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2021-12-20 16:28:42 -08:00
readme.md DDD 2021-12-20 16:28:42 -08:00

-runner: the minimal task runner you've been missing in your life

-runner is a language-agnostic task runner in the category of tools such as make, grunt, gradle, leiningen, etc. It has a single, widely available dependency: bash. It's intent is to provide your shell scripts with the syntactic sugar they crave to make them more presentable, and more manageable.

Why have you done this?

The main reason -runner was born, was because I'm a huge fan of go scripts. I find myself including one in nearly every repo I make. I've also started finding myself copy-pasting a WHOLE bunch of helper functions across them. These scripts are always in bash to make them easily usable by everyone on a team, regardless of their operating system of choice. I've also found myself using similar patterns for other scripts I have, which do maybe more than a single thing but maybe less than a full application would warrant.

Usage

Download the runner, chuck it into your repo, and source it from a shell script! (snazy curl-to-shell url coming eventually (maybe))

Now it's time for some documentation-driven development! (a.k.a. usage examples)

a.k.a. Literally none of this works.

Hello

As is tradition:

$ echo '
#!/usr/bin/env bash

hello() {
  _help-line "Say hello!"
  echo Hello, world!
}

source ⚡️
' > go && chmod +x go
$ ./go hello
Hello, world!
$ ./go
Usage: ./go [sub-command]

Available subcommands:
	hello                - Say hello!
	help                 - Show this list

Build/run/check/test/clean

Look! It's like a task runner!

#!/usr/bin/env bash
cd $(dirname $0)build() {
  echo "echo hi" > .generated/potato
  chmod +x .generated/potato
}run() {build
  .generated/potato "$@"
}check() {build
  shellcheck .generated/potato
}test() {build
  [ "$(.generated/potato)" == "hi" ]
}clean() {
  rm -rf .generated
}

source ⚡️

It's just bash!

Do whatever you need, just define a function or two as the interface

#!/usr/bin/env bash

cookie_jar_path=$(mktemp)
trap "rm $cookie_jar_path" EXIT
encrypted_password=$(pass routers/tp-link-encrypted)

router-curl() {
  path=$1; shift
  curl -s -b $cookie_jar_path -c $cookie_jar_path -X POST "http://192.168.0.1/cgi-bin/luci/;stok=${STOK:-}/$path" "$@"
}connected-devices() {
  _help-line "Show devices connected to router"
  STOK=$(router-curl login?form=login --data-raw "operation=login&password=$encrypted_password"| jq -r .data.stok )
  router-curl admin/status?form=all | jq '.data | [.access_devices_wired, .access_devices_wireless_guest, .access_devices_wireless_host] | flatten'
}

source ⚡️

More sugar

Colors

$ echo '
#!/usr/bin/env bash

⚡good() {
  _good-message + Good Message
}

⚡bad() {
  _bad-message - Bad Message
}

source ⚡️
' > go && chmod +x go
$ ./go good
+ Good message
$ ./go bad
- Bad message

Prerequisites

$ echo '
#!/usr/bin/env bash

_verify-prerequisites() {
  docker ps &> /dev/null || echo 'Not enough docker'
}

ubuntu() {
  docker run -ti ubuntu
}

source ⚡️
' > go && chmod +x go
$ ./go ubuntu
Not enough docker

Wrappers

Tired of your gradlew, terraformw, mavenw, jqw, opensslw, kubectlw, etc literring the root of your repo? Me too!

$ echo '
#!/usr/bin/env bash

kubectlw() {
  _wrapper \
    -a "$@" \
    -n kubectl \
    -v v1.19.4 \
    -l https://dl.k8s.io/release/VERSION/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl \
    -d https://dl.k8s.io/release/VERSION/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl
}

kubectl-version() {
  kubectlw version
}

source ⚡️
' > go && chmod +x go
$ ./go kubectl-version
Client Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"19", GitVersion:"v1.19.4", GitCommit:"d360454c9bcd1634cf4cc52d1867af5491dc9c5f", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2020-11-11T13:17:17Z", GoVersion:"go1.15.2", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"darwin/amd64"}
The connection to the server localhost:8080 was refused - did you specify the right host or port?

Appendix

This is where I would put the full list of helpers -runner provides IF I HAD ONE

FAQ

How do I type ?

Below this line are a number of options. Go down the list until you find one that works for you.

  • ^⌘Space on macos opens the emoji picker. Search for 'lightning'
  • ⊞Win + . on windows opens the emoji picker. Search for 'lightning'
  • ctrl + . within gnome opens the emoji picker. Search for 'lightning' (can someone confirm?)
  • Super + . within KDE opens the emoji picker. Search for 'lightning' (can someone confirm?)
  • Copy and paste this:
  • Use your favorite web search engine to search for 'lightning emoji', copy paste from there.

Why bash?

Because I like it.

But really, why bash?

When have you, a developer, used a computer that doesn't have bash installed?

My operating system of choice is Windows, it doesn't come with bash?

That's not a question. Enable WSL.

I don't want to enable WSL?

That's still not a question. Also you're wrong.