MIX(1) | General Commands Manual | MIX(1) |
mix
— The software
project management tool
mix |
[TASK] [project_name] |
elixir |
[OPTIONS] -S
mix [TASK]
[project_name] |
mix
is intended for both organizing code
into projects and their maintenance. For the latter the tool offers some
advanced features like dependency management, packaging, preparing
documentation, testing and so on.
Have a look at the SYNOPSIS section and the
second way of running mix
it offers. The point is
that the tool is none other than the Elixir script, therefore it can be
invoked via elixir(1) in the same way as any other script.
It's useful when you want to run mix
with particular
options.
All the mix
functionality is represented
by a set of tasks. A
task is a
piece of code written in Elixir and intended for solving a particular
problem. Like programs, many tasks accept input parameters and/or support
options which slightly modify their behaviour, but others do not. There are
two types of tasks: those that are available after installation this or that
archive (local tasks) and those that are offered by
mix
(built-in tasks). The
run task
will be executed by default if none other has been specified.
In spite of the fact that the greater part of
mix
is tasks, the man page doesn't contain the help
information related to each of them because mix
is
self-descriptive. Thus, using the
help task, you can
get both the full list of local/built-in tasks and the information related
to a particular task.
An archive, in terms of Erlang/OTP, is the ZIP file with the .ez extension which contains a precompiled OTP application with all its dependencies[1].
An application is an entity that helps to combine sets of components into a single unit to simplify their reusing in other systems[2].
MIX_ARCHIVES
MIX_DEBUG
MIX_ENV
Sometimes you have to use a particular set of configuration
parameter values or perform particular steps when you compile or run a
project (or in some other cases). The mix
environments allow grouping values of configuration parameters and steps
to switch between them by specifying the necessary environment via
MIX_ENV.
MIX_TARGET
MIX_EXS
mix
environments (see above) are not enough to
solve the problem.MIX_HOME
MIX_PATH
As mentioned above, there are two types of tasks: local and
built-in. These tasks are always visible for mix
because the directories, in which they are located, are a part of code
path. If a task belongs to neither the one type nor the other, MIX_PATH
helps you say to mix
where it should search the
task.
MIX_QUIET
May 27, 2015 | Debian |