Commando is a PHP command line interface library that beautifies and simplifies writing PHP scripts intended for command line use.
PHP's $argv
magic variable and global $_SERVER['argv']
make me cringe, getopt
isn't all that much better, and most other PHP CLI libraries are far too OOP bloated. Commando gets down to business without a ton of overhead, removes the common boilerplate stuff when it comes to handling cli input, all while providing a clean and readable interface.
Commando requires that you are running PHP 5.3 or higher.
Commando is PSR-0 compliant and can be installed using Composer. Add nategood/commando
to your composer.json
"require": {
"nategood/commando": "*"
}
If you're new to Composer...
- Download and build Composer
- Make it globally accessible
cd
to your the directory where you'll be writing your Commando script and runcomposer install
Currently installing via Composer is the only supported option.
Here is an example of a PHP Commando script that gives a decent tour of Commando's features. Let's say it is in a file called hello.php
.
<?php
require_once 'vendor/autoload.php';
$hello_cmd = new Commando\Command();
// Define first option
$hello_cmd->option()
->require()
->describedAs('A person\'s name');
// Define a flag "-t" a.k.a. "--title"
$hello_cmd->option('t')
->aka('title')
->describedAs('When set, use this title to address the person')
->must(function($title) {
$titles = array('Mister', 'Mr', 'Misses', 'Mrs', 'Miss', 'Ms');
return in_array($title, $titles);
})
->map(function($title) {
$titles = array('Mister' => 'Mr', 'Misses' => 'Mrs', 'Miss' => 'Ms');
if (array_key_exists($title, $titles))
$title = $titles[$title];
return "$title. ";
});
// Define a boolean flag "-c" aka "--capitalize"
$hello_cmd->option('c')
->aka('capitalize')
->aka('cap')
->describedAs('Always capitalize the words in a name')
->boolean();
$name = $hello_cmd['capitalize'] ? ucwords($hello_cmd[0]) : $hello_cmd[0];
echo "Hello {$hello_cmd['title']}$name!", PHP_EOL;
Running it:
> php hello.php Nate
Hello, Nate!
> php hello.php --capitalize nate
Hello, Nate!
> php hello.php -c -t Mr 'nate good'
Hello, Mr. Nate Good!
Things to note:
- Commando implements ArrayAccess so it acts much like an array when you want to retrieve values for it
- For "annonymous" (i.e. not a named flag) arguments, we access them based on their numeric index
- We can access option values in an array via a flags name OR it's alias
- We can use closures to perform validation and map operations right as part of our option definition
Commando has automatic --help
support built in. Calling your script with this flag will print out a pretty help page based on your option definitions and Commando settings. If you define an option with the alias of 'help', it will override this built in support.
By default, Commando will catch Exceptions that occur during the parsing process. Instead Commando prints a formatted, user-friendly error message to standard error and exits with a code of 1. If you wish to have Commando throw Exceptions in these cases, call the doNotTrapErrors
method on your Command instance.
These options work on the "command" level
The default behavior of Commando is to provide a --help option that spits out a useful help page generated off of your option definitions. Disable this feature by calling useDefaultHelp(false)
Text to prepend to the help page. Use this to describe the command at a high level and maybe some examples usages of the command.
When an error occurs, print character to make the terminal "beep".
Return an array of Option
s for each options provided to the command.
Return an array of Option
s for only the flags provided to the command.
Return an array of Options
for only the arguments provided to the command. The order of the array is the same as the order of the arguments.
Return associative array of values for arguments provided to the command. E.g. array('f' => 'value1')
.
Return array of values for arguments provided to the command. E.g. array('value1', 'value2')
.
These options work on the "option" level, even though they are chained to a Command
instance
Aliases: o
Define a new option. When name
is set, the option will be a named "flag" option. Can be a short form option (e.g. f
for option -f
) or long form (e.g. foo
for option --foo). When no name
is defined, the option is an annonymous argument and is referenced in the future by it's position.
Same as option
except that it can only be used to define "flag" type options (a.k.a. those options that must be specified with a -flag on the command line).
Same as option
except that it can only be used to define "argument" type options (a.k.a those options that are specified WITHOUT a -flag on the command line).
Aliases: a
, aka
Add an alias for a named option. This method can be called multiple times to add multiple aliases.
Aliases: d
, describe
, describedAs
Text to describe this option. This text will be used to build the "help" page and as such, it is end user facing.
Aliases: r
, required
Require that this flag is specified
Aliases: N/A
Define a rule to validate input against. Takes function that accepts a string $value and returns a boolean as to whether or not $value is valid.
Aliases: cast
, castTo
Perform a map operation on the value for this option. Takes function that accepts a string $value and return mixed (you can map to whatever you wish).
Aliases: title
, referredToAs
Add a name to refer to an argument option by. Makes the help docs a little cleaner for annonymous "argument" options.
Commando highly encourages sending in pull requests. When submitting a pull request please:
- All pull requests should target the
dev
branch (notmaster
) - Make sure your code follows the coding standards laid out in PSR-1 and PSR-2
- Make sure you add appropriate test coverage for your changes
- Run all unit tests in the test directory via
phpunit ./tests
- Include commenting where appropriate and add a descriptive pull request message
Released under MIT license.
- Added abilty to define default values for options
- Improved Help Formatting PR #12
- Bug fix for printing double help PR #10
- Adds support for requiring options to be valid file paths or globs
- Returns a fully qualified file path name (e.g. converts relative paths)
- Returns an array of file paths in the case of globbing
- See the file.php example in the examples directory
The primary goal of this update was to better delineate between flag options and argument options. In Commando, flags are options that we define that require a name when they are being specified on the command line. Arguments are options that are not named in this way. In the example below, '-f' and '--long' are described as "flags" type options in Commando terms with the values 'value1' and 'value2' respectively, whereas value3, value4, and value5 are described as "argument" type options.
php command.php -f value1 --long value2 value3 value4 value5
- Added Command::getArguments() to return an array of
Option
that are of the "argument" type (see argumentsVsFlags.php example) - Added Command::getFlags() to return an array of
Option
that are of the "flag" type (see argumentsVsFlags.php example) - Added Command::getArgumentValues() to return an array of all the values for "arguments"
- Added Command::getFlagValues() to return an array of all values for "flags"
- Command now implements Iterator interface and will iterator over all options, starting with arguments and continuing with flags in alphabetical order
- Can now define options with Command::flag($name) and Command::argument(), in addition to Command::option($name)
- Added ability to add a "title" to refer to arguments by, making the help docs a little cleaner (run help.php example)
- Cleaned up the generated help docs
- Bug fix for additional colorized red line when an error is displayed
- Bug fix for options values with multiple words
- Beep support added to Terminal
- Commando::beepOnError() added
- Terminal updated to use tput correctly