This commit does a few things:
- Sets up the ability to log information based off log level
- Figures out where to log the file
- Starts logging information in the program
As this is a first pass the logging is good enough to know where things
went wrong, but we can expand on this in the future to log many many
things. We just now have an initial implementation. The log is written
out to a file that can be read by the user if they pass in -v, -vv, etc.
where each v is an extra level of logging.
Remove quicli from the code base. It's a fantastic library to get
started, but in order to implement logging as well as just maintaining
the library in general it was easier to remove it and continue work
without it. While we were going to remove it in 0.4 we found it easier
to remove now to implement logging.
This commit does quite a few things in order to get this to work:
1. We move all of the code dealing with knowing which command to run
into it's own function. This wrapper command allows us to always
close out PBAR before dumping error output. This fixes a problem
where stderr and stdout were borked and not printing out error
messages correctly.
2. We then refactor the code that has a panic to return early with that
error message.
3. If the command we ran errored, we print out with PBAR that there was
an error with the program we ran (not wasm-pack itself) then dump the
stderr from the command to the actual stderr
This means we can abort early on without continuing any of the other
parts of wasm-pack and let the user know what the error was rather than
just saying "There's an error"
Functions to new module. Tidies up reused code into
private function.
Throws warning due to line 11 in command.rs - unused import
Import is used for the StructOpt derive macro, so is needed
but still throws this warning
This commit allows us to have a global progress bar to write data to
giving us the following benefits:
- Consistent ways to handle types of messages such as errors and
warnings
- Easy interface to add progress bars of various types
- Easy to maintain, add new types of bars, or more while encapsulating
the login in a single module
npm allows scopes to avoid name collisions. In order to support this
optional feature a flag has been added so that the name in the generated
package.json is correct.
Example for a package named wasm-add:
```bash
wasm-pack init
```
package.json
```json
{
"name": "wasm-add"
}
```
```bash
wasm-pack init --scope mgattozzi
```
package.json
```json
{
"name": "@mgattozzi/wasm-add"
}
```