View Source Configuring Igniter
This guide is for those who are end-users of igniter, for example, using the generators provided by a library that are backed by igniter.
Setting up igniter
Use mix igniter.setup
to create a .igniter.exs
file in your project root. This file configures igniter for your project. You can run this command repeatedly to keep the file up to date over time.
See the documentation in Igniter.Project.IgniterConfig
for available configuration.
Extensions
Igniter supports extensions. These extensions are limited to determining where modules should be created (i.e a module in /web
ending in Controller
).
This is not bulletproof and will likely need to be improved over time. (The best thing would be if Phoenix conventions were the same as the
elixir conventions of module names matching paths). To this end, you will want to add the phoenix extension if your generator builds any phoenix-related modules.
For an end user, this can be done with mix igniter.add_extension phoenix
.
For those writing tasks, use Igniter.compose_task("igniter.add_extension", ["phoenix"])
.
Moving files
One available configuration is module_location
. This configuration dictates where modules are placed when there is a folder that exactly matches their module name. There are two available strategies for this, and with igniter not only can you change your mind, but you can actually move back and forth between each strategy. To move any modules to their rightful place, use mix igniter.move_files
.
Only for matching modules
The following rules are only applied when a top-level module is defined in the file. If it is not, then the file will always be left exactly where it is. It is generally considered best-practice to define one top-level module per file.
:outside_matching_folder
The "standard" way to place a module is to place it in a folder path that exactly matches its module name, inside of lib/
. For example, a module named MyApp.MyModule
would be placed in lib/my_app/my_module.ex
.
Use the default :outside_matching_folder
to follow this convention in all cases.
:inside_matching_folder
What some people don't like about the previously described strategy is that it can split up related modules. For example:
lib/
└── my_app/
├── accounts/
│ ├── user.ex
│ ├── organization.ex
├── social/
│ ├── post.ex
│ ├── comment.ex
├── accounts.ex # <- This feels to some like it should be in `/accounts`
└── social.ex
They would prefer to put that leaf-node module in its matching folder if it exists, and otherwise follow the original convention if not.
lib/
└── my_app/
├── accounts/
│ ├── user.ex
│ ├── organization.ex
│ ├── accounts.ex
├── social/
│ ├── post.ex
│ ├── comment.ex
│ └── social.ex