forked from jmohr/compago
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
A framework for simple command-line option parsing.
License
derrley/compago
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
============================================================================= Project: Compago Copyright: ©2011,2012 Justin Mohr. All Rights Reserved. ============================================================================= Write polished command line applications in a fraction of the time. Guaranteed, or double your money back! Compago is a framework for simple command-line parsing in Python. Compago provides a simple framework and set of decorators to allow you to quickly and easily define a set of commands within a script. For those familiar with Ruby's Thor, Compago fills a similar niche. This project was inspired by the excellent Flask-Script extension for Flask, but has been entirely rewritten to remove all Flask dependencies. (see: http://packages.python.org/Flask-Script/) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Quick Start ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- First, install compago with pip, or alternately fetch the sources from Github or PyPI. $ pip install compago Then, create a python file named "mycommand.py" containing this: import compago app = compago.Application() @app.command def say_hello(to="world"): print("Hello there, %s" % to) if __name__ == '__main__': app.run() Save the file, and run it thusly: $ python mycommand.py For some more in-depth examples, see the /examples folder in the sources. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Background ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Why Compago? We've all needed to whip up a quick command line script at some point. How often have you wanted to wrap a quick five lines of Python in a script for reuse? Perhaps your little script requires a few arguments to be passed in. In the past, you've had a few options: - Quick and dirty: just hard code some global variables at the top of your script. - Better, but still messy: just directly pull in sys.argv - Best, but difficult: use optparse or argparse If you'll be using the script often, option 1 can become a pain very quickly. You have to open the file in a text editor every time you need to change the values. And if you ever need to let someone else use the script, option 1 can be a no-go. Option 2 is pretty easy, but just directly using sys.argv can get out of control very quickly if you need to pull in more than one command line argument. And similar to using global variables, expecting other users to always play nice with the command line args is just asking for trouble. Using argparse and/or optparse is the most prudent option, but if your script is just a few lines of code, setting up all of that boilerplate can add a ton of overhead to your quick script. With Compago, you have another option. With the use of some simple decorators, Compago can introspect a function, and set up command line arguments and defaults automagically. For example, instead of importing optparse, and manually setting up each option in an OptionParser, and then taking the output of that and feeding it into your function, you can just define your function thusly: myapp.py: @app.command def check_host(hostname, username='admin', password='testing123'): '''Do some stuff.''' print "Let's do some junk on %s as user %s." % ( hostname, username) Now, the function's arguments (hostname, username, password) will be available as command line arguments to your script: $ ./myapp.py check_host localhost --username=root --password=testing234 Let's do some junk on localhost as user root. $ ./myapp.py check_host host1.example.com Let's do some junk on host1.example.com as user admin. That's it! No other nasty boilerplate required. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Installing Compago ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Use pip or easy_install: pip install compago easy_install compago Boom. Done. Or alternately, fetch the source from github: git clone https://github.com/jmohr/compago.git ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Using Compago ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Starting a Compago script is as easy as importing the compago module, and creating a compago.Application object. import compago app = compago.Application() An Application has one primary attribute, a name. By default, this will just be the name of the script (sys.argv[0]), but you can override this if needed. The name will be shown in the help. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Commands and Options ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- After you create the application, you need to define some commands. A command will be accessible for the user to call on the command line. For example, in the Quick Start example above, the "check_host" function is a command. You can define as many commands as you want in your script. The @app.command decorator is pretty straight forward in its usage. Simply decorate a function (with or without arguments), and the function will then be available as a "command" on the command line. Function arguments without a default defined will be "positional" or "required" arguments on the command line. For example, in the check_host example above, the "hostname" argument is required on the command line. If you provide a default for your function argument, it will be an option on the command line. For example: @myapp.command def mycommand(say="Hello", name="John Doe"): print "%s, %s." % (say, name) In that example, the arguments "say" and "name" will be available as options on the command line: python myapp.py --say="What up" --name="Justin Beiber" or python myapp.py -s "Goodbye" -n "Dude" If the options are not specified, the defaults will be used. One special type of option exists, and that is a boolean option: @myapp.command def mycommand(debug=False): if debug: print "Lots of great debugging info..." else: print "Terse. Very terse." In this example, the "debug" option is a switch on the command line: python myapp.py --debug If provided, debug will be set to True. No need to provide a value. You can mix up the argument types, as well: @myapp.command def deploy(hostname, username="admin", verbose=True): result = ssh_to(hostname, username=username) if verbose: print result It works as you'd expect. Another decorator is available if you need more control over the options. You can define one or more @option decorators on your function, and pass in the same arguments that you would pass directly to argparse.ArgumentParser to define an option. See it in action: @myapp.option('-x', '--execute', dest='command') @myapp.option('-U', '--user', dest='username') def run(command, username): with exec_user(username): call(command) This also works about as you'd expect. One thing to note, if you decorate your function with one or more @option decorators, there is no need to also decorate it with @command. This will be done automatically. Finally, adding help strings to your commands is super easy. Just put a docstring in the function, and that string will be shown when the user runs --help or -h on the command line. For example: @myapp.command def help_included(): '''This command has some help.''' pass When the user runs "python myapp.py --help", it will show the docstring next to help_included. Try it! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Plugins ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Compago provides a simple plugin framework, which allows you to write your own plugins to be used in your scripts. Two default plugins are provided, and are turned on by default if you have the compago_plugins module installed. The default plugins are LoggingPlugin and ConfigPlugin. LoggingPlugin provides access to Python's logging infrastructure from within your commands. For example: @myapp.command def test_command(name): myapp.logger.info('Hello, {0}!'.format(name)) This command will log an INFO message to myapp.py.log (or whatever your script is called). By default, logging will not occur unless you call your script with the --log option: $ python myapp.py --log test_command Justin You can also specify --logfile, which will override the default location of the log file. $ python myapp.py --log --logfile /var/log/myapp.log test_command Justin The second default plugin is the ConfigPlugin. This allows you to read config vars from a YAML formatted config file (default location: ./myapp.py.conf). This location can be overridden by specifying the --configfile option on the command line. Any config variables defined in the config file are available within your commands as myapp.config['YOUR_KEY']. For example, say you have a config file named /etc/myapp.conf: YOUR_NAME: Justin YOUR_EMAIL: [email protected] YOUR_BACON_LEVELS: -low -medium -high And you call your script thusly: $ python myapp.py --configfile /etc/myapp.conf Then, within your commands, you can fetch these config variables: @myapp.command def test_command(): print myapp.config['YOUR_NAME'] # ... etc ... You can disable plugins by overriding Application.default_plugins before instantiating your Application: from compago import Application Application.default_plugins = [] myapp = Application() # ... etc ... ### Writing your own plugins You can write your own plugins easily. A plugin is a class that inherits from compago.plugin.Plugin. It should override one or more of the hook methods: after_application_init(application) - called just after the application is initialized before_command_run(application, command) - called before a command is run after_command_run(application, command) - called just after a command is run option_added(application, option) - called after an option is defined command_added(application, command) - called after a command is defined For example, let's say we want a simple plugin that prints out the current time before and after each command is run. Create a file time_plugin.py: from compago.plugin import Plugin from datetime import datetime class TimePlugin(Plugin): def before_command_run(self, application): print datetime.now() def after_command_run(self, application): print datetime.now() Then, to use the plugin in your compago application: from compago import Application from time_plugin import TimePlugin myapp = Application() myapp.add_plugin(TimePlugin()) @myapp.command def testing123(): pass if __name__ == '__main__': myapp.run() Simple as that! ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- FAQ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Q: Why did you write Compago? A: I really liked the way Thor and Flask-Script worked, and I wanted a similar tool for my plain old Python scripts. And I had way to much time on my hands. Q: What does Compago mean? A: According to Google Translate -- which is *never* wrong -- compago is Latin for "joint" or "connection". ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- TODO ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- * Create more helper functions for fun stuff.
About
A framework for simple command-line option parsing.
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published