CLI::Simple - a framework for creating option driven Perl scripts
package MyScript;
use strict;
use warnings;
use parent qw(CLI::Simple);
caller or __PACKAGE__->main();
sub execute {
my ($self) = @_;
# retrieve a CLI option
my $file = $self->get_file;
...
}
sub list {
my ($self) = @_
# retrieve a command argument with name
my $file = $self->get_arg(qw(file));
...
}
sub main {
CLI::Simple->new(
option_specs => [ qw( help formt=s ) ],
default_options => { format => 'json' }, # set some defaults
extra_options => [ qw( content ) ], # non-option, setter/getter
commands => { execute => \&execute, list => \&list, }
)->run;
1;
Tired of writing the same 'ol boilerplate code for command line
scripts? Want a standard, simple way to create a Perl script?
CLI::Simple
makes it easy to create scripts that take options,
commands and arguments.
This documentation describes version 0.0.7.
- accept command line arguments ala GetOptions::Long
- supports commands and command arguments
- automatically add a logger
- easily add usage notes
- automatically create setter/getters for your script
Command line scripts often take options, sometimes a command and
perhaps arguments to those commands. For example, consider the
script myscript
that takes options and implements a few commands
(send-message, receive-message) that also take arguments.
myscript [options] command args
or
myscript command [options] args
Examples:
myscript --foo bar --log-level debug send-message "Hello World" now
myscript --bar --log-level info receive-message
Using CLI::Simple
to implement this script looks like this...
package MyScript;
use parent qw(CLI::Simple);
caller or __PACKAGE__main();
sub send_message {...}
sub default {...}
sub receive_message {...}
sub main {
return __PACKAGE__->new(
option_specs => [
qw(
foo=s
bar
log-level
)
],
commands => {
send => \&send_message,
receive => \&receive_message,
},
)->run;
}
1;
new( args )
args
is a hash or hash reference containing the following keys:
-
commands (required)
A hash reference containing the command names and a code reference to the subroutines that implement the command.
Example:
{ send => \&send_message, receive => \&receive_message, }
If your script does not accept a command, set a
default
key to the subroutine or method that will implement your script.{ default => \&main }
-
default_options (optional)
A hash reference that contains the default values for your options.
-
extra_options
If you want to create additional setters or getters, set
extra_options
to an array of names.Example:
extra_options => [ qw(foo bar baz) ]
-
option_specs (required)
An array reference of option specifications. These are the same as those passed to
Getopt::Long
.
Instantiates a new CLI::Simple
object.
Execute the script with the given options, commands and arguments. The
run
method interprets the command line and pass control to your command
subroutines. Your subroutines should return a 0 for success and a
non-zero value for failure. This error code is passed to the shell as
the script return code.
get_args(var-name, ... );
In scalar context returns a reference to the hash of arguments. In array context will return a list of key/value pairs.
Example:
sub send_message {
my ($self) = @_;
my (%args) = $self->get_args(qw(message email));
_send_message($arg{message}, $args{email});
...
If you define your own init()
function, it will be called by the
constructor.
You can pass the necessary parameter required to implement your command line scripts in the constructor or some people prefer to see them clearly defined in the code. Accordingly, you can use package variables with the same name as the constructor arguments (in upper case).
our $OPTION_SPECS = [
qw(
help|h
log-level=s|L
debug|d
)
];
our $COMMANDS = {
foo => \&foo,
bar => \&bar,
};
Command line options are set ala Getopt::Long
. You pass those
options into the constructor like this:
my $cli = CLI::Simple->new(option_specs => [ qw( help|h foo bar=s log-level=s ]);
In your command subroutines you can then access these options using gettters.
$cli->get_foo;
$cli->get_bar;
$cli->get_log_level;
Note that options that use dashes in the name will be automatically converted to snake case names. (Some folks find it easier to use '-' rather than '_' for option names.)
If you want to allow your commands to accept positional arguments you can retrieve them as named hash elements. This can make your code much easier to read and understand.
sub send_message {
my ($self) = @_;
my %args = $self->get_args(qw(phone_number message));
send_sms_mesage($args{phone_number}, $args{message});
...
}
If you pass an empty list then all of the command arguments will be returned.
my ($phone_number, $message) = $self->get_args;
To set default values for your option, pass a hash reference as the
default_options
argument to the constructor.
my $cli = CLI::Simple->new(
default_option => { foo => 'bar' },
option_specs => [ qw(foo=s bar=s) ],
commands => { foo => \&foo, bar => \&bar },
);
As noted all command line options are available using getters of the
same name preceded by get_
.
If you want to create additional setter and getters, pass an array of
variable names as the extra_options
argument to the constructor.
my $cli = CLI::Simple->new(
default_option => { foo => 'bar' },
option_specs => [ qw(foo=s bar=s) ],
extra_options => [ qw(biz buz baz) ],
commands => { foo => \&foo, bar => \&bar },
);
To add usage or help capability to your scripts, just add some pod at the bottom of your script in a USAGE section (head1).
=head1 USAGE
usage: myscript [options] command args
Options
-------
--help, -h help
....
If the command specified is 'help' or if you have added an optional
--help
option, users can then access the usage section from the command line.
perl myscript.pm -h perl myscript.pm help
CLI::Simple
will enable you to automatically add logging to your
script using a Log::Log4perl logger. You can pass in a Log4perl
configuration string or let the class instantiate Log::Log4perl
in
easy mode.
Do this at the top of your class:
__PACKAGE__->use_log4perl(level => 'info', config => $config);
The class will add a --log-level
option for you if you have not
added one yourself. Additionally, you can use the get_logger
method
to retrieve the logger.
-
How do I execute some startup code before my command runs?
The
new
constructor will execute aninit()
method prior to returning. Implement your own "init" function which will have of the commands and arguments available to it at that time. -
Do I need to implement commands?
No, but if you don't you must provide the name of the subroutine that will implement your script logic as the
default
command.use CLI::Simple; sub do_it { my ($cli) = @_; # do something useful... } my $cli = CLI::Simple->new( default_option => { foo => 'bar' }, option_specs => [ qw(foo=s bar=s) ], extra_options => [ qw(biz buz baz) ], commands => { default => \&do_it }, ); $cli->run;
-
Do I have to subclass
CLI::Simple
?No, see above example,
-
How do I turn my class into a script?
I like to implement scripts as a Perl class and use the so-called "modulino" pattern popularized by Brian d foy. Essentially you create a class that looks something like this:
package Foo; caller or __PACKAGE__->main(); sub main { .... } 1;
Using this pattern you can write Perl modules that can also be used as a script or test harness for your class.
package MyScript; use strict; use warnings; caller or __PACKAGE__->main(); sub do_it { my ($cli) = @_; # do something useful... } sub main { my $cli = CLI::Simple->new( default_option => { foo => 'bar' }, option_specs => [ qw(foo=s bar=s) ], extra_options => [ qw(biz buz baz) ], commands => { default => \&do_it }, ); exit $cli->run; } 1;
To make it easy to use such a module, I've created a
bash
script that calls the module with the arguments passed on the command line.The script (
modulino
) is include in this distribution.You can also use the included
create-modulino.pl
script to create a symbolic link to your class that will be executed as if it is a Perl script if you've implemented the modulino pattern described above.sudo create-modulino.pl Foo::Bar foo-bar
If you do not provide an alias name as the second argument the script will create a copy of the
modulino
script as a normalized name of your module but will not create a symbolic link.The script essentially executes the recipe below.
-
-
Copy the
modulino
script using a name that converts the first letter of the class to lower case and any CamelCased words inside the class name to lower case with all words snake cased. Example:Module::ScanDeps::FindRequires
becomes:module_scanDeps_findRequires
.sudo cp /usr/local/bin/modulino /usr/local/bin/module_scanDeps_findRequire
-
-
-
Make sure the new script is executable.
chmod 0755 module_scanDeps_findRequire
-
-
-
Create a symlink with a name of your chosing to the new script.
sudo ln -s /usr/local/bin/module_scanDeps_findRequire /usr/local/bin/find-requires
-
-
This module is free software. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as Perl itself.
Getopt::Long, CLI::Simple::Utils
Rob Lauer - rlauer6@comcast.net