The falkor-commander
project is a standalone npm
command-line application written in strict ES6 TypeScript. It is a plugin based task runner / -sequencer using the @falkor/falkor-library
to make everyday devops tasks more approachable, friendly, and secure in the terminal for non-technical people.
Install the package globally, so it's available in your PATH
:
$ npm install --global @falkor/falkor-commander
There is an up-to-date testing repository at falkor-plugin-example
to demonstrate framework capabilities, which you can use to test features, or as a boilerplate for your own task sequence.
Usage:
falkor-commander [(--scope <scope>) | (--path <path>)] [(--keyword <keyword>)] [(--registry <registry>)] [<tasks>...] [(-- <answers>...)]
falkor-commander [(-s <scope>) | (-p <path>)] [(-k <keyword>)] [(-r <registry>)] [<tasks>...] [(-- <answers>...)]
falkor-commander (-v | --version | -h | --help)
Options:
-v
or--version
: Show version and exit-h
or--help
: Show help and exit-s <scope>
or--scope <scope>
: The scope to look for plugins undernode_modules
(default:@falkor
)-p <path>
or--path <path>
: Explicit directory to look for plugins in (overrides scope setting)-k <keyword>
or--keyword <keyword>
: The keyword to look for in plugin candidates'package.json
(default:@falkor-plugin
)-r <registry>
or--registry <registry>
: Registry to use when searching for plugins at fresh install (default:https://registry.npmjs.org
)<tasks>...
: Treat all positional arguments as buffered task IDs-- <answers>...
: Treat all positional arguments after double dash as buffered input
Task Specific Options:
It is possible to forward command line arguments to individual tasks exposed by plugins. To compose such option, one has to use the task's escaped ID (spaces replaced with dashes, all lowercase) after double dash, so eg. Example Task
becomes --example-task
.
The value of such an option is similar to command line options, only using #
instead of -
, so building on the previous example eg.:
--example-task "##debug #V #a10 ##key key-value positional-value ## extra-value"
This will be parsed by minimist after transformation, and passed to the specific task's run
method as:
const argv = {
debug: true,
V: true,
a: 10,
key: "key-value"
_: ["positional-value"],
"--": ["extra-value"]
}
If for some reason the #
character is reserved in your workflow, it can be substituted with an other special character starting the value with the ":<special-char> "
sequence:
--example-task ":$ $$debug $V $a10 $$key key-value positional-value $$ extra-value"
The project uses the @falkor/falkor-bundler
module to compile sources. To clone the repository and compile falkor-commander
one can use the commands:
$ git clone --branch develop [email protected]:theonethread/falkor-commander.git
$ cd falkor-commander
$ npm install
$ npm run [ debug | release ]
SEE:
"scripts"
entry inpackage.json
for further reference.
NOTE: Compiling the
develop
sources might need locally linkeddevelop
versions of downstream modules:SEE:
npm-link
for further reference.
By default the falkor-commander
project ships with a pre-compiled man page when installed on Unix-like operating systems. The manual was created by converting the file man/man.md
.
To recompile the manual, make sure that Pandoc
is installed, and present in the PATH
, then run:
$ npm run man
The project uses prettier
for code formatting and cspell
to avoid general typos in both sources and documentation - it is advised to install these packages as extensions in your IDE to prevent CI errors beforehand. To lint the project run:
$ npm run lint
SEE:
.prettierrc.cjs
andcspell.config.cjs
for further reference.
- To fix formatting issues run
$ npx prettier --write <path-to-file>
. This will overwrite the file with the default formatting applied locally, so then you can review the changes ingit
and ensure those did not affect production artifacts. - To fix spelling errors run
$ npx cspell lint --wordsOnly --unique --gitignore --exclude .git ** .*
for details, and either make the fixes in the sources listed, addcspell
favored comments, or extend the project-widecspell.config.cjs
accordingly.
Release sources can be found on the master
branch, this one always points to the latest tagged release. Previous sources of releases can be found using git
version tags (or browsing GitHub releases). Released packages can be found on npmjs.
The repository's main branch is develop
(due to technical reasons), this holds all developments that are already decided to be included in the next release. Usually this branch is ahead of master
one patch version (but based on upcoming features to include this can become minor, or major), so prepared external links may yet be broken.
The feature/*
branches usually hold ideas and POC code, these will only be merged into develop
once their impact measured and quality meets release requirements.
The project uses SemVer,
git
tags are prefixed with av
character.
The workflows can be found here.
Automatic builds are achieved via GitHub actions, CI will make nightly builds of the develop
branch (using Ubuntu image), and test master
when there is a pull request, or commit on it (using Ubuntu - Win - MacOS image matrix).
The project uses CodeQL and Snyk to ensure standard security.
The Falkor Framework supports a healthy and ubiquitous Internet Immune System enabled by security research, reporting, and disclosure. Check out our Vulnerability Disclosure Policy - based on disclose.io's best practices.
The latest sources can always be found on GitHub.
We believe - and we hope you do too - that learning how to code, how to think, and how to contribute to free- and open source software can empower the next generation of coders and creators. We value first time contributors just the same as rock stars of the OSS world, so if you're interested in getting involved, just head over to our Contribution Guidelines for a quick heads-up!
©2020-2023 Barnabas Bucsy - All rights reserved.