NAME
App::Cmd - write command line apps with less suffering
VERSION
version 0.318
SYNOPSIS
in yourcmd:
use YourApp;
YourApp->run;
in YourApp.pm:
package YourApp;
use App::Cmd::Setup -app;
1;
in YourApp/Command/blort.pm:
package YourApp::Command::blort;
use YourApp -command;
use strict; use warnings;
sub opt_spec {
return (
[ "blortex|X", "use the blortex algorithm" ],
[ "recheck|r", "recheck all results" ],
);
}
sub validate_args {
my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
# no args allowed but options!
$self->usage_error("No args allowed") if @$args;
}
sub execute {
my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
my $result = $opt->{blortex} ? blortex() : blort();
recheck($result) if $opt->{recheck};
print $result;
}
and, finally, at the command line:
knight!rjbs$ yourcmd blort --recheck
All blorts successful.
DESCRIPTION
App::Cmd is intended to make it easy to write complex command-line applications without having to think about most of the annoying things usually involved.
For information on how to start using App::Cmd, see App::Cmd::Tutorial.
METHODS
new
my $cmd = App::Cmd->new(\%arg);
This method returns a new App::Cmd object. During initialization, command plugins will be loaded.
Valid arguments are:
no_commands_plugin - if true, the command list plugin is not added
no_help_plugin - if true, the help plugin is not added
plugin_search_path - The path to search for commands in. Defaults to
results of plugin_search_path method
If no_commands_plugin
is not given, App::Cmd::Command::commands will be required, and it will be registered to handle all of its command names not handled by other plugins.
If no_help_plugin
is not given, App::Cmd::Command::help will be required, and it will be registered to handle all of its command names not handled by other plugins. Note: "help" is the default command, so if you do not load the default help plugin, you should provide your own or override the default_command
method.
run
$cmd->run;
This method runs the application. If called the class, it will instantiate a new App::Cmd object to run.
It determines the requested command (generally by consuming the first command-line argument), finds the plugin to handle that command, parses the remaining arguments according to that plugin's rules, and runs the plugin.
It passes the contents of the global argument array (@ARGV
) to "prepare_command
", but @ARGV
is not altered by running an App::Cmd.
prepare_args
Normally App::Cmd uses @ARGV
for its commandline arguments. You can override this method to change that behavior for testing or otherwise.
default_args
If "prepare_args"
is not changed and there are no arguments in @ARGV
, this method is called and should return an arrayref to be used as the arguments to the program. By default, it returns an empty arrayref.
arg0
full_arg0
my $program_name = $app->arg0;
my $full_program_name = $app->full_arg0;
These methods return the name of the program invoked to run this application. This is determined by inspecting $0
when the App::Cmd object is instantiated, so it's probably correct, but doing weird things with App::Cmd could lead to weird values from these methods.
If the program was run like this:
knight!rjbs$ ~/bin/rpg dice 3d6
Then the methods return:
arg0 - rpg
full_arg0 - /Users/rjbs/bin/rpg
These values are captured when the App::Cmd object is created, so it is safe to assign to $0
later.
prepare_command
my ($cmd, $opt, @args) = $app->prepare_command(@ARGV);
This method will load the plugin for the requested command, use its options to parse the command line arguments, and eventually return everything necessary to actually execute the command.
default_command
This method returns the name of the command to run if none is given on the command line. The default default is "help"
execute_command
$app->execute_command($cmd, \%opt, @args);
This method will invoke validate_args
and then run
on $cmd
.
plugin_search_path
This method returns the plugin_search_path as set. The default implementation, if called on "YourApp::Cmd" will return "YourApp::Cmd::Command"
This is a method because it's fun to override it with, for example:
use constant plugin_search_path => __PACKAGE__;
allow_any_unambiguous_abbrev
If this method returns true (which, by default, it does not), then any unambiguous abbreviation for a registered command name will be allowed as a means to use that command. For example, given the following commands:
reticulate
reload
rasterize
Then the user could use ret
for reticulate
or ra
for rasterize
and so on.
global_options
if ($cmd->app->global_options->{verbose}) { ... }
This method returns the running application's global options as a hashref. If there are no options specified, an empty hashref is returned.
set_global_options
$app->set_global_options(\%opt);
This method sets the global options.
command_names
my @names = $cmd->command_names;
This returns the commands names which the App::Cmd object will handle.
command_plugins
my @plugins = $cmd->command_plugins;
This method returns the package names of the plugins that implement the App::Cmd object's commands.
plugin_for
my $plugin = $cmd->plugin_for($command);
This method returns the plugin (module) for the given command. If no plugin implements the command, it returns false.
get_command
my ($command_name, $opt, @args) = $app->get_command(@args);
Process arguments and into a command name and (optional) global options.
usage
print $self->app->usage->text;
Returns the usage object for the global options.
usage_desc
The top level usage line. Looks something like
"yourapp [options] <command>"
global_opt_spec
Returns an empty list. Can be overridden for pre-dispatch option processing. This is useful for flags like --verbose.
usage_error
$self->usage_error("Something's wrong!");
Used to die with nice usage output, during validate_args
.
TODO
publish and bring in Log::Speak (simple quiet/verbose output)
publish and use our internal enhanced describe_options
publish and use our improved simple input routines
AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.