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@appsemble/cli
Advanced tools
Manage apps and blocks from the command line.
npm install @appsemble/cli
A full list of functionalities can be achieved by running the following command:
appsemble --help
Every subcommand also supports the --help
flag.
The development server can create an app from a specified folder containing an app-definition.yml
file. It will check what blocks are needed for the app and will try to load them from the local
workspaces, listed in the package.json
file in the root of the project, if they are present. This
way, all default Appsemble blocks shipped with Appsemble are loaded automatically.
Once the development server is started, making a change to a block’s code or styles will reflect in the browser immediately after refreshing the page, without the need of increasing the block’s version. Running docker database containers, creating a user account and creating an organization are not needed.
The Appsemble CLI can be used to start the development server. For example, the following command
serves my-app
:
appsemble serve <path-to-app-directory>
This will serve the app on http://localhost:9090
.
A different port can be specified with the --port
parameter.
The following option allows you to view the app with a specified role:
appsemble serve <path-to-app-directory> --user-role test
The following option allows you to view the app as a Manager of a group:
appsemble serve <path-to-app-directory> --group-role Manager
App data is stored within a db.json
file in your machine’s cache directory. Each app has their own
directory <my-app>
.
MacOS - /Users/<my-name>/Library/Caches/appsemble/<my-app>
Linux - /home/<my-name>/.cache/appsemble/<my-app>
Windows - C:\Users\<my-name>\AppData\Local\appsemble\Cache\<my-app>
App assets will be served from the local file system.
The development server will automatically fetch all blocks that are needed for the served app but
are missing from the local workspaces. These are typically third-party or proprietary blocks. The
development server will use http://localhost:9999
as the default remote server to fetch blocks
from. The following option allows you to specify a different remote (e.g. https://appsemble.app
):
appsemble serve <path-to-app-directory> --remote <remote>
The development server will use the corresponding block directory in your machine’s cache directory to store and read block manifests and assets.
MacOS - /Users/<my-name>/Library/Caches/appsemble/blocks/<organisation>/<block-name>/<block-version>
Linux - /home/<my-name>/.cache/appsemble/blocks/<organisation>/<block-name>/<block-version>
Windows - C:\Users\<my-name>\AppData\Local\appsemble\Cache\blocks\<organisation>\<block-name>\<block-version>
You can overwrite the existing block cache with the following option:
appsemble serve <path-to-app-directory> --remote <remote> --overwrite-block-cache
The Appsemble CLI uses OAuth2 client credentials to authenticate to the Appsemble server.
To login, run the following command and follow the instructions in the output:
appsemble login
To logout, run the following command and select the client credentials to remove:
apsemble logout
The Appsemble CLI also supports authentication using the APPSEMBLE_CLIENT_CREDENTIALS
environment
variable. This is mostly useful for automation.
The Appsemble CLI can be used to create and update organizations. For example:
appsemble organization create my-organization --name 'My Organization' --icon icon.png
The Appsemble CLI allows you to bootstrap an Appsemble app into a standard Appsemble project layout. The command is followed by a series of interactive questions. You can also pass the values as arguments.
appsemble app create
The Appsemble CLI can be used to create, export, import and update apps. For example, to create an
app in the apps/my-app
directory, run:
appsemble app publish apps/my-app
Similarly, to update an app using an app directory, run the following command:
appsemble app update --id <app-id> <path/to/updated app>.
If you want to update settings for an app, run the following command:
appsemble app patch --id <app-id>
Use --help
flag with the above command to view the supported arguments.
🛈NOTE
The
app patch
command supports updating thelocked
property of an app, locked property is updated before other properties. If you set the locked property tofullLock
, any other changes won’t be applied unless you are using--force
flag.
To delete an app using the CLI use the following command:
appsemble app delete --id <appId>
To export an app as a zip file, run the following:
appsemble app export --id <app-id>
Supported arguments for this command are resources
, assets
and path
. Resources is used to
specify whether to include the resources in the exported file, the same can be applied to assets and
path is the path of the folder where you want to put your downloaded file. The default path is
./apps
, and resources and assets are by default false
.
To import an app from a zip file, use the following command:
appsemble app import <path-of-zip-file> --organization <organizationId>
For a more in depth explanation of how to build apps, use our app building guide.
The Appsemble CLI allows you to bootstrap an Appsemble block into a standard Appsemble project layout. The command is followed by a series of interactive questions.
appsemble block create
The Appsemble CLI can also be used to publish and delete (although we don’t recommend doing it in
production) Appsemble blocks. For example, to publish all blocks in the blocks
directory, run:
appsemble block publish blocks/*
or to publish a single block located in some other directory, run
appsemble block publish path/to/block/directory
Blocks can be deleted if they are not in use by any apps. To delete a block, run
appsemble block delete <block-name:block-version>
Organization id can be passed as an argument(default for which is “appsemble”).
To know more about the block related commands, run
appsemble block --help
Building blocks uses
Webpack. To use
this, install the additional dependencies
webpack
and
@appsemble/webpack-config
npm install webpack@webpack-4 @appsemble/webpack-config
For a more in-depth explanation of how to build apps, use our block development guide.
The Appsemble CLI can be used to manage groups for apps. For example, the following command creates
a new group named My Group
:
appsemble group create 'My Group' --app-id 1 --context development
The Appsemble CLI can be used to upload assets from disk. For example, the following command creates
an asset named example-asset
:
appsemble asset publish --app-id 1 path/to/example-asset.png
The Appsemble CLI can be used to create a resource from a JSON file or directory:
[
{
"title": "My Resource",
"description": "This record is an example."
}
]
appsemble resource publish --app-id 1 --context development --app path/to/my-app my-resource path/to/resources/my-resource.json
appsemble resource publish --app-id 1 --context development --app path/to/my-app my-resource path/to/resources/*
And resources can also be updated when they contain an id in the JSON file.
[
{
"id": 1,
"title": "My Updated Resource",
"description": "This will be the updated content of the first my-resource record."
}
]
appsemble resource update --app-id 1 --context development --app path/to/my-app my-resource path/to/resources/*
The Appsemble CLI can be used to run app cronjobs. The following command runs all cronjobs that were scheduled to run in the past 5 minutes:
appsemble run-cronjobs
How often jobs are run (more accurately how far back the job can be scheduled for it to run) the time interval (in minutes) can also be set with:
appsemble run-cronjobs --interval 30
FAQs
The CLI for developing with Appsemble apps and blocks
The npm package @appsemble/cli receives a total of 1,168 weekly downloads. As such, @appsemble/cli popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @appsemble/cli demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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