1App::Cmd(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation App::Cmd(3)
2
3
4
6 App::Cmd - write command line apps with less suffering
7
9 version 0.331
10
12 in yourcmd:
13
14 use YourApp;
15 YourApp->run;
16
17 in YourApp.pm:
18
19 package YourApp;
20 use App::Cmd::Setup -app;
21 1;
22
23 in YourApp/Command/blort.pm:
24
25 package YourApp::Command::blort;
26 use YourApp -command;
27 use strict; use warnings;
28
29 sub abstract { "blortex algorithm" }
30
31 sub description { "Long description on blortex algorithm" }
32
33 sub opt_spec {
34 return (
35 [ "blortex|X", "use the blortex algorithm" ],
36 [ "recheck|r", "recheck all results" ],
37 );
38 }
39
40 sub validate_args {
41 my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
42
43 # no args allowed but options!
44 $self->usage_error("No args allowed") if @$args;
45 }
46
47 sub execute {
48 my ($self, $opt, $args) = @_;
49
50 my $result = $opt->{blortex} ? blortex() : blort();
51
52 recheck($result) if $opt->{recheck};
53
54 print $result;
55 }
56
57 and, finally, at the command line:
58
59 knight!rjbs$ yourcmd blort --recheck
60
61 All blorts successful.
62
64 App::Cmd is intended to make it easy to write complex command-line
65 applications without having to think about most of the annoying things
66 usually involved.
67
68 For information on how to start using App::Cmd, see App::Cmd::Tutorial.
69
71 new
72 my $cmd = App::Cmd->new(\%arg);
73
74 This method returns a new App::Cmd object. During initialization,
75 command plugins will be loaded.
76
77 Valid arguments are:
78
79 no_commands_plugin - if true, the command list plugin is not added
80
81 no_help_plugin - if true, the help plugin is not added
82
83 no_version_plugin - if true, the version plugin is not added
84
85 show_version_cmd - if true, the version command will be shown in the
86 command list
87
88 plugin_search_path - The path to search for commands in. Defaults to
89 results of plugin_search_path method
90
91 If "no_commands_plugin" is not given, App::Cmd::Command::commands will
92 be required, and it will be registered to handle all of its command
93 names not handled by other plugins.
94
95 If "no_help_plugin" is not given, App::Cmd::Command::help will be
96 required, and it will be registered to handle all of its command names
97 not handled by other plugins. Note: "help" is the default command, so
98 if you do not load the default help plugin, you should provide your own
99 or override the "default_command" method.
100
101 If "no_version_plugin" is not given, App::Cmd::Command::version will be
102 required to show the application's version with command "--version". By
103 default, the version command is not included in the command list. Pass
104 "show_version_cmd" to include the version command in the list.
105
106 run
107 $cmd->run;
108
109 This method runs the application. If called the class, it will
110 instantiate a new App::Cmd object to run.
111
112 It determines the requested command (generally by consuming the first
113 command-line argument), finds the plugin to handle that command, parses
114 the remaining arguments according to that plugin's rules, and runs the
115 plugin.
116
117 It passes the contents of the global argument array (@ARGV) to
118 ""prepare_command"", but @ARGV is not altered by running an App::Cmd.
119
120 prepare_args
121 Normally App::Cmd uses @ARGV for its commandline arguments. You can
122 override this method to change that behavior for testing or otherwise.
123
124 default_args
125 If "prepare_args" is not changed and there are no arguments in @ARGV,
126 this method is called and should return an arrayref to be used as the
127 arguments to the program. By default, it returns an empty arrayref.
128
129 abstract
130 sub abstract { "command description" }
131
132 Defines the command abstract: a short description that will be printed
133 in the main command options list.
134
135 description
136 sub description { "Long description" }
137
138 Defines a longer command description that will be shown when the user
139 asks for help on a specific command.
140
141 arg0
142 full_arg0
143 my $program_name = $app->arg0;
144
145 my $full_program_name = $app->full_arg0;
146
147 These methods return the name of the program invoked to run this
148 application. This is determined by inspecting $0 when the App::Cmd
149 object is instantiated, so it's probably correct, but doing weird
150 things with App::Cmd could lead to weird values from these methods.
151
152 If the program was run like this:
153
154 knight!rjbs$ ~/bin/rpg dice 3d6
155
156 Then the methods return:
157
158 arg0 - rpg
159 full_arg0 - /Users/rjbs/bin/rpg
160
161 These values are captured when the App::Cmd object is created, so it is
162 safe to assign to $0 later.
163
164 prepare_command
165 my ($cmd, $opt, @args) = $app->prepare_command(@ARGV);
166
167 This method will load the plugin for the requested command, use its
168 options to parse the command line arguments, and eventually return
169 everything necessary to actually execute the command.
170
171 default_command
172 This method returns the name of the command to run if none is given on
173 the command line. The default default is "help"
174
175 execute_command
176 $app->execute_command($cmd, \%opt, @args);
177
178 This method will invoke "validate_args" and then "run" on $cmd.
179
180 plugin_search_path
181 This method returns the plugin_search_path as set. The default
182 implementation, if called on "YourApp::Cmd" will return
183 "YourApp::Cmd::Command"
184
185 This is a method because it's fun to override it with, for example:
186
187 use constant plugin_search_path => __PACKAGE__;
188
189 allow_any_unambiguous_abbrev
190 If this method returns true (which, by default, it does not), then any
191 unambiguous abbreviation for a registered command name will be allowed
192 as a means to use that command. For example, given the following
193 commands:
194
195 reticulate
196 reload
197 rasterize
198
199 Then the user could use "ret" for "reticulate" or "ra" for "rasterize"
200 and so on.
201
202 global_options
203 if ($cmd->app->global_options->{verbose}) { ... }
204
205 This method returns the running application's global options as a
206 hashref. If there are no options specified, an empty hashref is
207 returned.
208
209 set_global_options
210 $app->set_global_options(\%opt);
211
212 This method sets the global options.
213
214 command_names
215 my @names = $cmd->command_names;
216
217 This returns the commands names which the App::Cmd object will handle.
218
219 command_groups
220 my @groups = $cmd->commands_groups;
221
222 This method can be implemented to return a grouped list of command
223 names with optional headers. Each group is given as arrayref and each
224 header as string. If an empty list is returned, the commands plugin
225 will show two groups without headers: the first group is for the "help"
226 and "commands" commands, and all other commands are in the second
227 group.
228
229 command_plugins
230 my @plugins = $cmd->command_plugins;
231
232 This method returns the package names of the plugins that implement the
233 App::Cmd object's commands.
234
235 plugin_for
236 my $plugin = $cmd->plugin_for($command);
237
238 This method returns the plugin (module) for the given command. If no
239 plugin implements the command, it returns false.
240
241 get_command
242 my ($command_name, $opt, @args) = $app->get_command(@args);
243
244 Process arguments and into a command name and (optional) global
245 options.
246
247 usage
248 print $self->app->usage->text;
249
250 Returns the usage object for the global options.
251
252 usage_desc
253 The top level usage line. Looks something like
254
255 "yourapp <command> [options]"
256
257 global_opt_spec
258 Returns a list with help command unless "no_help_plugin" has been
259 specified or an empty list. Can be overridden for pre-dispatch option
260 processing. This is useful for flags like --verbose.
261
262 usage_error
263 $self->usage_error("Something's wrong!");
264
265 Used to die with nice usage output, during "validate_args".
266
268 · publish and bring in Log::Speak (simple quiet/verbose output)
269
270 · publish and use our internal enhanced describe_options
271
272 · publish and use our improved simple input routines
273
275 Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
276
278 · Adam Prime <aprime@oanda.com>
279
280 · ambs <ambs@cpan.org>
281
282 · Andreas Hernitscheck <andreash@lxhe.(none)>
283
284 · A. Sinan Unur <nanis@cpan.org>
285
286 · Chris 'BinGOs' Williams <chris@bingosnet.co.uk>
287
288 · David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
289
290 · David Steinbrunner <dsteinbrunner@pobox.com>
291
292 · Davor Cubranic <cubranic@stat.ubc.ca>
293
294 · Denis Ibaev <dionys@gmail.com>
295
296 · Diab Jerius <djerius@cfa.harvard.edu>
297
298 · Glenn Fowler <cebjyre@cpan.org>
299
300 · Ingy dot Net <ingy@ingy.net>
301
302 · Jakob Voss <jakob@nichtich.de>
303
304 · Jakob Voss <voss@gbv.de>
305
306 · Jérôme Quelin <jquelin@gmail.com>
307
308 · John SJ Anderson <genehack@genehack.org>
309
310 · Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
311
312 · Kent Fredric <kentfredric@gmail.com>
313
314 · Matthew Astley <mca@sanger.ac.uk>
315
316 · mokko <mauricemengel@gmail.com>
317
318 · Olivier Mengué <dolmen@cpan.org>
319
320 · Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@codesimply.com>
321
322 · Ryan C. Thompson <rct@thompsonclan.org>
323
324 · Salvatore Bonaccorso <carnil@debian.org>
325
326 · Sergey Romanov <sromanov-dev@yandex.ru>
327
328 · Stephen Caldwell <steve@campusexplorer.com>
329
330 · Yuval Kogman <nuffin@cpan.org>
331
333 This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Ricardo Signes.
334
335 This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
336 the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
337
338
339
340perl v5.30.0 2019-07-26 App::Cmd(3)