# Apprise Development Tools This directory just contains some tools that are useful when developing with Apprise. It is presumed that you've set yourself up with a working development environment before using the tools identified here: ```bash # Using pip, setup a working development environment: pip install -r dev-requirements.txt ``` The tools are as follows: - :gear: `apprise`: This effectively acts as the `apprise` tool would once Apprise has been installed into your environment. However `apprise` uses the branch you're working in. So if you added a new Notification service, you can test with it as you would easily. `apprise` takes all the same parameters as the `apprise` tool does. ```bash # simply make your code changes to apprise and test it out: ./bin/apprise -t title -b body \ mailto://user:pass@example.com ``` - :gear: `test.sh`: This allows you to just run the unit tests associated with this project. You can optionally specify a _keyword_ as a parameter and the unit tests will specifically focus on a single test. This is useful when you need to debug something and don't want to run the entire fleet of tests each time. e.g: ```bash # Run all tests: ./bin/tests.sh # Run just the tests associated with the rest framework: ./bin/tests.sh rest # Run just the Apprise config related unit tests ./bin/tests.sh config ``` - :gear: `checkdone.sh`: This script just runs a lint check against the code to make sure there are no PEP8 issues and additionally runs a full test coverage report. This is what will happen once you check in your code. Nothing can be merged unless these tests pass with 100% coverage. So it's useful to have this handy to run now and then. ```bash # Perform PEP8 and test coverage check on all code and reports # back. It's called 'checkdone' because it checks to see if you're # actually done with your code commit or not. :) ./bin/checkdone.sh ``` You can optionally just update your path to include this `./bin` directory and call the scripts that way as well. Hence: ```bash # Update the path to include the bin directory: export PATH="$(pwd)/bin:$PATH" # Now you can call the scripts identified above from anywhere... ```