0.1.2 • Published 2 years ago

auditboard-cli v0.1.2

Weekly downloads
320
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
2 years ago

Auditboard Cli

ab basic

Installation

$ yarn add auditboard-cli

$ npm install auditboard-cli

Make sure your projects node_modules/.bin is in your path.

$ export PATH=$PATH:$PWD/node_modules/.bin

Why this CLI?

auditboard-cli is a cli that you can drop into any node project (>=v10) and automate anything you can write code for. Inspired by Rake and Artisan to help support developers maximise productivity. The commands you create live in the repo you install auditboard-cli in <YOUR PROJECT ROOT>/ab-cli-commands. We also support global creation of commands which live in ~/.ab-cli-commands. If you want to delete a command just delete that file.

Basic Usage

First thing to do when you get up and running is use the make:command (you can pass a -g or --global to the make command to install globally).

ab make command

Now open the command file that was created.

module.exports = {
	/**
	 * args get defined by the commandOptions interface below
	 * {
	 *   "firstParam": "users", <-- required params
	 *   "options": 11 <-- optional params
	 * }
	 */
	async command(args) {
		console.log("HELLO WORLD From my new command", args);
		return "Return a message and the cli will log it!";
	},
	commandOptions: {
		help: "This help string supports markdown!",
		description: "This is your command short description",
		required: [
			/**
			 * This is where you put required params
			 * arguments are parsed sequentially
			 * example: ./auditboard make:command users -o 11
			 *
			 * This segment is how it got to this 
			 */
			{
				name: "firstParam", // <-- this value will be users
				message: 'Something went wrong...', // <-- (optional) failure message if param does not exist
			},
			// ... more required params
		],
		args: {
			// these are optional parameters
			// https://www.npmjs.com/package/args
			'--option': Number,
			'-o': '--option',
		}
	}
};

Command API

make:command creates the above example let's walk through the interface.

command

  async command(args) {
    console.log("HELLO WORLD From my new command", args);
    return "Return a message and the cli will log it!";
  },

This is the function that gets executed. If you want a custom message to display on command completion return a string

commandOptions

  • help
    • The message that gets displayed when a user runs help(supports markdown):
    $ auditboard help <your awesome command>
  • description
    • The description that displays when you run list
  • required
    • An array of parameter objects that are required to run your command. The engine does the validation.
      required: [
        /**
          * This is where you put required params
          * arguments are parsed sequentially
          * example: ./auditboard make:command users -o 11
          *
          * This segment is how it got to this 
          */
        {
          name: "firstParam", // <-- this value will be users
          message: 'Something went wrong...', // <-- (optional) failure message if param does not exist
        },
        // ... more required params
      ],
  • args
    • We leveraged the open source communuty for parsing optional arguments (you will be responsible for checking if they exist in your command function). See Args docs

Argument injection

Arguments (both optional and required) are injected into the command function. Keyed by name (for optional parms we remove --)

Our make command, for example, has required and optional arguments Required:

{
  name: "commandName",
  message: 'You need a command name to create a command... duh',
},

Optional:

args: {
  "--global": Boolean,
  "-g": "--global"
}

We run the command...

$ auditboard make:command mynew:command -g

Inside the command function the arguments are

async command(args) {
  // args.commandName => mynew:command
  // args.global => true
  ...
}

Contributing

Feel free to create issues and open pull requests!

License

MIT (AuditBoard <3 Open Source)

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