or never ran.
grunt.task.requires(taskName);
Added in 0.4.5
Check with the name, if a task exists in the registered tasks. Return a boolean.
grunt.task.exists(name)
Rename a task. This might be useful if you want to override the default behavior of a task, while retaining the old name.
Note that if a task has been renamed, the this.name and this.nameArgs properties will change accordingly.
grunt.task.renameTask(oldname, newname)
This method is also available as grunt.renameTask.
For most projects, tasks will be defined in the Gruntfile. For larger projects, or in cases where tasks need to be shared across projects, tasks can be loaded from one or more external directories or Npm-installed Grunt plugins.
Load task-related files from the specified directory, relative to the Gruntfile. This method can be used to load task-related files from a local Grunt plugin by specifying the path to that plugin's "tasks" subdirectory.
grunt.task.loadTasks(tasksPath)
This method is also available as grunt.loadTasks.
Load tasks from the specified Grunt plugin. This plugin must be installed locally via npm, and must be relative to the Gruntfile. Grunt plugins can be created by using the grunt-init gruntplugin template: grunt init:gruntplugin
.
grunt.task.loadNpmTasks(pluginName)
This method is also available as grunt.loadNpmTasks.
Grunt automatically enqueues and runs all tasks specified on the command line, but individual tasks can enqueue additional tasks to be run.
Enqueue one or more tasks. Every specified task in taskList
will be run immediately after the current task completes, in the order specified. The task list can be an array of tasks or individual task arguments.
grunt.task.run(taskList)
Empty the task queue completely. Unless additional tasks are enqueued, no more tasks will be run.
grunt.task.clearQueue()
Normalizes a task target configuration object into an array of src-dest file mappings. This method is used internally by the multi task system this.files / grunt.task.current.files property.
grunt.task.normalizeMultiTaskFiles(data [, targetname])