Run grunt tasks concurrently
Running slow tasks like Coffee and Sass concurrently can potentially improve your build time significantly. This task is also useful if you need to run multiple blocking tasks like nodemon
and watch
at once.
npm install --save-dev grunt-concurrent
require('load-grunt-tasks')(grunt);
grunt.initConfig({
concurrent: {
target1: ['coffee', 'sass'],
target2: ['jshint', 'mocha']
}
});
// Tasks of target1 run concurrently, after they all finished, tasks of target2 run concurrently, instead of target1 and target2 running concurrently.
grunt.registerTask('default', ['concurrent:target1', 'concurrent:target2']);
grunt.initConfig({
concurrent: {
target: [['jshint', 'coffee'], 'sass']
}
});
Now jshint
will always be done before coffee
and sass
runs independent of both of them.
Type: number
Default: Twice the number of CPU cores with a minimum of 2
Limit how many tasks that are run concurrently.
Type: boolean
Default: false
You can optionally log the output of your concurrent tasks by specifying the logConcurrentOutput
option. Here is an example config which runs grunt-nodemon to launch and monitor a node server and grunt-contrib-watch to watch for asset changes all in one terminal tab:
grunt.initConfig({
concurrent: {
target: {
tasks: ['nodemon', 'watch'],
options: {
logConcurrentOutput: true
}
}
}
});
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-concurrent');
grunt.registerTask('default', ['concurrent:target']);
The output will be messy when combining certain tasks. This option is best used with tasks that don't exit like watch
and nodemon
to monitor the output of long-running concurrent tasks.
Type: boolean
Default: true
You can optionally skip indenting the log output of your concurrent tasks by specifying false
. This can be useful for running tasks in parallel for a stdout parser which expects no indentation, for example, TeamCity tests.