251 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
251 lines
7.1 KiB
Markdown
# Mercenary
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Lightweight and flexible library for writing command-line apps in Ruby.
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[![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/jekyll/mercenary.png)](https://travis-ci.org/jekyll/mercenary)
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## Installation
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Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
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gem 'mercenary'
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And then execute:
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$ bundle
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Or install it yourself as:
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$ gem install mercenary
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**Note: Mercenary may not work with Ruby < 1.9.3.**
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## Usage
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Creating programs and commands with Mercenary is easy:
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```ruby
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Mercenary.program(:jekyll) do |p|
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p.version Jekyll::VERSION
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p.description 'Jekyll is a blog-aware, static site generator in Ruby'
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p.syntax "jekyll <subcommand> [options]"
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p.command(:new) do |c|
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c.syntax "new PATH" # do not include the program name or super commands
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c.description "Creates a new Jekyll site scaffold in PATH"
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c.option 'blank', '--blank', 'Initialize the new site without any content.'
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c.action do |args, options|
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Jekyll::Commands::New.process(args, blank: options['blank'])
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end
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end
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p.command(:build) do |c|
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c.syntax "build [options]"
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c.description "Builds your Jekyll site"
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c.option 'safe', '--safe', 'Run in safe mode'
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c.option 'source', '--source DIR', 'From where to collect the source files'
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c.option 'destination', '--dest DIR', 'To where the compiled files should be written'
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c.action do |_, options|
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Jekyll::Commands::Build.process(options)
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end
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end
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# Bring in command bundled in external gem
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begin
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require "jekyll-import"
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JekyllImport.init_with_program(p)
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rescue LoadError
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end
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p.default_command(:build)
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end
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```
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All commands have the following default options:
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- `-h/--help` - show a help message
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- `-v/--version` - show the program version
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- `-t/--trace` - show the full backtrace when an error occurs
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## API
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### `Mercenary`
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#### `.program`
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Creates and executes a program. Accepts two arguments:
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- `name` - program name as a Symbol
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- `block` - the specification for the program, passed the program instance as an
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argument.
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Example is above, under the heading [Usage](#usage).
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### `Program`
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`Program` is a subclass of `Command`, so it has all of the methods documented
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below as well as those for `Command`.
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#### `#config`
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Fetches the program configuration hash.
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### `Command`
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#### `#new`
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Create a new command. Accepts two arguments:
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- `name` - the name of your command, as a symbol
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- `parent` - (optional) the parent Command
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#### `#version`
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Sets or gets the version of the command. Accepts an optional argument:
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- `version` - (optional) the version to set for the command. If present, this
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becomes the new version for the command and persists.
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#### `#syntax`
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Sets or gets the syntax of the command. Built on parent syntaxes if a parent
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exists. Accepts one optional argument:
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- `syntax` - (optional) the syntax to set for the command. Will inherit from the
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parent commands or program. Usually in the form of
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`"command_name <SUBCOMMAND> [OPTIONS]"`
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When a parent command exists, say `supercommand`, with syntax set as
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`supercommand <SUBCOMMAND> [OPTIONS]`, the syntax of the command in question
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will be `supercommand command_name <SUBCOMMAND> [OPTIONS]` with both
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`<SUBCOMMAND>` and `[OPTIONS]` stripped out. Any text between `<` and `>` or
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between `[` and `]` will be stripped from parent command syntaxes. The purpose
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of this chaining is to reduce redundancy.
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#### `#description`
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Sets or gets the description of the command. Accepts one optional argument:
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- `desc` - (optional) the description to set for the command. If
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provided, will override any previous description set for the command.
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#### `#default_command`
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Sets or gets the default subcommand of the command to execute in the event no
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subcommand is passed during execution. Accepts one optional argument:
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- `command_name` - (optional) the `Symbol` name of the subcommand to be
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executed. Raises an `ArgumentError` if the subcommand doesn't exist.
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Overwrites previously-set default commands.
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#### `#option`
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Adds a new option to the command. Accepts many arguments:
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- `config_key` - the configuration key that the value of this option maps to.
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- `*options` - all the options, globbed, to be passed to `OptionParser`, namely the
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switches and the option description. Usually in the format
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`"-s", "--switch", "Sets the 'switch' flag"`.
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Valid option calls:
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```ruby
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cmd.option 'config_key', '-c', 'Sets the "config" flag'
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cmd.option 'config_key', '--config', 'Sets the "config" flag'
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cmd.option 'config_key', '-c', '--config', 'Sets the "config" flag.'
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cmd.option 'config_key', '-c FILE', '--config FILE', 'The config file.'
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cmd.option 'config_key', '-c FILE1[,FILE2[,FILE3...]]', '--config FILE1[,FILE2[,FILE3...]]', Array, 'The config files.'
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```
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Notice that you can specify either a short switch, a long switch, or both. If
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you want to accept an argument, you have to specify it in the switch strings.
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The class of the argument defaults to `String`, but you can optionally set a
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different class to create, e.g. `Array`, if you are expecting a particular class
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in your code from this option's value. The description is also optional, but
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it's highly recommended to include a description.
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#### `#alias`
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Specifies an alias for this command such that the alias may be used in place of
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the command during execution. Accepts one argument:
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- `cmd_name` - the alias name for this command as a `Symbol`
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Example:
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```ruby
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cmd.alias(:my_alias)
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# Now `cmd` is now also executable via "my_alias"
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```
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#### `#action`
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Specifies a block to be executed in the event the command is specified at
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runtime. The block is given two arguments:
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- `args` - the non-switch arguments given from the command-line
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- `options` - the options hash built via the switches passed
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**Note that actions are additive**, meaning any new call to `#action` will
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result in another action to be executed at runtime. Actions will be executed in
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the order they are specified in.
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Example:
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```ruby
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cmd.action do |args, options|
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# do something!
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end
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```
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#### `#logger`
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Access the logger for this command. Useful for outputting information to STDOUT.
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Accepts one optional argument:
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- `level` - (optional) the severity threshold at which to begin logging. Uses
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Ruby's built-in
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[`Logger`](http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib-2.1.0/libdoc/logger/rdoc/Logger.html)
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levels.
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Log level defaults to `Logger::INFO`.
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Examples:
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```ruby
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cmd.logger(Logger::DEBUG)
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cmd.logger.debug "My debug message."
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cmd.logger.info "My informative message."
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cmd.logger.warn "ACHTUNG!!"
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cmd.logger.error "Something terrible has happened."
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cmd.logger.fatal "I can't continue doing what I'm doing."
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```
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#### `#command`
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Creates a new subcommand for the current command. Accepts two arguments:
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- `cmd_name` - the command name, as a Symbol
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- `block` - the specification of the subcommand in a block
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Example:
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```ruby
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my_command.command(:my_subcommand) do |subcmd|
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subcmd.description 'My subcommand'
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subcmd.syntax 'my_subcommand [OPTIONS]'
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# ...
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end
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```
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## Contributing
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1. Fork it
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2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`)
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3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`)
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4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`)
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5. Create new Pull Request
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