boilerplate

Easy to use tool for painless project layout templating


License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install boilerplate==1.2.4

Documentation

boilerplate

ver. 1.2.3

Very simple templating engine for directories & files structures.

Creating project structure is not a thing I'm doing everyday. Nevertheless when I'm doing it I always feel frustrated that I don't have anything prepared. Or when I use some third parties templates I'm pissed off when "all I need to do is clone repo, remove .git directory, clean README..." and so on. Using such things is hard because all those templates has also some dynamic parts (like SECRET_KEY in django projects).

How it works?

After installation new boil command line tool wil be available for you. All you need to do is:

  1. create you template (eq. myfancy_template) with specialy formed _$variables$_
  2. setup all variables parts in config.py file
  3. use your template
myfancy_template/                                                      simpleapp/
  |-- config.py                 $> boil myfancy_template simpleapp        |-- __init__.py
  `-- tmpl/                     =================================>        `-- simpleapp.py
        |
        `-- _$project_name$_/
               |-- __init__.py
               `-- _$project_name$_.py

Boilerplate simply creates project / app structure on the given template basis. You can configurate context variables (only variables) which you can use everywhere in your templates, even for files or directories names.

How to install?

  1. Pip:

    $> pip install boilerplate
    
  2. Download and install:

    $> python setup.py install
    
  3. Or directly from github:

    $> pip install -e git+git://github.com/jqb/boilerplate.git#egg=boilerplate
    

You need to have root privileges to install it in system packages.

By default boilerplate search for templates in $HOME/.boilerplate_templates so it's enough if you just create that directory and place your templates there.

You can also set up BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES environ variable to tell boilerplate where it should search for your custom templates. You can (should?) setup it in your <dot>-file, eg in .bashrc

export BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES=$HOME/.custom_templates

You probably would also want to turn on bash completion in your rc-file:

eval "`boil --bash-completion`"

Usage

Boilerplate comes with "boil" command line. Here's how you might use it.

  1. listing existing templates:

    $> boil -l     # show list of all available templates, you can also type "boil --list"
    
  2. creating new project from existing template:

    $> boil <template-name> <project-name>
    
    
    ``project_name`` and ``template_name`` variables are always available your
    template context.
    
  3. creating new project template:

    $> cd $BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES  # just go to your templates directory
    $> boil boil_template my_first_template
    
    
    This is what you gonna get::
    
    $BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES/my_first_template/
       |-- __init__.py
       |-- config.py    # meta information about template, context variables for template engine
       `-- tmpl/        # template directory
             |
             `-- _$project_name$_/
                   |
                   `-- _$project_name$__readme.txt
    
  4. using your new project template:

    $> boil my_first_template myproject
    
  5. more controll over creation process

    You are allowed to redifine hooks by passing subclass of boilerplate.ProjectCreator to the boilerplate.Configuration objects in your template config.py file. Eg. if you want to change mode of manage.py in your own django project template, you can do it in this way:

    # $BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES/my_fancy_django_project_template/config.py
    import subprocess
    from boilerplate import Configuration, ProjectCreator as PC
    
    
    class ProjectCreator(PC):
        def after_file_create(self, destination_path):
            if destination_path.endswith('manage.py'):
                subprocess.call(['chmod', '+x', destination_path])
    
    
    conf = Configuration(__file__, {
        # put your context variables here, to use them in your project template
    }, creator_class=ProjectCreator)
    

    Here's a list of available hooks:

    • directory_ignored - invoked every time when directory with dirname from the template was ignored

      signature:

      def directory_ignored(dirname)
      
    • file_ignored - invoked every time when file with file_name from the template was ignored

      signature:

      def file_ignored(file_name)
      
    • before_file_create - invoked before every file creation. destination_file_path param contains full path to new file

      signature:

      def before_directory_create(destination_file_path)
      
    • create_file - invoked for file creation. It acctually has implementation that uses builtin simple template language. You can redefine it in order change template engine to your favourite one

      signature:

      def create_file(source_path, dest_path, context)
      
    • after_file_create - invoked with full destination_file_path after every file creation.

      signature:

      def after_file_create(destination_file_path)
      
    • before_directory_create

      signature:

      def before_directory_create(destination_dir_path)
      
    • after_directory_create

      signature:

      def after_directory_create(destination_dir_path)
      
    • before_create - invoked before creation of the project with destination_path param that contains path to the place where boil command was invoked

      signature:

      def before_create(destination_path)
      
    • after_create - same as before_create except it is invoked after creation.

      signature:

      def after_create(destination_path)
      

TODO

  • docs for all features available via Configuration objects
  • make defining BOILERPLATE_TEMPLATES variable optional, maybe --create-template-dir is a good idea.