Gluegun
Gluegun is a delightful toolkit for building Node-based command-line interfaces (CLIs) in TypeScript or modern JavaScript, with support for:
🌯 parameters - command-line arguments and options
🎛 template - generating files from templates
🗄 patching - manipulating file contents
💾 filesystem - moving files and directories around
⚒ system - executing other command-line scripts
🎅 http - interacting with API servers
🛎 prompt - auto-complete prompts
💃 print - printing pretty colors and tables
👩✈️ semver - working with semantic versioning
🎻 strings - manipulating strings & template data
📦 packageManager - installing NPM packages with Yarn or NPM
In addition, gluegun
supports expanding your CLI's ecosystem with a robust set of easy-to-write plugins and extensions.
Notice
Gluegun is at a stable point and we aren't planning on building new features for it, although the community continues to send in PRs and we release them. Read the Community Supported section to learn more.
Why use Gluegun?
You might want to use Gluegun if:
- You need to build a CLI app
- You want to have powerful tools at your fingertips
- And you don't want to give up flexibility at the same time
If so ... welcome!
Quick Start
Just run the gluegun
CLI like this:
# spin up your new CLI
npx gluegun new movies
# choose TypeScript or Modern JavaScript
# now jump into the source
cd movies
# and link your new executable
bun link
# and run it!
movies help
You should see your new CLI help. Open the folder in your favorite editor and start building your CLI!
Code
Let's start with what a gluegun
CLI looks like.
const { build } = require('gluegun')
const movieCLI = build('movie')
.src(`${__dirname}/src`)
.plugins('node_modules', { matching: 'movie-*' })
.help()
.version()
.defaultCommand()
.create()
movieCLI.run()
Commands
Commands are simple objects that provide a name, optional aliases, and a function to run.
module.exports = {
name: 'foo',
alias: 'f',
run: async function (toolbox) {
const { system, print, filesystem, strings } = toolbox
const awesome = strings.trim(await system.run('whoami'))
const moreAwesome = strings.kebabCase(`${awesome} and a keyboard`)
const contents = `🚨 Warning! ${moreAwesome} coming thru! 🚨`
const home = process.env['HOME']
filesystem.write(`${home}/realtalk.json`, { contents })
print.info(`${print.checkmark} Citius`)
print.warning(`${print.checkmark} Altius`)
print.success(`${print.checkmark} Fortius`)
},
}
See the toolbox api docs for more details on what you can do.
See the runtime docs for more details on building your own CLI and join us in the #gluegun channel of the Infinite Red Community Slack (community.infinite.red) to get friendly help!
Who Is Using This?
Additionally, the first versions of the AWS Amplify CLI (a CLI toolchain for simplifying serverless web and mobile development) used Gluegun. They've since integrated Gluegun's functionality into their CLI in a bespoke way, but you can still see Gluegun patterns in their CLI.
What's under the hood?
We've assembled an all-star cast of libraries to help you build your CLI.
⭐️ ejs for templating
⭐️ semver for version investigations
⭐️ fs-jetpack for the filesystem
⭐️ yargs-parser, enquirer, colors, ora and cli-table3 for the command line
⭐️ axios & apisauce for web & apis
⭐️ cosmiconfig for flexible configuration
⭐️ cross-spawn for running sub-commands
⭐️ execa for running more sub-commands
⭐️ node-which for finding executables
⭐️ pluralize for manipulating strings
Node.js 12.0+ is required.
Community CLIs and Plugins
Here are a few community CLIs based on Gluegun plus some plugins you can use. Is yours missing? Send a PR to add it!
While Gluegun is no longer actively developed by Infinite Red, it has built a community that cares deeply about it. Infinite Red won't be building new features ourselves for Gluegun, but we encourage the community to continue to send high quality pull requests. We will try to review and merge them in a timely manner.
If you're looking for alternatives, here's a list:
- Rust CLI -- Rust is a rapidly growing community and hot language, and has the benefit of speed and not needing to rely on a local Node engine.
- oclif - oclif is used by some large CLIs and is very actively maintained
- commander and yeoman - commander and yeoman have been around a long time and have very large communities. Keep in mind that we built Gluegun to avoid Commander and Yeoman, so YMMV
- vorpal - unfortunately looks like it isn't actively maintained
- just make your own - you don't need a framework to make a Node CLI. Check out this article from Twilio