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Grumble - A powerful modern CLI and SHELL

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There are a handful of powerful go CLI libraries available (spf13/cobra, urfave/cli). However sometimes an integrated shell interface is a great and useful extension for the actual application. This library offers a simple API to create powerful CLI applications and automatically starts an integrated interactive shell, if the application is started without any command arguments.

Hint: We do not guarantee 100% backwards compatiblity between minor versions (1.x). However, the API is mostly stable and should not change much.

asciicast

Introduction

Create a grumble APP.

var app = grumble.New(&grumble.Config{
	Name:        "app",
	Description: "short app description",

	Flags: func(f *grumble.Flags) {
		f.String("d", "directory", "DEFAULT", "set an alternative directory path")
		f.Bool("v", "verbose", false, "enable verbose mode")
	},
})

Register a top-level command. Note: Sub commands are also supported...

app.AddCommand(&grumble.Command{
    Name:      "daemon",
    Help:      "run the daemon",
    Aliases:   []string{"run"},

    Flags: func(f *grumble.Flags) {
        f.Duration("t", "timeout", time.Second, "timeout duration")
    },

    Args: func(a *grumble.Args) {
        a.String("service", "which service to start", grumble.Default("server"))
    },

    Run: func(c *grumble.Context) error {
        // Parent Flags.
        c.App.Println("directory:", c.Flags.String("directory"))
        c.App.Println("verbose:", c.Flags.Bool("verbose"))
        // Flags.
        c.App.Println("timeout:", c.Flags.Duration("timeout"))
        // Args.
        c.App.Println("service:", c.Args.String("service"))
        return nil
    },
})

Run the application.

err := app.Run()

Or use the builtin grumble.Main function to handle errors automatically.

func main() {
	grumble.Main(app)
}

Shell Multiline Input

Builtin support for multiple lines.

>>> This is \
... a multi line \
... command

Separate flags and args specifically

If you need to pass a flag-like value as positional argument, you can do so by using a double dash:
>>> command --flag1=something -- --myPositionalArg

Remote shell access with readline

By calling RunWithReadline() rather than Run() you can pass instance of readline.Instance. One of interesting usages is having a possibility of remote access to your shell:

handleFunc := func(rl *readline.Instance) {

    var app = grumble.New(&grumble.Config{
        // override default interrupt handler to avoid remote shutdown
        InterruptHandler: func(a *grumble.App, count int) {
            // do nothing
        },
		
        // your usual grumble configuration
    })  
    
    // add commands
	
    app.RunWithReadline(rl)

}

cfg := &readline.Config{}
readline.ListenRemote("tcp", ":5555", cfg, handleFunc)

In the client code just use readline built in DialRemote function:

if err := readline.DialRemote("tcp", ":5555"); err != nil {
    fmt.Errorf("An error occurred: %s \n", err.Error())
}

Samples

Check out the sample directory for some detailed examples.

Projects using Grumble

Known issues

Additional Useful Packages

Credits

This project is based on ideas from the great ishell library.

License

MIT