handyman

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Published: Oct 25, 2020 License: MIT Imports: 2 Imported by: 0

README

Handyman

build status go version

Handyman is a tools that allow you to quickly define, generate, and run custom CLI tools using simple text-based configuration files.

Overview

If you often find yourself writing shell scripts or similar to make calling and testing various web services and cloud resources easier, Handyman is for you. Handyman lets you define a hierarchy of command line tools using a simple YAML or JSON configuation file.

Installation

The easiest way to install Handyman on macOS is via homebrew:

$ brew install jefflinse/handyman/handyman

Verify your installation by running the handyman CLI tool, hm:

$ hm version

Quickstart

Create a Handyman spec:

myapp.yml:

name: myapp
description: an example of a Handyman app
commands:
  - name: say-hello
    description: prints a greeting to the world
    exec:
      name: "echo"
      args: ["Hello, World!"]

The hm run command runs a Handyman spec as an app on-the-fly. Its only required argument is the path to a spec file; all remaining arguments are passed to the app.

Run the app spec without any additional arguments to view its usage:

$ hm run myapp.yml
myapp - an example of a Handyman app

usage:
  myapp  command [command options] [arguments...]

commands:
  say-hello  prints a greeting to the world

Now run our app spec with the say-hello command:

$ hm run myapp.yml say-hello
Hello, World!

The hm build command compiles a Handyman app spec into a native Go binary. Let's compile our app:

$ hm build myapp.yml

$ ls
myapp     myapp.yml

Now we can run it directly:

$ ./myapp
myapp - an example of a Handyman app

usage:
  myapp  command [command options] [arguments...]

commands:
  say-hello  prints a greeting to the world
$ ./myapp say-hello
Hello, World!

Handyman can do more than just execute local commands. See the complete list of Command Providers to learn more.

Specification Format

A Handyman spec can be written in either YAML or JSON. The root object describes the application, which contains one or more commands, each of which can contain any number of nested subcommands.

App

The app spec has the following properties:

Property Description Type Required
name The name of the app as invoked on the command line. string true
description A description of the app. string true
commands A set of commmand specs. array false
Command

A command spec either defines command behvior via a provider, or defines a list of subcommands. It has the following properties:

Propery Description Type Required
name The name of the command as invoked on the command line. string true
description A description of the command. string true
subcommands Subcommands for this command. array true (if no provider specified)
<provider> Configuration for the provider that executes the logic for the command. object true (if no subcommands specified)

Exactly one of <provider> or subcommands must be specified.

<provider> must be the name of a supported command provider, and its value must be an object defining the configuration for that provider. See Command Providers for information how how to configure each provider.

Parameter

Some commands take additional parameters. Each parameter spec has the following properties:

Propery Description Type Required
name The name of the parameter. Must use snake_casing. string true
description A description of the parameter. string false
type The type of value the parameter accepts. Must be one of [int, number, string]. string true
required Whether or not the parameter is required. Default is false. bool false
default The default value to use for the parameter, if the parameter is not required. type false
as_flag For boolean type parameters, defining this will cause the parameter to render the specified value when true. string false

Command Providers

exec

An exec command runs a local command. It executes the provided command, directly passing any supplied arguments.

name: sample-exec
description: example command spec using an exec command provider
exec:
  name: date
  args: ["{{params.format}}"]
  params:
    - name: format
      type: string
      description: the format string for the date
      default: "+Y"
lambda

A lambda command executes an AWS Lambda function. It prints the response to stdout and any errors to stderr, respectively. When using this provider, the command spec must include the ARN of the Lambda to execute, and optionally any request parameters to be included. The request parameters are sent as the JSON payload to the Lambda function and are available as command line flags in the app.

Here's an example of a command that invokes a lambda function that accepts a single request parameter called site_name:

name: sample-lambda
description: example command spec using a Lambda command provider
lambda:
  arn: "aws:arn:some:valid:arn"
  request_params:
    - name: site_name
      type: string
      description: the name of the website
      required: true

Note: The command name does not need to match the Lambda function's name.

noop

A noop command does nothing; it's truly a no-op. This is useful in scenarios where you might want to mock our your entire app's command struture in an app spec before specifying the actual behavior of each action.

name: sample-noop
description: example command spec using a noop command provider
noop:
rest

A rest command makes a request to a REST endpoint. It can pass parameters as query string parameters or JSON-formatted request body parameters.

name: sample-rest
description: example command spec using a REST command provider
rest:
  endpoint: https://postman-echo.com/get
  method: GET
  query_params:
    - name: my_query_param
      type: string
      description: a query parameter passed to the request
subcommands

A command specifying subcommands instead of a provider allows for a spec to define a "Git-like" hierarchy of commands:

name: sample-with-subcommands
description: example command spec using subcommands
subcommands:  
  - name: call-my-api
    description: call my API
    rest:
      endpoint: https://postman-echo.com/get
      method: GET
      query_params:
        - name: my_query_param
          type: string
          description: a query parameter passed to the request
  - name: clean temp directory
    description: cleans the temp directory
    exec:
      name: rm
      args: ["-f", "/tmp"]

Roadmap

A very rough list of features and improvements I have in mind:

  • App-level and command-level versioning
  • Support for app- and command-level variables
  • Support directory-based spec composition (a la Terraform)
  • Support reading parameter values from files
  • Support for producing binaries/scripts for other languages
  • Improved unit test coverage
  • registry: cache latest spec content so app can be run even if spec is moved or deleted
  • Add run protection for spec files obtained from the internet
  • Providers for Azure Functions and Google Cloud Functions
  • Support for specifying environment variables

Documentation

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

func AppHelpTemplate added in v0.2.0

func AppHelpTemplate() string

AppHelpTemplate defines the layout of app help.

func CommandHelpTemplate added in v0.2.0

func CommandHelpTemplate() string

CommandHelpTemplate defines the layout of command help.

Types

type App

type App struct {
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

App is a configured app.

func NewApp

func NewApp(specification []byte) (*App, error)

NewApp creates a new Handyman app from the provided JSON specification.

func (App) Run

func (app App) Run(args []string) error

Run runs the Handyman app.

Directories

Path Synopsis
The compiler isn't a true compiler; it just takes a Handyman spec, generates a Go source file with the spec contents statically defined, and compiles it into a Go binary.
The compiler isn't a true compiler; it just takes a Handyman spec, generates a Go source file with the spec contents statically defined, and compiles it into a Go binary.

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