npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

autocmdr

v0.0.8

Published

autocmdr

Downloads

824

Readme

autocmdr Build Status NPM version Code Climate

NPM

autocmdr is a both a command line interface for running tasks and a set of components for building CLIs. autocmdr is designed to work with generator-commander to enable easily building of commander.js command line apps.

autocmdr itself was partially built using autocmdr/generator-commander. Please also see the obligatory todo app here todo-md (Works with GFM task lists!!).

Warning... The usage is changing rapidly. I'm working towards a 0.1.0 release soon. Feedback is welcome.

Introduction

The diverse ecosystem of modules available for node.js through npm make it a great tool for the rapid development of a variety of tools including useful command line interfaces. Commander.js from visionmedia is an excellent node.js command line parser that, using a natural, clean and highly readable syntax, allows for easy development of versatile self-documenting command line interfaces (CLIs). However, a command line parser is just the beginning. Many CLIs will inevitably need to include additional components such as debug logging, configuration management, and other CLI type actions. autocmdr is a command line tool that implements these modules, so you don't have too. In fact using the autocmdr executable all you need to do is add commands to your local directory and autocmdr will load them automatically along with a reasonable set of additional support components. Using autocmdr along with yo and generator-commander provides tools for easily building command components and full CLI applications. This includes converting a detached set of command components into a independent CLI application that uses autocmdr (along with all it's support modules) as a library.

Philosophy and Workflow

Building excellent command tools using excellent tools. Using the right tool for the right task

commander.js is an node.js command line parser from visionmedia.

autocmdr is a set of components that add interfaces and support to commander.js based applications built by Hypercubed (me).

yo is a scaffolding tool built by Google.

generator-commander is a commander.js application generator for Yo also built by Hypercubed.

Yo, together with the commander generator, makes it easy to scaffold complete command line tools that uses commander.js command line parser and autocmdr components to enable great command line interfaces.

Usage

Summary

Essentially autocmdr, like most node.js modules, works in two modes; executable (command line) mode and library (require) mode. In executable mode autocmdr will load any commands located in the current working directory's (cwd's) cmds/ folder. By convention each file in the cmds/ directory corresponds to one commander.js command, although this is not necessary. In this mode it is not necessary to install autocmdr in the current working directory, you are using the global autocmdr executable with the local cmds/ commands.

In library mode a commander.js based CLI executable has access to autocmdr components extending its interface.

Using autocmdr as a task runner

Install autocmdr globally

npm install -g Hypercubed/autocmdr

When running in executable mode all commands located in the cmds/ folder of the current working directory are automatically loaded. These commands can be be run by invoking autocmdr commandname. autocmdr --help will list help on these local commands. By using the globally installed autocmdr executable the rest of your project remains untouched so you can add commands to augment existing projects.

Using generator-commander to add command components

Install yo and generator-commander

npm install -g yo generator-commander

using yo and generator-commander you can add commands to the current working directory's cmds/ folder. Referring to the example below yo commander:command mycmd will add the mycmd command to the cwd's cmd/ directory. The autocmdr mycmd call executes the mycmd command. If you change to another directory these commands are no longer available.

$ mkdir example && cd example
$ autocmdr --help

  Usage: autocmdr [options] [command]

  Commands:

    config [key] [value]   Get and set options
    completion             Print command completion script

  Options:

    -h, --help     output usage information
    -d, --debug    enable debugger
    -V, --version  output the version number

  Bug reports, suggestions, updates:
   https://github.com/Hypercubed/autocmdr/issues

$ yo commander:command mycmd

[?] Command name: mycmd
[?] version: 0.0.0
[?] description: A commander command
   create cmds/mycmd.js

I'm all done. Add `require('../cmds/mycmd.js')(program);` to your app before program.parse.

$ autocmdr --help

  Usage: autocmdr [options] [command]

  Commands:

    mycmd [options]        A commander command
    config [key] [value]   Get and set options
    completion             Print command completion script

  Options:

    -h, --help     output usage information
    -d, --debug    enable debugger
    -V, --version  output the version number

  Bug reports, suggestions, updates:
   https://github.com/Hypercubed/autocmdr/issues

$ autocmdr mycmd
$ cd ..
$ autocmdr mycmd
$ error:    'mycmd' is not a known command. See 'autocmdr --help'.

Using generator-commander

If a set of commands in a folder are useful globally you can convert a set of tasks to an self contained commander.js command line application. Notice after running yo commander the previously created command mycmd is available within the newly created example application.

  1. Create an independent commander.js based app with autocmdr default plug-ins.

     $ cd example
     $ yo commander
        
     [?] Name (must be only letters, spaces, or dashes) example
     [?] Version: 0.0.0
     [?] Description: A commander CLI app
     [?] GitHub username:
     [?] license: MIT
     >[x] Logger (adds a Winston logger)
      [x] Commander loader (automatically loads commands from cmds/ directory)
      [x] Autocompletion (adds command line autocompletion)
      [x] Package (load reasonable defaults from your application's package.json)
      [x] Config (adds a config command)
      [x] Help (adds a `did you mean` messege when an unknown command is given)
    	  
        create package.json
        create bin/example
        create Readme.md
        create test/example.js
        create .editorconfig
        create .jshintrc
        create .gitignore
        create .travis.yml
    
     I'm all done. Running npm install for you to install the required dependencies. If this fails, try running the command yourself.
        
     $ ./bin/example --help
        
       Usage: example [options] [command]
          
       Commands:
         mycmd [options]        A commander command
         config [key] [value]   Get and set options
         completion             Print command completion script
        
       Options:
         -h, --help     output usage information
         -d, --debug    enable debugger
         -V, --version  output the version number
  2. (Optional) Make it global

     $ npm link
     $ cd ..
     $ example --help
    
       Usage: example [options] [command]
    
       Commands:
         mycmd [options]        A commander command
         config [key] [value]   Get and set options
         completion             Print command completion script
    
       Options:
         -h, --help     output usage information
         -d, --debug    enable debugger
         -V, --version  output the version number

The new executable you just created, when you include the autocmdr components, will have access to the autocmdr features as well as the commands in the cmds/ folder. Edit bin/example to change what components are loaded.

Commander.js components

autocmdr components are node.js modules that export a single initialization function. This function is called with a commander.js program and an optional options object. Components have a simple syntax that doesn't deviate far from the syntax established by commander.js itself. See autocmdr's example commands and lib for examples.

Commands

The most basic form of a command component is shown below. Within the exported function a single command is added to the commander.js program as you would in any other commander.js program (see commander.js api documentation).

module.exports = function(program) {

    program
        .command('name')
        .version('version')
        .description('description')
        .action(function(args){
            // Do something
        });

};

Components

autocmdr component modules have the same structure as command modules. The only difference is that they are not designed to be automatically loaded. Plugins are loaded using node's require function again exporting a single initialization function; this time accepting an optional options object as the second parameter. Below are the built-in autocmdr plug-ins.

module.exports = function(program, options) {

    // Do plug-in stuff here

};

autocmdr supplied components

loader

This component is what loads the cmds/ modules.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/loader.js')(program) will load all modules in the cmds folder just above the executable. This path can be overridden by setting the path option; for example require('autocmdr/lib/loader.js')(program, { path: path.join(process.cwd(), 'cmds/') ) will load modules from the cwd's /cmds folder.

logger

The logger component uses Winston for logging.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/logger')(program) will add program.log to your application. The plug-in will enable output to the terminal depending on the log level. The plug-in will also add the -d option to your application to enable debug logging. Then logging can be done like this:

program.log('info', 'Hello!');
program.info('Hello again');
program.debug('Can you hear me now?');

While this component is optional other components expect to find and instant of Winston at program.log.

config

This component will load nconf for handling of configuration. It will add program.config as an instance of nconf.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/config')(program) will enable this.

While this component is optional other components expect to find and instant of nconf at program.config.

help

This component will use didyoumean to add a "Did you mean:" message to your application when an unknown command is given.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/help')(program) will enable this.

package

This component will use the will load reasonable defaults (such as description and bug reporting URL) from your application's package.json.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/package')(program) will load the package.json file located one directory above the executable. You can override this path using the options object.

completion

This component will use node-tabtab to add auto-completion support to your application.

Adding require('autocmdr/lib/completion')(program) just before program.parse(argv); will will enable auto-completion support. You will then need to do one of the following to enable auto-completion in your shell.

  • Add completion helper to ~/.bashrc (or ~/.zshrc) pkgname completion >> ~/.bashrc
  • Add completion to current shell . <(pkgname completion)

Share

The modular nature of autocmdr command files makes it easy to share using gist, git or similar tool. Simply copying files into cmds/ folder can work in many cases.

Todo

See todo.md ( managed using todo-md and it's self an autocmdr app)

License

MIT License

Copyright (c) 2013 J. Harshbarger Gittip donate button Paypal donate button

Acknowledgments

autocmdr itself was (partially) built using autocmdr.

autocmdr is build on top of commander.js and inspired by other task managers ( grunt, automaton ) and command line tools ( docpad, git ).