Clad User Manual: Difference between revisions

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=Concepts=
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:[[clad User Manual - Concepts]]
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=Options=

Revision as of 16:22, 8 November 2016

Internal

Overview

The framework scans the command line looking for the first argument that can be mapped to a command.

The mapping process involves scanning the classpath and looking for classes implementing the Command interface. The current version does not introspect all classes, but just those whose simple class name match the following pattern: <commandName>Command.

All arguments between the wrapper name and the command name are interpreted as global options.

All arguments following the command name are interpreted as command options.


   wrapper [global-options] command [command-options]

Concepts

clad User Manual - Concepts

Options

The options use the GNU command line convention:


 -o <value> | --option=<value>

Universal Global Options

-v|--verbose

-v or --verbose turns on DEBUG on the underlying CONSOLE appender.

--debug

TODO: do I need support for -d?

Configuration File

Each command line option has a configuration file correspondent. Command line value takes precedence over the configuration file value.

Implementing a Command Line Application

Declare the Maven Dependency

<dependency>
    <groupId>io.novaordis.clad</groupId>
    <artifactId>novaordis-clad</artifactId>
    <version>...</version>
</dependency>

Provide an ApplicationRuntime Implementation

Extend ApplicationRuntimeBase, into a "clad" sub-package. This is the recommended approach. If you need more flexibility, you can implement ApplicationRuntime interface.





Package the application runtime implementation class and the commands in a JAR (or place them in a directory).

Set “application.name” as a system property. If the application runtime implementation class is BlueApplicationRuntime, the application.name must be “blue”.

Make sure the JAR or the directory is first on the class path (otherwise other <your-command-name>Command.class, if exist, will be instantiated first).

In-line Application Help

If a text file named <application-name>.txt is placed in the same package as the ApplicationRuntime implementation class, its content is rendered to stdout every time the in-line application help is invoked with no-argument "help" command:

   <app-name> help|--help|-h

The length of a text line should not be larger than 99.

Macros

The help renderer recognizes several macros, which are replaced by dynamically generated content at runtime.

@COMMANDS@ - inserts the list of commands available to the application. The runtime builds that list via introspection looking for classes that implement the Command interface.

Implementing a Command

Implement the Command interface or extend CommandBase (recommended).

The implementation class must be named <command-name>Command.

Example: PrintCommand will be matched to the "print" command. BusinessScenarioCommand will be matched to the "business-scenario" command.

Relationship between Command and ApplicationRuntime

If a specific command does not need an application runtime instance (thus the framework is not required to instantiate an application runtime for it), the Command.needsRuntime() implementation must return false. By default CommandBase.needsRuntime() returns true.

In-Line Command Help

If a text file named <command-name>.txt is placed in the same package as the command implementation class, the framework will send the content of the file to stdout when in-line command help is requested:

    <wrapper> help|--help|-h <command>

For a command whose name is blue, the in-line command help file should be named blue.txt.

For a command whose name is business-scenario, the in-line command help file should be named business-scenario.txt.

The length of a text line should not be larger than 99.

Command Options

To declare that a command requires a specific option, override Command.requiredOptions().

To declare that a command accepts a specific option, override Command.optionalOptions().

In both cases, the set should contain option definitions only, the command instance is not expected to maintain any state inside the option instances, they can be recreated on each invocation. Example:

@Override
public Set<Option> optionalOptions() {
    return new HashSet<>(Collections.singletonList(new BooleanOption("ignore-faults")));
}

Implementation Examples:

https://github.com/NovaOrdis/esa/blob/master/src/main/java/io/novaordis/esa/extensions/bscenarios/BusinessScenarioCommand.java

Default Command

If no command is specified, the framework will use the “default command”, if there is one. If not, the application should display:

 [error]: no command specified on command line and no default command was configured.

Instructions on how to configure the default command.

Command Execution

execute() will be called on the main thread.

Universal Commands

The framework comes with a set of universal commands that are available to any application:

Version and Release Date

The framework supports the "version" command by default. The "version" command pulls version and release date from the underlying application and displays it in a standard format:

version 1.0
release date 01/26/16

Error Handling

If a processing error is caused by what the user did, or by the input data, and it can be corrected by user input (or by data correction), throw an UserErrorException with a human-readable message. The upmost runtime layer must be designed so it displays the error message at stderr and System.exit()s.