Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

ronin

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
1798
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ronin

Libary to build shining CLI tools

  • 0.3.5
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
1.2K
increased by65.34%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Ronin

Toolkit for building shining CLI programs in Node.js.

Circle CI

Features

  • Forced & clean organization of program code
  • Command name generation based on folder structure
  • CLI tool to quickly create program skeleton and commands
  • Auto-generated usage and help
  • Small codebase (269 sloc)
  • Program auto-updates itself when new version is available

Installation

npm install ronin --global

Getting Started

Creating basic structure

Execute the following command to generate basic skeleton for your program:

ronin new hello-world

Ronin will create a hello-world directory (if it does not exists or empty) and put everything that's needed to start developing your CLI tool immediately:

Output

Initialization

Here's how to initialize CLI program using Ronin:

var ronin = require('ronin');

var program = ronin(__dirname); // root path, where commands folder is

program.run();

Creating commands

Next, to setup some commends, simply create folders and files. The structure you create, will be reflected in your program. For example, if you create such folders and files:

commands/
--  apps.js
--  apps/
    -- add.js
    -- remove.js
--  keys/
    -- dump.js

In result, Ronin, will generate these commands for you automatically:

$ hello-world apps
$ hello-world apps add
$ hello-world apps remove
$ hello-world keys dump

Each folder is treated like a namespace and each file like a command, where file name is command name.

To actually create handlers for those commands, in each file, Command should be defined:

var Command = require('ronin').Command;

var AppsAddCommand = module.exports = Command.extend({
    desc: 'This command adds application',
    
    run: function (name) {
        // create an app with name given in arguments
    }
});

To run this command, execute:

$ hello-world apps add great-app

Whatever arguments passed to command after command name, will be passed to .run() method in the same order they were written.

Specifying options

You can specify options and their properties using options object.

var AppsDestroyCommand = module.exports = Command.extend({
    desc: 'This command removes application',
    
    options: {
        name: 'string',
        force: {
            type: 'boolean',
            alias: 'f'
        }
    },
    
    run: function (name, force) {
        if (!force) {
            throw new Error('--force option is required to remove application');
        }
        
        // remove app
    }
});

Note: Options will be passed to .run() method in the same order they were defined.

Customizing help

By default, Ronin generates help for each command and for whole program automatically. If you wish to customize the output, override .help() method in your command (program help can not be customized at the moment):

var HelloCommand = Command.extend({
    help: function () {
        return 'Usage: ' + this.programName + ' ' + this.name + ' [OPTIONS]';
    },
    
    desc: 'Hello world'
});
Customizing command delimiter

By default, Ronin separates sub-commands with a space. If you want to change that delimiter, just specify this option when initializing Ronin:

var program = ronin();

program.set({
    path: __dirname,
    delimiter: ':'
});

program.run();

After that, apps create command will become apps:create.

Middleware

There are often requirements to perform the same operations/checks for many commands. For example, user authentication. In order to avoid code repetition, Ronin implements middleware concept. Middleware is just a function, that accepts the same arguments as .run() function + callback function. Middleware functions can be asynchronous, it makes no difference for Ronin.

Let's take a look at this example:

var UsersAddCommand = Command.extend({
    use: ['auth', 'beforeRun'],
    
    run: function (name) {
        // actual users add command
    },
    
    beforeRun: function (name, next) {
        // will execute before .run()
        
        // MUST call next() when done
        next();
    }
});

In this example, we've got 2 middleware functions: auth and beforeRun. Ronin allows you to write middleware functions inside commands or inside root/middleware directory. So in this example, Ronin will detect that beforeRun function is defined inside a command and auth function will be required from root/middleware/auth.js file.

Note: To interrupt the whole program and stop execution, just throw an error.

Auto-updating

To make your program auto-update itself, only 1 line of code needed. Go to your program's index file and replace program.run() with this:

program.autoupdate(function () {
  program.run();
});

From now on, your program will check for updates once a day and if new update is available, it will automatically install it. How cool is this?

Tests

npm test

License

Ronin is released under the MIT License.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 18 Feb 2015

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc