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com.sirolf2009:Husk

A nutty shell

  • 0.0.2
  • Source
  • Maven
  • Socket score

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Maintainers
1
Source

Husk

A nutty shell

Maven

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.sirolf2009</groupId>
    <artifactId>Husk</artifactId>
    <version>0.0.2</version>
</dependency>

About

This is a java shell to quickly set up commands, rather than building a GUI. It's intentions are to be able to do anything a standard UNIX shell can do, with the ease of Cliche Shell, along with some more optional utilities

Guide

What we'll need is one class where we can add commands and register them to the shell. Let's make it look something like this:

import com.sirolf2009.husk.Command;
import com.sirolf2009.husk.Husk;
import com.sirolf2009.husk.Husk.CommandSaveException;

public class ExampleShell {
	
	@Command
	public String greet() {
		return "Hello World";
	}
	
	@Command
	public String reverse(String string) {
		return new StringBuffer(string).reverse().toString();
	}
	
	public static void main(String[] args) throws IllegalArgumentException, IllegalAccessException, CommandSaveException {
		new Husk(new ExampleShell(), "My awesome shell name", "My awesome splash!").commandLoop();
	}

}

What we've created is a shell that has 2 commands. The command greet and the command reverse. If we run this file, we will see something like this:

My awesome splash!
My awesome shell name> 

Enter greet in your shell and the text Hello World will be returned to the terminal. We have another command, let's type reverse husk. The terminal should return ksuh. But why stop there? what if we want to take the output from greet and then reverse it? easy.

My awesome shell name> greet | reverse
dlroW olleH

In the background, greet was executed and returned a string. This string was then fed to the reverse command thanks to the | character. This is what's known as a pipeline. With a more advanced setup you could do something like getNewRecordsFromDatabase | createDatabaseRecordReport | saveToDatabase. This might not seem easier like writing a function to do this for you, until you want to do something like this: getAllRecordsFromDatabase | createDatabaseRecordReport | saveToDatabase. Now you need to not only write the function to get all the database records, but also a function to combine the three commands above. Using pipelines, you only need to write the functiong to get everything from your database

Now what if we want to reverse multiple words? Do I have to type the reverse command multiple times? Of course not! Just add varargs to your function

@Command
public String reverse(String... stringArray) {
	StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer();
	for(String string : stringArray) {
		buffer.append(new StringBuffer(string).reverse().toString()+" ");
	}
	return buffer.toString();
}

Let's test it out!

My awesome shell name> reverse Hello World
olleH dlroW 

Abbreviations and names

Isn't it a pain to write word like greet and reverse? Well good news everyone! For every function, an abbreviation is created. By default these are the camelcase characters.

The word myAwesomeFunction would get the abbreviation maf. greet and reverse will get the abbreviation g and r. This means that instead of doing greet | reverse, we can also do g | r If you don't like your default abbreviation, you can always override it, the same thing goes for the full function name. It would be done like this:

@Command(abbrev="hi", fullName="hello-world")
public String greet() {
	return "Hello World";
}

The command greet is now called hello-world and the abbreviation g has become hi

The help system

The help system is still under construction, more features will be added

If you want to list all commands available to you, you can enter ?list or ?l. For the example above, the output would be

╔═════════════╤══════════════╤════════════╤══════════════════════════╗
║ Name        │ Abbreviation │ Parameters │ Description              ║
╠═════════════╪══════════════╪════════════╪══════════════════════════╣
║ ?list       │ ?l           │            │ Display all the commands ║
╟─────────────┼──────────────┼────────────┼──────────────────────────╢
║ hello-world │ hi           │            │                          ║
╟─────────────┼──────────────┼────────────┼──────────────────────────╢
║ reverse     │ r            │ String[]   │                          ║
╚═════════════╧══════════════╧════════════╧══════════════════════════╝

As you can see, the ?list command has a description. Don't you want a description for your functions? Of course you do!

@Command(abbrev="hi", fullName="hello-world", description="A simple greeting")
public String greet() {
	return "Hello World";
}

@Command(description="reverse a string array")
public String reverse(String... stringArray) {
	StringBuffer buffer = new StringBuffer();
	for(String string : stringArray) {
		buffer.append(new StringBuffer(string).reverse().toString()+" ");
	}
	return buffer.toString();
}

Let's see what we now get when we type ?list

╔═════════════╤══════════════╤════════════╤══════════════════════════╗
║ Name        │ Abbreviation │ Parameters │ Description              ║
╠═════════════╪══════════════╪════════════╪══════════════════════════╣
║ ?list       │ ?l           │            │ Display all the commands ║
╟─────────────┼──────────────┼────────────┼──────────────────────────╢
║ hello-world │ hi           │            │ A simple greeting        ║
╟─────────────┼──────────────┼────────────┼──────────────────────────╢
║ reverse     │ r            │ String[]   │ reverse a string array   ║
╚═════════════╧══════════════╧════════════╧══════════════════════════╝

RMI

RMI stands for Remote Method Invocation and basically means that a client can perform functions on a server. If you enable shared mode on Husk like so:

new Husk(new Handler()).shared(4567);

An RMI server will start hosting on port 4567. If you run the same code again, the new instance of husk will search for existing instances of servers. By default it only looks at localhost, but different IP's can be passed as a second parameter.

Once you have your second instance running, you can start executing commands at the server. Say that the server has this handler registered:

public static class Handler {
		
	private String value;
	@Command
	public void setValue(String value) {
		this.value = value;
	}
	
	@Command
	public String getValue() {
		return value;
	}
	
}

and in the first husk instance, the server instance, you type:

gv
sv hello
gv

The first get-value will return null, makes sense. The second get-value will return hello. Again, nothing special here.

Now take your second instance of husk, the client instance, and run gv. What do you get? Exactly! hello. If you now run sv world on the client and gv on the server, then the server will display world. You can use this to build debugging or monitoring handlers, that can help you with operating servers, or you can treat the shells as multiple shell instances of the same application.

FAQs

Package last updated on 20 Jan 2016

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