pax_global_header00006660000000000000000000000064133261404100014504gustar00rootroot0000000000000052 comment=b47d3837d452ca6d2509d2524c7a08c701e84367 adr-tools-3.0.0/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000134105ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/.editorconfig000066400000000000000000000002031332614041000160600ustar00rootroot00000000000000root = true [*] charset = utf-8 end_of_line = lf indent_style = space insert_final_newline = true trim_trailing_whitespace = true adr-tools-3.0.0/.gitattributes000066400000000000000000000000111332614041000162730ustar00rootroot00000000000000* eol=lf adr-tools-3.0.0/.gitignore000066400000000000000000000000071332614041000153750ustar00rootroot00000000000000build/ adr-tools-3.0.0/.travis.yml000066400000000000000000000001151332614041000155160ustar00rootroot00000000000000language: bash os: - linux - osx script: make clean check sudo: false adr-tools-3.0.0/GPL.txt000066400000000000000000001045131332614041000145770ustar00rootroot00000000000000 GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 3, 29 June 2007 Copyright (C) 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms, reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a copy of the Program in return for a fee. END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms. To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found. Copyright (C) This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail. If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode: Copyright (C) This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions; type `show c' for details. The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box". You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see . The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this License. But first, please read . adr-tools-3.0.0/INSTALL.md000066400000000000000000000033051332614041000150410ustar00rootroot00000000000000Installation ============ MacOS X ------- Mac OS X users can install with [Homebrew](https://brew.sh): brew install adr-tools ASDF-VM ------- ADR-Tools can be installed from the [ASDF-VM version manager](https://github.com/asdf-vm/asdf). From a Release Package ---------------------- You can install a released package: 1. Download a zip or tar.gz package from the [releases page](https://github.com/npryce/adr-tools/releases) 2. Unzip / untar the package 3. Add the 'src/' subdirectory to your PATH From Git -------- You can install with Git, if you want to be on the bleeding edge: 1. Clone this repository 2. Add the `src/` subdirectory to your PATH. Windows 10 ---------- ### Git for Windows: git bash When using git bash within [Git for Windows](https://git-for-windows.github.io/), the scripts can simply be put in `usr\bin` in the installation directory. That directory usually is `C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin`. 1. Download a zip package from the [releases page](https://github.com/npryce/adr-tools/releases) 2. Unzip the package 3. Copy everything from `src/` into `C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin` ### Linux subsystem The scripts work in the Bash on [Ubuntu on Windows](https://www.microsoft.com/store/p/ubuntu/9nblggh4msv6), the Linux-subsystem that officially supports Linux command line tools. Make sure that you have [installed](https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/commandline/wsl/install_guide) the Linux-subsystem, run `bash` on the command line and follow the instructions in the "From a Release Package" section above. Autocomplete ---------- In order to have autocomplete on the commands, add the `autocomplete/adr` script to your `/etc/bash_autocomplete.d` or the equivalent to your platform. adr-tools-3.0.0/LICENSE.txt000066400000000000000000000015701332614041000152360ustar00rootroot00000000000000ADR Tools - command line tools to maintain a project's architecture decision records Copyright (C) 2016 Nat Pryce This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . Content that this tool adds to your project is under the [Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) licence. adr-tools-3.0.0/Makefile000066400000000000000000000015451332614041000150550ustar00rootroot00000000000000 TESTS:=$(wildcard tests/*.sh) SRC:=$(wildcard src/*) # Run tests outside the project directory so that they cannot interfere with the project's # own ADR directory BUILDDIR:=/tmp/adr-tools-build check: $(TESTS:tests/%.sh=$(BUILDDIR)/tests/%.diff) @echo SUCCESS $(BUILDDIR)/tests/%.diff: $(BUILDDIR)/tests/%.output tests/%.expected @diff --side-by-side $^ > $@ || ! cat $@ $(BUILDDIR)/tests/%.output: tests/%.sh tests/%.expected $(SRC) @echo TEST: $* @rm -rf $(dir $@)/$* @mkdir -p $(dir $@)/$* @(cd $(dir $@)/$* && \ PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:$(abspath src):$(abspath tests) \ ADR_DATE=1992-01-12 \ VISUAL= \ EDITOR= \ PS4='+ ' \ /bin/sh -v $(abspath $<) > $(abspath $@) 2>&1) || ! cat $@ clean: rm -rf /tmp/adr-tools-build show-%: @echo "$* ($(flavor $*)) = $($*)" .PHONY: all clean .PRECIOUS: $(BUILDDIR)/tests/%.output .DELETE_ON_ERROR: adr-tools-3.0.0/README.md000066400000000000000000000034501332614041000146710ustar00rootroot00000000000000ADR Tools ========= A command-line tool for working with a log of [Architecture Decision Records][ADRs] (ADRs). [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/npryce/adr-tools.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/npryce/adr-tools) Quick Start ----------- [Install ADR Tools](INSTALL.md). Use the `adr` command to manage ADRs. Try running `adr help`. ADRs are stored in a subdirectory of your project as Markdown files. The default directory is `doc/adr`, but you can specify the directory when you initialise the ADR log. 1. Create an ADR directory in the root of your project: adr init doc/architecture/decisions This will create a directory named `doc/architecture/decisions' containing the first ADR, which records that you are using ADRs to record architectural decisions and links to [Michael Nygard's article on the subject][ADRs]. 2. Create Architecture Decision Records adr new Implement as Unix shell scripts This will create a new, numbered ADR file and open it in your editor of choice (as specified by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variable). To create a new ADR that supercedes a previous one (ADR 9, for example), use the -s option. adr new -s 9 Use Rust for performance-critical functionality This will create a new ADR file that is flagged as superceding ADR 9, and changes the status of ADR 9 to indicate that it is superceded by the new ADR. It then opens the new ADR in your editor of choice. 3. For further information, use the built in help: adr help See the [tests](tests/) for detailed examples. The decisions for this tool are recorded as [architecture decision records in the project repository](doc/adr/). [ADRs]: http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions adr-tools-3.0.0/approve000077500000000000000000000002421332614041000150100ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e test="${1:?test}" test_name=$(basename $test | sed 's/\..*//') cp -v /tmp/adr-tools-build/tests/$test_name.output tests/$test_name.expected adr-tools-3.0.0/autocomplete/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000161115ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/autocomplete/adr000066400000000000000000000003311332614041000165770ustar00rootroot00000000000000_adr() { # Autocomplete only when entering the last term if [ ${COMP_CWORD} -eq $((${#COMP_WORDS[@]} - 1)) ] then COMPREPLY=( $(_adr_autocomplete ${COMP_WORDS[*]} ) ) fi } complete -F _adr -o default adr adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000141555ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000147235ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md000066400000000000000000000006171332614041000235430ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 1. Record architecture decisions Date: 2016-02-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context We need to record the architectural decisions made on this project. ## Decision We will use Architecture Decision Records, as described by Michael Nygard in this article: http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions ## Consequences See Michael Nygard's article, linked above. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0002-implement-as-shell-scripts.md000066400000000000000000000012051332614041000230070ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 2. Implement as shell scripts Date: 2016-02-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context ADRs are plain text files stored in a subdirectory of the project. The tool needs to create new files and apply small edits to the Status section of existing files. ## Decision The tool is implemented as shell scripts that use standard Unix tools -- grep, sed, awk, etc. ## Consequences The tool won't support Windows. Being plain text files, ADRs can be created by hand and edited in any text editor. This tool just makes the process more convenient. Development will have to cope with differences between Unix variants, particularly Linux and MacOS X. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0003-single-command-with-subcommands.md000066400000000000000000000022171332614041000240060ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 3. Single command with subcommands Date: 2016-02-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context The tool provides a number of related commands to create and manipulate architecture decision records. How can the user find out about the commands that are available? ## Decision The tool defines a single command, called `adr`. The first argument to `adr` (the subcommand) specifies the action to perform. Further arguments are interpreted by the subcommand. Running `adr` without any arguments lists the available subcommands. Subcommands are implemented as scripts in the same directory as the `adr` script. E.g. the subcommand `new` is implemented as the script `adr-new`, the subcommand `help` as the script `adr-help` and so on. Helper scripts that are part of the implementation but not subcommands follow a different naming convention, so that subcommands can be listed by filtering and transforming script file names. ## Consequences Users can more easily explore the capabilities of the tool. Users are already used to this style of command-line tool. For example, Git works this way. Each subcommand can be implemented in the most appropriate language. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0004-markdown-format.md000066400000000000000000000017021332614041000207360ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 4. Markdown format Date: 2016-02-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context The decision records must be stored in a plain text format: * This works well with version control systems. * It allows the tool to modify the status of records and insert hyperlinks when one decision supercedes another. * Decisions can be read in the terminal, IDE, version control browser, etc. People will want to use some formatting: lists, code examples, and so on. People will want to view the decision records in a more readable format than plain text, and maybe print them out. ## Decision Record architecture decisions in [Markdown format](https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/). ## Consequences Decisions can be read in the terminal. Decisions will be formatted nicely and hyperlinked by the browsers of project hosting sites like GitHub and Bitbucket. Tools like [Pandoc](http://pandoc.org/) can be used to convert the decision records into HTML or PDF. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0005-help-comments.md000066400000000000000000000021421332614041000204010ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 5. Help comments Date: 2016-02-13 ## Status Accepted Amended by [9. Help scripts](0009-help-scripts.md) ## Context The tool will have a `help` subcommand to provide documentation for users. It's nice to have usage documentation in the script files themselves, in comments. When reading the code, that's the first place to look for information about how to run a script. ## Decision Write usage documentation in comments in the source file. Distinguish between documentation comments and normal comments. Documentation comments have two hash characters at the start of the line. The `adr help` command can parse comments out from the script using the standard Unix tools `grep` and `cut`. ## Consequences No need to maintain help text in a separate file. Help text can easily be kept up to date as the script is edited. There's no automated check that the help text is up to date. The tests do not work well as documentation for users, and the help text is not easily cross-checked against the code. This won't work if any subcommands are not implemented as scripts that use '#' as a comment character. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0006-packaging-and-distribution-in-other-version-control-repositories.md000066400000000000000000000022241332614041000324420ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 6. Packaging and distribution in other version control repositories Date: 2016-02-16 ## Status Accepted ## Context Users want to install adr-tools with their preferred package manager. For example, Ubuntu users use `apt`, RedHat users use `yum` and Mac OS X users use [Homebrew](http://brew.sh). The developers of `adr-tools` don't know how, nor have permissions, to use all these packaging and distribution systems. Therefore packaging and distribution must be done by "downstream" parties. The developers of the tool should not favour any one particular packaging and distribution solution. ## Decision The `adr-tools` project will not contain any packaging or distribution scripts and config. Packaging and distribution will be managed by other projects in separate version control repositories. ## Consequences The git repo of this project will be simpler. Eventually, users will not have to use Git to get the software. We will have to tag releases in the `adr-tools` repository so that packaging projects know what can be published and how it should be identified. We will document how users can install the software in this project's README file. adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0007-invoke-adr-config-executable-to-get-configuration.md000066400000000000000000000021771332614041000273230ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 7. Invoke adr-config executable to get configuration Date: 2016-12-17 ## Status Accepted ## Context Packagers (e.g. Homebrew developers) want to configure adr-tools to match the conventions of their installation. Currently, this is done by sourcing a file `config.sh`, which should sit beside the `adr` executable. This name is too common. The `config.sh` file is not executable, and so doesn't belong in a bin directory. ## Decision Replace `config.sh` with an executable, named `adr-config` that outputs configuration. Each script in ADR Tools will eval the output of `adr-config` to configure itself. ## Consequences Configuration within ADR Tools is a little more complicated. Packagers can write their own implementation of `adr-config` that outputs configuration that matches the platform's installation conventions, and deploy it next to the `adr` script. To make development easier, the implementation of `adr-config` in the project's src/ directory will output configuration that lets the tool to run from the src/ directory without any installation step. (Packagers should not include this script in a deployable package.) adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0008-use-iso-8601-format-for-dates.md000066400000000000000000000027001332614041000227610ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 8. Use ISO 8601 Format for Dates Date: 2017-02-21 ## Status Accepted ## Context `adr-tools` seeks to communicate the history of architectural decisions of a project. An important component of the history is the time at which a decision was made. To communicate effectively, `adr-tools` should present information as unambiguously as possible. That means that culture-neutral data formats should be preferred over culture-specific formats. Existing `adr-tools` deployments format dates as `dd/mm/yyyy` by default. That formatting is common formatting in the United Kingdom (where the `adr-tools` project was originally written), but is easily confused with the `mm/dd/yyyy` format preferred in the United States. The default date format may be overridden by setting `ADR_DATE` in `config.sh`. ## Decision `adr-tools` will use the ISO 8601 format for dates: `yyyy-mm-dd` ## Consequences Dates are displayed in a standard, culture-neutral format. The UK-style and ISO 8601 formats can be distinguished by their separator character. The UK-style dates used a slash (`/`), while the ISO dates use a hyphen (`-`). Prior to this decision, `adr-tools` was deployed using the UK format for dates. After adopting the ISO 8601 format, existing deployments of `adr-tools` must do one of the following: * Accept mixed formatting of dates within their documentation library. * Update existing documents to use ISO 8601 dates by running `adr upgrade-repository` adr-tools-3.0.0/doc/adr/0009-help-scripts.md000066400000000000000000000013351332614041000202520ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 9. Help scripts Date: 2018-06-26 ## Status Accepted Amends [5. Help comments](0005-help-comments.md) ## Context Currently help text is generated by extracting specially formatted comments from the top of the command script. This makes it easy for developers of the tool: documentation and code is all in one place. But, it means that help text cannot include calculated values, such as the location of files. ## Decision Where necessary, help text can be generated by a script. The script will be called _adr_help__ ## Consequences Help scripts can include helper scripts to locate files, giving more accurate instructions to the user that reflect how the tool is deployed in their environment. adr-tools-3.0.0/new-test000077500000000000000000000001741332614041000151060ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/sh set -e touch tests/$1.{sh,expected} ${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-true}} tests/$1.{sh,expected} echo tests/$1.{sh,expected} adr-tools-3.0.0/src/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000141775ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_add_link000077500000000000000000000011461332614041000166610ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" source=$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_file" "${1:?SOURCE}") link_type="${2:?LINK TYPE}" target=$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_file" "${3:?TARGET}") target_title="$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_title" "$target")" awk -v link_type="$link_type" -v target="$(basename $target)" -v target_title="$target_title" ' BEGIN { in_status_section=0 } /^##/ { if (in_status_section) { print link_type " [" target_title "](" target ")" print "" } in_status_section=0 } /^## Status$/ { in_status_section=1 } { print } ' "$source" > "$source.tmp" mv "$source.tmp" "$source" adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_autocomplete000077500000000000000000000011771332614041000176210ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" cmds=("$@") available_commands=$( $adr_bin_dir/_adr_commands | sort ) if (( ${#@} <= 2)) then suggestions=($( compgen -W "${available_commands}" -- "$2" )) if [ "$suggestions" != "$2" ] then echo "${suggestions[*]}" exit 0 fi fi subcmds_files=( $(compgen -G "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_$2_"'*' | sort ) ) if (( ${#subcmds_files} > 0 )) then subcmds=$( for f in "${subcmds_files[@]}" do basename $f | cut -c $(( ${#2} + 7 ))- done ) suggestions=($( compgen -W "${subcmds}" -- "$3" )) if [ "$suggestions" != "$3" ] then echo "${suggestions[*]}" exit 0 fi fi adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_commands000077500000000000000000000002641332614041000167150ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" for f in $(cd "$adr_bin_dir" && find . -name 'adr-*') do if [ -x "$adr_bin_dir/$f" ] then echo "$f" | cut -c 7- fi done adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_dir000077500000000000000000000006141332614041000156710ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" reldir=. function mkrel() { local d=$reldir/$1 echo ${d#./} } function absdir() { (cd $(dirname $1) && pwd -P) } while [ $(absdir $reldir) != / ] do if [ -f $(mkrel .adr-dir) ] then mkrel $(cat $(mkrel .adr-dir)) exit elif [ -d $(mkrel doc/adr) ] then mkrel doc/adr exit else reldir=$reldir/.. fi done echo doc/adr adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_file000077500000000000000000000001451332614041000160310ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" "$adr_bin_dir/adr-list" | grep "$1" | head -1 adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_generate_graph000077500000000000000000000034751332614041000200760ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr generate graph [-p LINK_PREFIX] [-e LINK-EXTENSION] ## ## Generates a visualisation of the links between decision records in ## Graphviz format. This can be piped into the graphviz tools to ## generate a an image file. ## ## Each node in the graph represents a decision record and is linked to ## the decision record document. ## ## Options: ## ## -e LINK-EXTENSION ## the file extension of the documents to which generated links refer. ## Defaults to `.html`. ## ## -p LINK_PREFIX ## prefix each decision file link with LINK_PREFIX. ## ## E.g. to generate a graph visualisation of decision records in SVG format: ## ## adr generate graph | dot -Tsvg > graph.svg ## ## E.g. to generate a graph visualisation in PDF format, in which all links ## are to .pdf files: ## ## adr generate graph -e .pdf | dot -Tpdf > graph.pdf link_prefix= link_extension=.html while getopts e:p: arg do case "$arg" in e) link_extension="$OPTARG" ;; p) link_prefix="$OPTARG" ;; *) echo "Not implemented: $arg" >&2 exit 1 ;; esac done shift $((OPTIND-1)) function index() { basename "$1" | sed -e 's/-.*//' | sed -e 's/^0*//' } echo "digraph {" echo " node [shape=plaintext];" echo " subgraph {" for f in $("$adr_bin_dir/adr-list") do n=$(index "$f") title=$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_title" $f) echo " _$n [label=\"$title\"; URL=\"${link_prefix}$(basename $f .md)${link_extension}\"];" if [ $n -gt 1 ] then echo " _$(($n - 1)) -> _$n [style=\"dotted\", weight=1];" fi done echo " }" for f in $("$adr_bin_dir/adr-list") do n=$(index "$f") "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_links" "$f" | grep -Ev " by$" | sed -E -e 's/^([0-9]+)=(.+)$/ _'"$n"' -> _\1 [label="\2", weight=0]/;' done echo "}" adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_generate_toc000077500000000000000000000022261332614041000175530ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr generate toc [-i INTRO] [-o OUTRO] [-p LINK_PREFIX] ## ## Generates a table of contents in Markdown format to stdout. ## ## Options: ## ## -i INTRO precede the table of contents with the given INTRO text. ## -o OUTRO follow the table of contents with the given OUTRO text. ## -p LINK_PREFIX ## prefix each decision file link with LINK_PREFIX. ## ## Both INTRO and OUTRO must be in Markdown format. args=$(getopt i:o:p: $*) set -- $args link_prefix= for arg do case "$arg" in -i) intro="$2" shift 2 ;; -o) outro="$2" shift 2 ;; -p) link_prefix="$2" shift 2 ;; --) shift break ;; esac done cat < 1 )) then cmdexe="$adr_bin_dir/_adr_$(IFS=_; echo "${cmds[*]}")" fi helpexe="$adr_bin_dir/_adr_help_$(IFS=_; echo "${cmds[*]}")" if [ -z "$cmds" -o \( ! -x "$cmdexe" -a ! -x "$helpexe" \) ] then echo "usage: adr help COMMAND [ARG] ..." echo "COMMAND is one of: " $adr_bin_dir/_adr_commands | sed 's/^/ /' echo "Run 'adr help COMMAND' for help on a specific command." else if [ -x "$helpexe" ] then "$helpexe" else grep -E '^##' "$cmdexe" | cut -c 4- fi # Assumes only two levels of command / subcommand. subcmds=( $(compgen -G "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_$1_"'*') ) if (( ${#subcmds} > 0 )) then echo echo Subcommands: for f in "${subcmds[@]}" do basename $f | cut -c $(( ${#1} + 7 ))- done | sed "s/^/ adr $1 /" fi fi adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_help_new000077500000000000000000000040451332614041000167160ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" cat < "$file.tmp" mv "$file.tmp" "$file" adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_status000077500000000000000000000002431332614041000164340ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" awk ' /^## Status/,/^#/ && !/^## Status/ { if (!/^(#|\s*$)/) print } ' "$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_file" "$1")" adr-tools-3.0.0/src/_adr_title000077500000000000000000000001541332614041000162330ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" head -1 $("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_file" "$1") | cut -c 3- adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr000077500000000000000000000002431332614041000146720ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" cmd=$adr_bin_dir/adr-$1 if [ -x $cmd ] then $cmd "${@:2}" else $adr_bin_dir/adr-help exit 1 fi adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-config000077500000000000000000000003111332614041000161310ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash # Config for when running from the source directory. basedir=$(cd -L $(dirname $0) >/dev/null 2>&1 && pwd -L) echo 'adr_bin_dir="'"${basedir}"'"' echo 'adr_template_dir="'"${basedir}"'"' adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-generate000077500000000000000000000014761332614041000164730ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr generate [REPORT [OPTION ...]] ## ## Generates summary documentation about the architecture decision records ## that is typically fed into the tool chain for publishing a project's ## documentatation. ## ## To list the report types that can be generated, run: ## ## adr generate ## ## To get help on a specific report generator, run: ## ## adr help generate ## ## For example, the following command will run the "toc" (table of contents) ## generator: ## ## adr generate toc ## ## The following command will display help for the "toc" generator: ## ## adr help generate toc cmd=$1 if [ -z $cmd ] then (cd "$adr_bin_dir" && find . -name '_adr_generate_*') | cut -c 17- else "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_generate_$cmd" "${@:2}" fi adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-help000077500000000000000000000007271332614041000156270ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr help [COMMAND [SUBCOMMAND...]] ## ## If COMMAND and any SUBCOMMANDs are given, displays help for that command. ## Otherwise lists the available commands. ## ## Uses the environment variables ADR_PAGER or PAGER (in that order) to ## specify the command to be used to display the help text. The default ## pager is: more. pager="${ADR_PAGER:-${PAGER:-more}}" ("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_help" "$@") | $pager adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-init000077500000000000000000000011421332614041000156320ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr init [DIRECTORY] ## ## Initialises the directory of architecture decision records: ## ## * creates a subdirectory of the current working directory ## * creates the first ADR in that subdirectory, recording the decision to ## record architectural decisions with ADRs. ## ## If the DIRECTORY is not given, the ADRs are stored in the directory `doc/adr`. if [ ! -z $1 ] then mkdir -p "$1" echo "$1" > .adr-dir fi VISUAL=true ADR_TEMPLATE="$adr_template_dir/init.md" \ "$adr_bin_dir/adr-new" record-architecture-decisions adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-link000077500000000000000000000013071332614041000156270ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr link SOURCE LINK TARGET REVERSE-LINK ## ## Creates a link between two ADRs, from SOURCE to TARGET new. ## SOURCE and TARGET are both a reference (number or partial filename) to an ADR ## LINK is the description of the link created in the SOURCE. ## REVERSE-LINK is the description of the link created in the TARGET ## ## E.g. to create link ADR 12 to ADR 10 ## ## adr link 12 Amends 10 "Amended by" ## source="${1:?SOURCE}" forward_link="${2:?LINK}" target="${3:?TARGET}" reverse_link="${4:?REVERSE-LINK}" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$source" "$forward_link" "$target" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$target" "$reverse_link" "$source" adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-list000077500000000000000000000004721332614041000156470ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr list ## ## Lists the architecture decision records adr_dir=$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_dir") if [ -d $adr_dir ] then find $adr_dir | grep -E "^$adr_dir/[0-9]+-[^/]*\\.md" | sort else echo "The $adr_dir directory does not exist" exit 1 fi adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-new000077500000000000000000000074751332614041000154770ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr new [-s SUPERCEDED] [-l TARGET:LINK:REVERSE-LINK] TITLE_TEXT... ## ## Creates a new, numbered ADR. The TITLE_TEXT arguments are concatenated to ## form the title of the new ADR. The ADR is opened for editing in the ## editor specified by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variable (VISUAL is ## preferred; EDITOR is used if VISUAL is not set). After editing, the ## file name of the ADR is output to stdout, so the command can be used in ## scripts. ## ## If the ADR directory contains a file `templates/template.md`, this is used as ## the template for the new ADR. Otherwise a default template is used that ## follows the style described by Michael Nygard in this article: ## ## http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions ## ## Options: ## ## -s SUPERCEDED A reference (number or partial filename) of a previous ## decision that the new decision supercedes. A Markdown link ## to the superceded ADR is inserted into the Status section. ## The status of the superceded ADR is changed to record that ## it has been superceded by the new ADR. ## ## -l TARGET:LINK:REVERSE-LINK ## Links the new ADR to a previous ADR. ## TARGET is a reference (number or partial filename) of a ## previous decision. ## LINK is the description of the link created in the new ADR. ## REVERSE-LINK is the description of the link created in the ## existing ADR that will refer to the new ADR. ## ## Multiple -s and -l options can be given, so that the new ADR can supercede ## or link to multiple existing ADRs. ## ## E.g. to create a new ADR with the title "Use MySQL Database": ## ## adr new Use MySQL Database ## ## E.g. to create a new ADR that supercedes ADR 12: ## ## adr new -s 12 Use PostgreSQL Database ## ## E.g. to create a new ADR that supercedes ADRs 3 and 4, and amends ADR 5: ## ## adr new -s 3 -s 4 -l "5:Amends:Amended by" Use Riak CRDTs to cope with scale ## superceded=() links=() while getopts s:l: arg do case "$arg" in s) superceded+=("$OPTARG") ;; l) links+=("$OPTARG") ;; --) break ;; *) echo "Not implemented: $arg" >&2 exit 1 ;; esac done shift $((OPTIND-1)) dstdir=$("$adr_bin_dir/_adr_dir") template="$ADR_TEMPLATE" if [ -z $template ] then template="$dstdir/templates/template.md" if [ ! -f "$template" ] then template="$adr_template_dir/template.md" fi fi title="$@" if [ -z "$title" ] then echo ERROR: no title given exit 1 fi if [ -d $dstdir ] then maxid=$(ls $dstdir | grep -Eo '^[0-9]+' | sed -e 's/^0*//' | sort -rn | head -1) newnum=$(($maxid + 1)) else newnum=1 fi newid=$(printf "%04d" $newnum) slug=$(echo -n $title | tr -Ccs [:alnum:] - | tr [:upper:] [:lower:] | sed -e 's/[^[:alnum:]]*$//' -e 's/^[^[:alnum:]]*//') dstfile=$dstdir/$newid-$slug.md date=${ADR_DATE:-$(date +%Y-%m-%d)} mkdir -p $dstdir cat $template | sed \ -e "s|NUMBER|$newnum|" \ -e "s|TITLE|$title|" \ -e "s|DATE|$date|" \ -e "s|STATUS|Accepted|" \ > $dstfile for target in "${superceded[@]}" do "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$target" "Superceded by" "$dstfile" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_remove_status" "Accepted" "$target" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$dstfile" "Supercedes" "$target" done for l in "${links[@]}" do target="$(echo $l | cut -d : -f 1)" forward_link="$(echo $l | cut -d : -f 2)" reverse_link="$(echo $l | cut -d : -f 3)" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$dstfile" "$forward_link" "$target" "$adr_bin_dir/_adr_add_link" "$target" "$reverse_link" "$dstfile" done ${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-true}} $dstfile echo $dstfile adr-tools-3.0.0/src/adr-upgrade-repository000077500000000000000000000005211332614041000205330ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/bash set -e eval "$($(dirname $0)/adr-config)" ## usage: adr upgrade-repository ## ## Upgrades the ADR documents to the latest format. for f in $("$adr_bin_dir/adr-list") do # Upgrade date format to ISO 8601 sed -E -e 's+Date: ([0-9]{2})/([0-9]{2})/([0-9]{4})+Date: \3-\2-\1+' "$f" > "$f.upgraded" mv "$f.upgraded" "$f" done adr-tools-3.0.0/src/init.md000066400000000000000000000007351332614041000154710ustar00rootroot00000000000000# 1. Record architecture decisions Date: DATE ## Status Accepted ## Context We need to record the architectural decisions made on this project. ## Decision We will use Architecture Decision Records, as [described by Michael Nygard](http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions). ## Consequences See Michael Nygard's article, linked above. For a lightweight ADR toolset, see Nat Pryce's [adr-tools](https://github.com/npryce/adr-tools). adr-tools-3.0.0/src/template.md000066400000000000000000000005541332614041000163400ustar00rootroot00000000000000# NUMBER. TITLE Date: DATE ## Status STATUS ## Context The issue motivating this decision, and any context that influences or constrains the decision. ## Decision The change that we're proposing or have agreed to implement. ## Consequences What becomes easier or more difficult to do and any risks introduced by the change that will need to be mitigated. adr-tools-3.0.0/tag-release000077500000000000000000000004251332614041000155300ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/sh -e version=$1 if [ -z ${version} ] then echo "ERROR no tag given; last tag:" `git tag -l | grep -E '[0-9]+(.[0-9]+){2}' | sort -t. -k 1,1nr -k 2,2nr -k 3,3nr | head -1` exit 1 else git tag -u sw@natpryce.com ${version} -m "tagging version ${version}" fi adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/000077500000000000000000000000001332614041000145525ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/alternative-adr-directory.expected000066400000000000000000000005161332614041000233630ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init alternative-dir alternative-dir/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md adr new Example ADR alternative-dir/0002-example-adr.md ls . alternative-dir ls alternative-dir 0001-record-architecture-decisions.md 0002-example-adr.md adr list alternative-dir/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md alternative-dir/0002-example-adr.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/alternative-adr-directory.sh000066400000000000000000000001201332614041000221630ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init alternative-dir adr new Example ADR ls . ls alternative-dir adr list adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/autocomplete.expected000066400000000000000000000003411332614041000207740ustar00rootroot00000000000000_adr_autocomplete adr config generate help init link list new upgrade-repository _adr_autocomplete adr li link list _adr_autocomplete adr generate graph toc _adr_autocomplete adr generate to toc _adr_autocomplete adr ierhir adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/autocomplete.sh000066400000000000000000000002151332614041000176050ustar00rootroot00000000000000_adr_autocomplete adr _adr_autocomplete adr li _adr_autocomplete adr generate _adr_autocomplete adr generate to _adr_autocomplete adr ierhir adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/avoid-octal-numbers.expected000066400000000000000000000014611332614041000221520ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Decision doc/adr/0001-first-decision.md adr new Second Decision doc/adr/0002-second-decision.md adr new Third Decision doc/adr/0003-third-decision.md adr new Fourth Decision doc/adr/0004-fourth-decision.md adr new Fifth Decision doc/adr/0005-fifth-decision.md adr new Sixth Decision doc/adr/0006-sixth-decision.md adr new Seventh Decision doc/adr/0007-seventh-decision.md adr new Eighth Decision doc/adr/0008-eighth-decision.md adr new Ninth Decision doc/adr/0009-ninth-decision.md ls doc/adr 0001-first-decision.md 0002-second-decision.md 0003-third-decision.md 0004-fourth-decision.md 0005-fifth-decision.md 0006-sixth-decision.md 0007-seventh-decision.md 0008-eighth-decision.md 0009-ninth-decision.md head -7 doc/adr/0009-ninth-decision.md # 9. Ninth Decision Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/avoid-octal-numbers.sh000066400000000000000000000004061332614041000207610ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Decision adr new Second Decision adr new Third Decision adr new Fourth Decision adr new Fifth Decision adr new Sixth Decision adr new Seventh Decision adr new Eighth Decision adr new Ninth Decision ls doc/adr head -7 doc/adr/0009-ninth-decision.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/create-first-record.expected000066400000000000000000000007411332614041000221430ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new The First Decision doc/adr/0001-the-first-decision.md cat doc/adr/0001-the-first-decision.md # 1. The First Decision Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context The issue motivating this decision, and any context that influences or constrains the decision. ## Decision The change that we're proposing or have agreed to implement. ## Consequences What becomes easier or more difficult to do and any risks introduced by the change that will need to be mitigated. adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/create-first-record.sh000066400000000000000000000001021332614041000207430ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new The First Decision cat doc/adr/0001-the-first-decision.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/create-mutiple-records.expected000066400000000000000000000006731332614041000226620ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Decision doc/adr/0001-first-decision.md adr new Second Decision doc/adr/0002-second-decision.md adr new Third Decision doc/adr/0003-third-decision.md ls doc/adr 0001-first-decision.md 0002-second-decision.md 0003-third-decision.md head -7 doc/adr/0002-second-decision.md # 2. Second Decision Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted head -7 doc/adr/0003-third-decision.md # 3. Third Decision Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/create-mutiple-records.sh000066400000000000000000000002401332614041000214610ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Decision adr new Second Decision adr new Third Decision ls doc/adr head -7 doc/adr/0002-second-decision.md head -7 doc/adr/0003-third-decision.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/edit-adr-on-creation.expected000066400000000000000000000013011332614041000221750ustar00rootroot00000000000000export EDITOR export VISUAL EDITOR=fake-editor VISUAL= adr new created with EDITOR environment variable set EDITOR doc/adr/0001-created-with-editor-environment-variable-set.md doc/adr/0001-created-with-editor-environment-variable-set.md EDITOR= VISUAL=fake-visual adr new created with VISUAL environment variable set VISUAL doc/adr/0002-created-with-visual-environment-variable-set.md doc/adr/0002-created-with-visual-environment-variable-set.md EDITOR=fake-editor VISUAL=fake-visual adr new uses setting of VISUAL if both VISUAL and EDITOR are set VISUAL doc/adr/0003-uses-setting-of-visual-if-both-visual-and-editor-are-set.md doc/adr/0003-uses-setting-of-visual-if-both-visual-and-editor-are-set.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/edit-adr-on-creation.sh000066400000000000000000000004461332614041000210170ustar00rootroot00000000000000export EDITOR export VISUAL EDITOR=fake-editor VISUAL= adr new created with EDITOR environment variable set EDITOR= VISUAL=fake-visual adr new created with VISUAL environment variable set EDITOR=fake-editor VISUAL=fake-visual adr new uses setting of VISUAL if both VISUAL and EDITOR are set adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/fake-editor000077500000000000000000000000331332614041000166660ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/sh echo EDITOR "$@" adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/fake-visual000077500000000000000000000000331332614041000167030ustar00rootroot00000000000000#!/bin/sh echo VISUAL "$@" adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/funny-characters.expected000066400000000000000000000003751332614041000215560ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new Something About Node.JS doc/adr/0001-something-about-node-js.md adr new Slash/Slash/Slash/ doc/adr/0002-slash-slash-slash.md adr new -- "-Bar-" doc/adr/0003-bar.md ls doc/adr 0001-something-about-node-js.md 0002-slash-slash-slash.md 0003-bar.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/funny-characters.sh000066400000000000000000000001311332614041000203550ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new Something About Node.JS adr new Slash/Slash/Slash/ adr new -- "-Bar-" ls doc/adr adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/generate-contents-with-header-and-footer.expected000066400000000000000000000010021332614041000261460ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Decision doc/adr/0001-first-decision.md adr new Second Decision doc/adr/0002-second-decision.md adr new Third Decision doc/adr/0003-third-decision.md cat > intro.md < outro.md < intro.md < outro.md < _2 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _3 [label="3. A better idea"; URL="0003-a-better-idea.html"]; _2 -> _3 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _4 [label="4. This will work"; URL="0004-this-will-work.html"]; _3 -> _4 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _5 [label="5. The end"; URL="0005-the-end.html"]; _4 -> _5 [style="dotted", weight=1]; } _3 -> _2 [label="Supercedes", weight=0] _5 -> _3 [label="Supercedes", weight=0] } # with specified root and extension in links adr generate graph -p http://example.com/ -e .xxx digraph { node [shape=plaintext]; subgraph { _1 [label="1. Record architecture decisions"; URL="http://example.com/0001-record-architecture-decisions.xxx"]; _2 [label="2. An idea that seems good at the time"; URL="http://example.com/0002-an-idea-that-seems-good-at-the-time.xxx"]; _1 -> _2 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _3 [label="3. A better idea"; URL="http://example.com/0003-a-better-idea.xxx"]; _2 -> _3 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _4 [label="4. This will work"; URL="http://example.com/0004-this-will-work.xxx"]; _3 -> _4 [style="dotted", weight=1]; _5 [label="5. The end"; URL="http://example.com/0005-the-end.xxx"]; _4 -> _5 [style="dotted", weight=1]; } _3 -> _2 [label="Supercedes", weight=0] _5 -> _3 [label="Supercedes", weight=0] } adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/generate-graph.sh000066400000000000000000000004311332614041000177750ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init adr new An idea that seems good at the time adr new -s 2 A better idea adr new This will work adr new -s 3 The end # with default root and extension in links adr generate graph # with specified root and extension in links adr generate graph -p http://example.com/ -e .xxx adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/init-adr-repository.expected000066400000000000000000000011751332614041000222250ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md ls doc/adr 0001-record-architecture-decisions.md cat doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md # 1. Record architecture decisions Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted ## Context We need to record the architectural decisions made on this project. ## Decision We will use Architecture Decision Records, as [described by Michael Nygard](http://thinkrelevance.com/blog/2011/11/15/documenting-architecture-decisions). ## Consequences See Michael Nygard's article, linked above. For a lightweight ADR toolset, see Nat Pryce's [adr-tools](https://github.com/npryce/adr-tools). adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/init-adr-repository.sh000066400000000000000000000001061332614041000210270ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init ls doc/adr cat doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/linking-new-records.expected000066400000000000000000000013441332614041000221600ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Record doc/adr/0001-first-record.md adr new Second Record doc/adr/0002-second-record.md adr new -l "1:Amends:Amended by" -l "2:Clarifies:Clarified by" Third Record doc/adr/0003-third-record.md head -12 doc/adr/0001-first-record.md # 1. First Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Amended by [3. Third Record](0003-third-record.md) ## Context head -12 doc/adr/0002-second-record.md # 2. Second Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Clarified by [3. Third Record](0003-third-record.md) ## Context head -14 doc/adr/0003-third-record.md # 3. Third Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Amends [1. First Record](0001-first-record.md) Clarifies [2. Second Record](0002-second-record.md) ## Context adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/linking-new-records.sh000066400000000000000000000003521332614041000207670ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Record adr new Second Record adr new -l "1:Amends:Amended by" -l "2:Clarifies:Clarified by" Third Record head -12 doc/adr/0001-first-record.md head -12 doc/adr/0002-second-record.md head -14 doc/adr/0003-third-record.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/linking.expected000066400000000000000000000013641332614041000177340ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Record doc/adr/0001-first-record.md adr new Second Record doc/adr/0002-second-record.md adr new Third Record doc/adr/0003-third-record.md adr link 3 Amends 1 "Amended by" adr link 3 Clarifies 2 "Clarified by" head -12 doc/adr/0001-first-record.md # 1. First Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Amended by [3. Third Record](0003-third-record.md) ## Context head -12 doc/adr/0002-second-record.md # 2. Second Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Clarified by [3. Third Record](0003-third-record.md) ## Context head -14 doc/adr/0003-third-record.md # 3. Third Record Date: 1992-01-12 ## Status Accepted Amends [1. First Record](0001-first-record.md) Clarifies [2. Second Record](0002-second-record.md) ## Context adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/linking.sh000066400000000000000000000003721332614041000165430ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr new First Record adr new Second Record adr new Third Record adr link 3 Amends 1 "Amended by" adr link 3 Clarifies 2 "Clarified by" head -12 doc/adr/0001-first-record.md head -12 doc/adr/0002-second-record.md head -14 doc/adr/0003-third-record.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/list-records.expected000066400000000000000000000004761332614041000207160ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr list The doc/adr directory does not exist adr new first doc/adr/0001-first.md adr list doc/adr/0001-first.md adr new second doc/adr/0002-second.md adr list doc/adr/0001-first.md doc/adr/0002-second.md adr new third doc/adr/0003-third.md adr list doc/adr/0001-first.md doc/adr/0002-second.md doc/adr/0003-third.md adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/list-records.sh000066400000000000000000000001201332614041000175110ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr list adr new first adr list adr new second adr list adr new third adr list adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/migrate-date-format.expected000066400000000000000000000011741332614041000221310ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md ( ADR_DATE=12/01/1992 adr new With Old Date Format ) doc/adr/0002-with-old-date-format.md adr new With Current Date Format doc/adr/0003-with-current-date-format.md grep Date: doc/adr/* doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md:Date: 1992-01-12 doc/adr/0002-with-old-date-format.md:Date: 12/01/1992 doc/adr/0003-with-current-date-format.md:Date: 1992-01-12 adr upgrade-repository grep Date: doc/adr/* doc/adr/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md:Date: 1992-01-12 doc/adr/0002-with-old-date-format.md:Date: 1992-01-12 doc/adr/0003-with-current-date-format.md:Date: 1992-01-12 adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/migrate-date-format.sh000066400000000000000000000002421332614041000207350ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init ( ADR_DATE=12/01/1992 adr new With Old Date Format ) adr new With Current Date Format grep Date: doc/adr/* adr upgrade-repository grep Date: doc/adr/* adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/must-provide-a-title-when-creating-new-adr.expected000066400000000000000000000001141332614041000263500ustar00rootroot00000000000000if adr new then echo ERROR: should have failed fi ERROR: no title given adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/must-provide-a-title-when-creating-new-adr.sh000066400000000000000000000000661332614041000251670ustar00rootroot00000000000000if adr new then echo ERROR: should have failed fi adr-tools-3.0.0/tests/project-specific-template.expected000066400000000000000000000010371332614041000233400ustar00rootroot00000000000000adr init adrs adrs/0001-record-architecture-decisions.md mkdir -p adrs/templates cat > adrs/templates/template.md < adrs/templates/template.md <