Awesome
⚠️ DEPRECATED: Marathon is now deprecated in favor of using the Swift Package Manager directly. It's recommended to migrate your scripts as soon as possible, since future Xcode/macOS versions may break compatibility. See this issue for more info.
<p align="center"> <img src="Logo.png" width="480" max-width="90%" alt="Marathon" /> </p> <p align="center"> <a href="https://dashboard.buddybuild.com/apps/58ff19a79a06210001d14c2d/build/latest?branch=master"> <img src="https://dashboard.buddybuild.com/api/statusImage?appID=58ff19a79a06210001d14c2d&branch=master&build=latest" /> <a href="https://travis-ci.org/JohnSundell/Marathon/branches"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/travis/JohnSundell/Marathon/master.svg" alt="Travis status" /> </a> <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/Swift-4.2-orange.svg" /> </a> <a href="https://swift.org/package-manager"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/spm-compatible-brightgreen.svg?style=flat" alt="Swift Package Manager" /> </a> <a href="https://twitter.com/johnsundell"> <img src="https://img.shields.io/badge/contact-@johnsundell-blue.svg?style=flat" alt="Twitter: @johnsundell" /> </a> </p>Welcome to Marathon, a command line tool that makes it easy to write, run and manage your Swift scripts. It's powered by the Swift Package Manager and requires no modification to your existing scripts or dependency packages.
Features
🐣 Create scripts
$ marathon create helloWorld "import Foundation; print(\"Hello world\")"
🏃♀️ Run scripts
$ marathon run helloWorld
> Hello world
📦 Hassle free dependency management. Simply add a package...
$ marathon add https://github.com/JohnSundell/Files.git
...and use it without any additional work
import Files
for file in try Folder(path: "MyFolder").files {
print(file.name)
}
🚀 Update all of your scripting dependencies with a single call
$ marathon update
⚒ Edit, run & debug your scripts using Xcode...
$ marathon edit helloWorld
...or in your favorite text editor
$ marathon edit helloWorld --no-xcode
🌍 Run remote scripts directly from a Git repository...
$ marathon run https://github.com/johnsundell/testdrive.git
...using only a GitHub username & repository name:
$ marathon run johnsundell/testdrive
💻 Install scripts as binaries and run them independently from anywhere...
$ marathon install helloWorld
$ helloWorld
> Hello world
...you can even install remote scripts (+ their dependencies) from a URL:
$ marathon install https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JohnSundell/Marathon-Examples/master/AddSuffix/addSuffix.swift
$ cd myImages
$ addSuffix "@2x"
> Added suffix "@2x" to 15 files
...or from a GitHub repository:
$ marathon install johnsundell/testdrive
$ testdrive
👪 Share your scripts with your team and automatically install their dependencies...
import Files // marathon:https://github.com/JohnSundell/Files.git
print(Folder.current.path)
...or specify your dependencies using a Marathonfile
:
$ echo "https://github.com/JohnSundell/Files.git" > Marathonfile
Installing
On macOS
Using Make (recommended):
$ git clone https://github.com/JohnSundell/Marathon.git
$ cd Marathon
$ make
Using the Swift Package Manager:
$ git clone https://github.com/JohnSundell/Marathon.git
$ cd Marathon
$ swift build -c release -Xswiftc -static-stdlib
$ cp -f .build/release/Marathon /usr/local/bin/marathon
Using Mint:
$ mint install JohnSundell/Marathon
Using Homebrew (not recommended, due to slow update cycle):
brew install marathon-swift
On Linux
$ git clone https://github.com/JohnSundell/Marathon.git
$ cd Marathon
$ swift build -c release
$ cp -f .build/release/Marathon /usr/local/bin/marathon
If you encounter a permissions failure while installing, you may need to prepend sudo
to the commands.
To update Marathon, simply repeat any of the above two series of commands, except cloning the repo.
Requirements
Marathon requires the following to be installed on your system:
- Swift 4.1 or later (bundled with Xcode 9.3 or later)
- Git
- Xcode (if you want to edit scripts using it)
Examples
Check out this repository for a few example Swift scripts that you can run using Marathon.
Specifying dependencies inline
Scripting usually involves using 3rd party frameworks to get your job done, and Marathon provides an easy way to define such dependencies right when you are importing them in your script, using a simple comment syntax:
import Files // marathon:https://github.com/JohnSundell/Files.git
import Unbox // marathon:https://github.com/JohnSundell/Unbox.git
Specifying your dependencies ensures that they will always be installed by Marathon before your script is run, edited or installed - making it super easy to share scripts with your friends, team or the wider community. All you have to do is share the script file, and Marathon takes care of the rest!
Using a Marathonfile
If you prefer to keep your dependency declarations separate, you can create a Marathonfile
in the same folder as your script. This file is simply a new line separated list of URLs pointing to either:
- The URL to a git repository of a local or remote package to install before running your script.
- The path to another script that should be linked to your script before running it.
Here is an example of a Marathonfile
:
https://github.com/JohnSundell/Files.git
https://github.com/JohnSundell/Unbox.git
https://github.com/JohnSundell/Wrap.git
~/packages/MyPackage
otherScript.swift
Shell autocomplete
Marathon includes autocomplete for the zsh
and fish
shells (PRs adding support for other shells is more than welcome!). To enable it, do the following:
-
zsh
:- Add the line
fpath=(~/.marathon/ShellAutocomplete/zsh $fpath)
to your~/.zshrc
file. - Add the line
autoload -Uz compinit && compinit -i
to your~/.zshrc
file if it doesn't already contain it. - Restart your terminal.
- Add the line
-
fish
:cp -f ~/.marathon/ShellAutocomplete/fish/marathon.fish ~/.config/fish/completions
You can now type marathon r
and have it be autocompleted to marathon run
🎉
Help, feedback or suggestions?
- Run
$ marathon help
to display help for the tool itself or for any specific command. - Append
--verbose
to any command to make Marathon output everything it's doing, for debugging purposes. - Open an issue if you need help, if you found a bug, or if you want to discuss a feature request.
- Open a PR if you want to make some change to Marathon.
- Contact @johnsundell on Twitter for discussions, news & announcements about Marathon.