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@salesforce/plugin-template

v2.1.0

Published

A template repository for sfdx plugins

Downloads

47

Readme

Use the lerna template if you need a library and plugin

This template is useful if the library is already in another repository or the plugin is a wrapper around an API.

plugin-<REPLACE ME>

NPM CircleCI Downloads/week License

Change above to <REPLACE_ME> before finalizing

<REPLACE ME DESCRIPTION START>

This repository provides a template for creating a plugin for the Salesforce CLI. To convert this template to a working plugin:

  1. Clone this repo
  2. Delete the .git folder
  3. Replace filler values a) Every instance of <REPLACE_ME> can be directly substitued for the name of the new plugin. However beware, things like github paths are for the salesforcecli Github organization b) Search for case-matching REPLACE to find other filler values, such as for the plugin description
  4. Use git init to set up the desired git information
  5. Follow the getting started steps below until the sfdx hello:org commmand is functioning

<REPLACE ME DESCRIPTION END>

Learn about the plugin-template

Salesforce CLI plugins are based on the oclif plugin framework. Read the plugin developer guide to learn about Salesforce CLI plugin development.

This repository contains a lot of additional scripts and tools to help with general Salesforce node development and enforce coding standards. You should familiarize yourself with some of the node developer packages used by Salesforce. There is also a default circleci config using the release management orb standards.

Additionally, there are some additional tests that the Salesforce CLI will enforce if this plugin is ever bundled with the CLI. These test are included by default under the posttest script and it is recommended to keep these tests active in your plugin, regardless if you plan to have it bundled.

Everything past here is only a suggestion as to what should be in your specific plugin's description

This plugin is bundled with the Salesforce CLI. For more information on the CLI, read the getting started guide.

We always recommend using the latest version of these commands bundled with the CLI, however, you can install a specific version or tag if needed.

Install

sfdx plugins:install <REPLACE_ME>@x.y.z

Issues

Please report any issues at https://github.com/forcedotcom/cli/issues

Contributing

  1. Please read our Code of Conduct
  2. Create a new issue before starting your project so that we can keep track of what you are trying to add/fix. That way, we can also offer suggestions or let you know if there is already an effort in progress.
  3. Fork this repository.
  4. Build the plugin locally
  5. Create a topic branch in your fork. Note, this step is recommended but technically not required if contributing using a fork.
  6. Edit the code in your fork.
  7. Write appropriate tests for your changes. Try to achieve at least 95% code coverage on any new code. No pull request will be accepted without unit tests.
  8. Sign CLA (see CLA below).
  9. Send us a pull request when you are done. We'll review your code, suggest any needed changes, and merge it in.

CLA

External contributors will be required to sign a Contributor's License Agreement. You can do so by going to https://cla.salesforce.com/sign-cla.

Build

To build the plugin locally, make sure to have yarn installed and run the following commands:

# Clone the repository
git clone [email protected]:salesforcecli/plugin-<REPLACE_ME>

# Install the dependencies and compile
yarn install
yarn build

To use your plugin, run using the local ./bin/run or ./bin/run.cmd file.

# Run using local run file.
./bin/run <REPLACE_ME>

There should be no differences when running via the Salesforce CLI or using the local run file. However, it can be useful to link the plugin to do some additional testing or run your commands from anywhere on your machine.

# Link your plugin to the sfdx cli
sfdx plugins:link .
# To verify
sfdx plugins

Commands

sfdx hello:org [-n <string>] [-f] [-v <string>] [-u <string>] [--apiversion <string>] [--json] [--loglevel trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal|TRACE|DEBUG|INFO|WARN|ERROR|FATAL]

print a greeting and your org IDs

USAGE
  $ sfdx hello:org [-n <string>] [-f] [-v <string>] [-u <string>] [--apiversion <string>] [--json] [--loglevel
  trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal|TRACE|DEBUG|INFO|WARN|ERROR|FATAL]

OPTIONS
  -f, --force                                                                       example boolean flag
  -n, --name=name                                                                   name to print

  -u, --targetusername=targetusername                                               username or alias for the target
                                                                                    org; overrides default target org

  -v, --targetdevhubusername=targetdevhubusername                                   username or alias for the dev hub
                                                                                    org; overrides default dev hub org

  --apiversion=apiversion                                                           override the api version used for
                                                                                    api requests made by this command

  --json                                                                            format output as json

  --loglevel=(trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal|TRACE|DEBUG|INFO|WARN|ERROR|FATAL)  [default: warn] logging level for
                                                                                    this command invocation

EXAMPLES
  $ sfdx hello:org --targetusername [email protected] --targetdevhubusername [email protected]
     Hello world! This is org: MyOrg and I will be around until Tue Mar 20 2018!
     My hub org id is: 00Dxx000000001234

  $ sfdx hello:org --name myname --targetusername [email protected]
     Hello myname! This is org: MyOrg and I will be around until Tue Mar 20 2018!