homerun v0.4.1
Homerun

Turn npm package scripts into CLI commands
Since npm 2.0, you can pass arguments to scripts... wait... what if you could use that for creating CLIs? Homerun is a little experiment that lets you just do that. If you need more, I highly recommend minimist.
Usage
Let's say you have a script called add that you can run this way:
npm run add -- 1 2
3Install homerun
npm install homerun --saveAdd it to your package.json
{
"name": "cli"
"bin": "./node_modules/.bin/homerun" // <-- here
"scripts": {
"add": "node commands/add"
}
}Now, without any other setup, if you npm link or npm publish you get a CLI for free:
cli add 1 2
3And of course, while you develop, you can still use npm run add -- 1 2 to test your command.
Options
Homerun will use these scripts in case no command is provided or matches.
"scripts": {
"index": "node commands/index" // no command provided
"unknown": "node commands/help" // unknown command provided
}Module
If you need to customize, homerun can be used as a module.
// index.js
var homerun = require('homerun')
var scripts = require('./package.json').scripts
homerun(scripts, process.argv).spawn()// package.json
{
"bin": "index.js"
}Test
To test your commands, you can use homerun.exec()
var assert = require('assert')
var argv = [,, 'add', '1', '2']
homerun(scripts, argv).exec(function(err, stdout, stderr) {
assert.equal(err, null)
assert.equal('', stderr)
assert.equal('3\n', stdout)
})Limit
Homerun doesn't support multiple commands. For example, echo foo && echo bar won't work.
License
MIT - Typicode
