Awesome
wp-cli/scaffold-package-command
Scaffolds WP-CLI commands with functional tests, full README.md, and more.
Quick links: Using | Installing | Contributing | Support
Using
This package implements the following commands:
wp scaffold package
Generate the files needed for a basic WP-CLI command.
wp scaffold package <name> [--description=<description>] [--homepage=<homepage>] [--dir=<dir>] [--license=<license>] [--require_wp_cli=<version>] [--require_wp_cli_tests=<version>] [--skip-tests] [--skip-readme] [--skip-github] [--skip-install] [--force]
Default behavior is to create the following files:
- command.php
- composer.json (with package name, description, and license)
- .gitignore, .editorconfig, and .distignore
- README.md (via wp scaffold package-readme)
- Test harness (via wp scaffold package-tests)
Unless specified with --dir=<dir>
, the command package is placed in the
WP-CLI packages/local/
directory.
OPTIONS
<name>
Name for the new package. Expects <author>/<package> (e.g. 'wp-cli/scaffold-package').
[--description=<description>]
Human-readable description for the package.
[--homepage=<homepage>]
Homepage for the package. Defaults to 'https://github.com/<name>'
[--dir=<dir>]
Specify a destination directory for the command. Defaults to WP-CLI's `packages/local/` directory.
[--license=<license>]
License for the package.
---
default: MIT
---
[--require_wp_cli=<version>]
Required WP-CLI version for the package.
---
default: ^2.5
---
[--require_wp_cli_tests=<version>]
Required WP-CLI testing framework version for the package.
---
default: ^3.0.11
---
[--skip-tests]
Don't generate files for integration testing.
[--skip-readme]
Don't generate a README.md for the package.
[--skip-github]
Don't generate GitHub issue and pull request templates.
[--skip-install]
Don't install the package after scaffolding.
[--force]
Overwrite files that already exist.
wp scaffold package-tests
Generate files for writing Behat tests for your command.
wp scaffold package-tests <dir> [--ci=<provider>] [--force]
WP-CLI makes use of a Behat-based testing framework, which you should use too. This command generates all of the files you need. Functional tests are an integral ingredient of high-quality, maintainable commands. Behat is a great choice as a testing framework because:
- It’s easy to write new tests, which means they’ll actually get written.
- The tests interface with your command in the same manner as your users interface with your command, and they describe how the command is expected to work in human-readable terms.
Behat tests live in the features/
directory of your project. When you
use this command, it will generate a default test that looks like this:
Feature: Test that WP-CLI loads.
Scenario: WP-CLI loads for your tests
Given a WP install
When I run `wp eval 'echo "Hello world.";'`
Then STDOUT should contain:
"""
Hello world.
"""
Functional tests typically follow this pattern:
- Given some background,
- When a user performs a specific action,
- Then the end result should be X (and Y and Z).
View all defined Behat steps available for use with behat -dl
:
Given /^an empty directory$/
Given /^an empty cache/
Given /^an? ([^\s]+) file:$/
Given /^"([^"]+)" replaced with "([^"]+)" in the ([^\s]+) file$/
The files generated by this command include:
.travis.yml
is the configuration file for Travis CI.bin/install-package-tests.sh
will configure your environment to run the tests.bin/test.sh
is a test runner that respects contextual Behat tags.features/load-wp-cli.feature
is a basic test to confirm WP-CLI can load.features/bootstrap
,features/steps
,features/extra
are Behat configuration files.
After running bin/install-package-tests.sh
, you can run the tests with
./vendor/bin/behat
. If you find yourself using Behat on a number of
projects and don't want to install a copy with each one, you can
composer global require behat/behat
to install Behat globally on your
machine. Make sure ~/.composer/vendor/bin
has also been added to your
$PATH
. Once you've done so, you can run the tests for a project by
calling behat
.
For Travis CI, specially-named files in the package directory can be
used to modify the generated .travis.yml
, where <tag>
is one of
'cache', 'env', 'matrix', 'before_install', 'install', 'before_script', 'script':
travis-<tag>.yml
- contents used for<tag>:
(if present following ignored)travis-<tag>-append.yml
- contents appended to generated<tag>:
You can also append to the generated .travis.yml
with the file:
travis-append.yml
- contents appended to generated.travis.yml
ENVIRONMENT
The features/bootstrap/FeatureContext.php
file expects the
WP_CLI_BIN_DIR environment variable.
WP-CLI Behat framework uses Behat ~2.5, which is installed with Composer.
OPTIONS
<dir>
Directory path to an existing package to generate tests for.
[--ci=<provider>]
Create a configuration file for a specific CI provider.
---
default: travis
options:
- travis
- circle
- github
---
[--force]
Overwrite files that already exist.
EXAMPLES
# Generate files for writing Behat tests.
$ wp scaffold package-tests /path/to/command/dir/
Success: Created package test files.
wp scaffold package-readme
Generate a README.md for your command.
wp scaffold package-readme <dir> [--force] [--branch=<branch>]
Creates a README.md with Using, Installing, and Contributing instructions based on the composer.json file for your WP-CLI package. Run this command at the beginning of your project, and then every time your usage docs change.
These command-specific docs are generated based composer.json -> 'extra' -> 'commands'. For instance, this package's composer.json includes:
{
"name": "wp-cli/scaffold-package-command",
// [...]
"extra": {
"commands": [
"scaffold package",
"scaffold package-tests",
"scaffold package-readme"
]
}
}
You can also customize the rendering of README.md generally with composer.json -> 'extra' -> 'readme'. For example, runcommand/hook's composer.json includes:
{
"extra": {
"commands": [
"hook"
],
"readme": {
"shields": [
"[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/runcommand/reset-password.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/runcommand/reset-password)"
],
"sections": [
"Using",
"Installing",
"Support"
],
"support": {
"body": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/runcommand/runcommand-theme/master/bin/readme-partials/support-open-source.md"
},
"show_powered_by": false
}
}
}
In this example:
- "shields" supports arbitrary images as shields to display.
- "sections" permits defining arbitrary sections (instead of default Using, Installing and Contributing).
- "support" -> "body" uses a remote Markdown file as the section contents. This can also be a local file path, or a string.
- "show_powered_by" shows or hides the Powered By mention at the end of the readme.
For sections, "pre", "body" and "post" are supported. Example:
"support": {
"pre": "highlight.md",
"body": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/runcommand/runcommand-theme/master/bin/readme-partials/support-open-source.md",
"post": "This is additional text to show after main body content."
},
In this example:
- "pre" content is pulled from local highlight.md file.
- "body" content is pulled from remote URL.
- "post" is a string.
OPTIONS
<dir>
Directory path to an existing package to generate a readme for.
[--force]
Overwrite the readme if it already exists.
[--branch=<branch>]
Name of default branch of the underlying repository. Defaults to master.
wp scaffold package-github
Generate GitHub configuration files for your command.
wp scaffold package-github <dir> [--force]
Creates a variety of files to better manage your project on GitHub. These files include:
.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE
- Text displayed when a user opens a new issue..github/PULL_REQUEST_TEMPLATE
- Text displayed when a user submits a pull request..github/settings.yml
- Configuration file for the Probot settings app.
OPTIONS
<dir>
Directory path to an existing package to generate GitHub configuration for.
[--force]
Overwrite files that already exist.
Installing
Installing this package requires WP-CLI v2.11 or greater. Update to the latest stable release with wp cli update
.
Once you've done so, you can install the latest stable version of this package with:
wp package install wp-cli/scaffold-package-command:@stable
To install the latest development version of this package, use the following command instead:
wp package install wp-cli/scaffold-package-command:dev-main
Contributing
We appreciate you taking the initiative to contribute to this project.
Contributing isn’t limited to just code. We encourage you to contribute in the way that best fits your abilities, by writing tutorials, giving a demo at your local meetup, helping other users with their support questions, or revising our documentation.
For a more thorough introduction, check out WP-CLI's guide to contributing. This package follows those policy and guidelines.
Reporting a bug
Think you’ve found a bug? We’d love for you to help us get it fixed.
Before you create a new issue, you should search existing issues to see if there’s an existing resolution to it, or if it’s already been fixed in a newer version.
Once you’ve done a bit of searching and discovered there isn’t an open or fixed issue for your bug, please create a new issue. Include as much detail as you can, and clear steps to reproduce if possible. For more guidance, review our bug report documentation.
Creating a pull request
Want to contribute a new feature? Please first open a new issue to discuss whether the feature is a good fit for the project.
Once you've decided to commit the time to seeing your pull request through, please follow our guidelines for creating a pull request to make sure it's a pleasant experience. See "Setting up" for details specific to working on this package locally.
Support
GitHub issues aren't for general support questions, but there are other venues you can try: https://wp-cli.org/#support
This README.md is generated dynamically from the project's codebase using wp scaffold package-readme
(doc). To suggest changes, please submit a pull request against the corresponding part of the codebase.