Provided by: libperinci-cmdline-perl_1.48-1_all bug

NAME

       Perinci::CmdLine::Manual::Examples - Collection of examples

VERSION

       This document describes version 1.48 of Perinci::CmdLine::Manual::Examples (from Perl
       distribution Perinci-CmdLine), released on 2015-10-22.

DESCRIPTION

       In the examples, Perinci::CmdLine::Any is used to show examples that are applicable to
       either Perinci::CmdLine::Classic or Perinci::CmdLine::Lite.  For examples that are more
       appropriate or only applicable to specific implementation, the specific module will be
       used.

       Perinci::CmdLine::Classic is hereby referred to as "PC::Classic", while Perinci::CmdLine
       as "PC::Lite".

BASICS

   Simplest application
       Since Perinci::CmdLine is function- and metadata-based, you need to create at least one
       function and add some metadata for it. And you'll need to return the result as an
       enveloped response. The simplest is something like:

        #!perl
        use strict;
        use warnings;
        use Perinci::CmdLine::Any;

        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{hello} = {
            v => 1.1,
            summary => 'Say hello',
        };
        sub hello {
            [200, "OK", "Hello, world!"];
        }

        Perinci::CmdLine::Any->new(url => '/main/hello')->run;

       The "url" attribute specifies the location of the function in URL format (see Riap for
       more details on the syntax of URL). It is basically a fully-qualified function name, with
       "::" replaced with "/". With this URL-based syntax, it is possible to use a remote and/or
       non-Perl function for the CLI application.

       The hash in $SPEC{hello} is called a Rinci metadata. The keys are called properties. There
       are two properties: "v" (which is always required with the value of 1.1 to specify
       version) and "summary" (which is actually optional, to describe the function).

       In this example, the function and its metadata is put inside the same script.  You can of
       course put them in a separate Perl module, and use them with e.g. "url =>
       '/Your/Module/func'". It is also worth mentioning that if you use the Perinci::CmdLine
       framework, your functions can also be used directly by other Perl modules/code since they
       are just regular Perl functions.

       The function returns a 3-element array containing HTTP-like status code, a status message,
       and the actual result.

       If you save the above script as "hello" run it on the command-line:

        % ./hello
        Hello, world!

       Yup, not very interesting. You get help message for free:

        % ./hello --help
        % ./hello -h

       As well as some common options like "--format" to return the result in a different format:

        % ./hello --json
        [200,"OK","Hello, world!"]

        % ./hello --format perl; # only in PC::Classic, not available in PC::Lite
        [200, "OK", "Hello, world!"]

FUNCTION ARGUMENTS AND COMMAND-LINE OPTIONS

   Basics
       Function arguments map to command-line options. Example:

        #!perl
        use strict;
        use warnings;
        use Perinci::CmdLine::Any;

        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{hello} = {
            v => 1.1,
            summary => 'Say hello',
            args => {
                name => {
                    summary => 'Name to say hello to',
                },
            },
        };
        sub hello {
            my %args = @_;
            [200, "OK", "Hello, $args{name}!"];
        }

        Perinci::CmdLine::Any->new(url => '/main/hello')->run;

       When you run this:

        % ./hello --name Jimmy
        Hello, Jimmy!

       If you run "./hello --help", the option is now mentioned as well in the help message.

       Unknown arguments will result in an error:

        % ./hello --gender m
        ERROR 400: Unknown option '--gender'

       To specify that an argument is required, add "req" property to the argument specification
       with a true value:

            args => {
                name => {
                    summary => 'Name to say hello to',
                    req => 1,
                },
            },

       So when you run the app:

        % ./hello
        ERROR 400: Missing required argument 'name'

       To specify that an argument can also be specified via positional command-line argument
       instead of just command-line option, add "pos" property to the argument specification:

            args => {
                name => {
                    summary => 'Name to say hello to',
                    req => 1,
                    pos => 0,
                },
            },

       So when you run the app you can specify:

        % ./hello --name Jimmy
        Hello, Jimmy!

       as well as:

        % ./hello Jimmy
        Hello, Jimmy!

       Extra arguments will also result in an error:

        % ./hello Jimmy Gideon
        ERROR 400: Extra argument 'Gideon'

   Argument schema (and more on text output formats)
       Following up from the previous example, here's another example with more arguments. Also
       note that I use PC::Classic since PC::Lite doesn't do schema validation.

        #!perl
        use 5.010;
        use strict;
        use warnings;
        use Perinci::CmdLine;

        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{hello} = {
            v => 1.1,
            summary => 'Say hello',
            args => {
                name => {
                    summary => 'Name(s) to say hello to',
                    schema  => [array => {of => 'str', min_len=>1}],
                    req     => 1,
                    pos     => 0,
                    greedy  => 1,
                },
                gender => {
                    summary => 'The gender of the name(s)',
                    schema  => [str => {in => ['m','f']}],
                },
            },
        };
        sub hello {
            my %args = @_;
            my $g = $args{gender};
            my @res;
            for my $name (@{ $args{name} // [] }) {
                push @res, join("",
                    "Hello, ",
                    (!$g ? "" : $g eq 'm' ? "Mr. " : "Mrs. "),
                    $name, '!',
                );
            }
            [200, "OK", \@res];
        }
        Perinci::CmdLine->new(url => '/main/hello')->run;

       If you run this program:

        % ./hello Jimmy Sion Habil
        % ./hello --name Jimmy --name Sion --name Habil
        Hello, Jimmy!
        Hello, Sion!
        Hello, Habil!

        % ./hello --name-json '["Jimmy","Sion","Habil"]' --gender m
        Hello, Mr. Jimmy!
        Hello, Mr. Sion!
        Hello, Mr. Habil!

       Some things you might notice. First, there is a "schema" property for each argument.
       "name" is specified as having a type of array of strings. To set this argument from the
       CLI, you can either specify multiple times (e.g. "--name NAME1 --name NAME2 ...") or
       specify using JSON (i.e. "--name-json JSONSTR").

       Second, the "name" argument specifies the "greedy" property. This is used in conjunction
       with the "pos" property. It declares that the argument will gobble up command-line
       arguments from "pos" to the end. So you can also specify the values of the "name" argument
       with "ARG1 ARG2 ...".

       Third, if you specify value that does not validate, an error will be produced.

        % ./hello --name-json '[]'
        ERROR 400: Invalid value for argument 'name': Length must be at least 1

        % ./hello --name Jimmy --name Sion --name Habil --gender x
        ERROR 400: Invalid value for argument 'gender': Must be one of ["m","f"]

       See Data::Sah for more about the schema syntax.

       Fourth, you return the result as a data structure (an array) instead of directly printing
       the result using "print()" or "say()". This is done to make your function more reusable
       outside the context of CLI. PC::Classic will format your data structure nicely using
       Data::Format::Pretty. Your array will be printed as a multicolumn ANSI table by default,
       on interactive mode. If you pipe the output of your program, you will by default get a
       simpler text output. This can be chosen explicitly using the "--format" common option.

        % ./hello Jimmy Sion Habil --format text; # will output pretty or simple depending on whether interactive
        % ./hello Jimmy Sion Habil --format text-simple; # will still output simple table even when interactive
        % ./hello Jimmy Sion Habil --format text-pretty; # will still output pretty table even when piped

   Short option aliases
       To add short options, you can use the "cmdline_aliases" property in the argument
       specification:

                name => {
                    ...
                    cmdline_aliases => { n => {} },
                },
                gender => {
                    ...
                    cmdline_aliases => { g => {} },
                },

       Now instead of:

        % ./hello --name Jimmy --name Sion --name Habil --gender m

       you can also use:

        % ./hello -n Jimmy -n Sion -n Habil -g m

   More on command-line option aliases
       You are not limited to one alias, or one letter:

                gender => {
                    ...
                    cmdline_aliases => { g => {}, sex => {} },
                },

       Now all these are equivalent:

        % ./hello ... --gender m
        % ./hello ... -g m
        % ./hello ... --sex m

       Suppose you want to create an alias "-m" to mean "--gender m" and "-f" to mean "--gender
       f" instead:

                gender => {
                    ...
                    cmdline_aliases => {
                        m => { schema=>'bool', code => sub {my $args=shift; $args->{gender} = 'm' } },
                        f => { schema=>'bool', code => sub {my $args=shift; $args->{gender} = 'f' } },
                    },
                },

       Now you can say:

        % ./hello Jimmy Sion -m
        Hello, Mr. Jimmy!
        Hello, Mr. Sion!

        % ./hello Nunung Misye -f
        Hello, Mrs. Nunung!
        Hello, Mrs. Misye!

   My function has some cmdline_aliases or cmdline_src defined but I want to change it!
       For example, your "f1" function metadata might look like this:

        package Package::F1;
        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{f1} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                foo => {
                    cmdline_aliases => { f=> {} },
                },
                bar => { ... },
                fee => { ... },
            },
        };
        sub f1 { ... }
        1;

       And your command-line script "f1":

        #!perl
        use Perinci::CmdLine;
        Perinci::CmdLine->new(url => '/Package/F1/f1')->run;

       Now you want to create a command-line script interface for this function, but with "-f" as
       an alias for "--fee" instead of "--foo". This is best done by modifying the metadata and
       creating a wrapper function to do this, e.g. your command-line script "f1" becomes:

        package main;
        use Perinci::CmdLine;
        use Package::F1;
        use Data::Clone;
        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{f1} = clone $Package::F1::SPEC{f1};
        delete $SPEC{f1}{args}{foo}{cmdline_aliases};
        $SPEC{f1}{args}{fee}{cmdline_aliases} = {f=>{}};
        *f1 = \&Package::F1::f1;
        Perinci::CmdLine->new(url => '/main/f1')->run;

       This also demonstrates the convenience of having the metadata as a data structure: you can
       manipulate it however you want. There is also a convenient helper function available in
       Perinci::Sub::Util when you want to create a modified subroutine based on another:

        package main;
        use Perinci::CmdLine;
        use Perinci::Sub::Util qw(gen_modified_sub);

        gen_modified_sub(
            output_name => 'f1',
            base_name   => 'Package::F1::f1',
            modify_args => {
                foo => sub { my $as = shift; delete $as->{cmdline_aliases}   },
                fee => sub { my $as = shift; $as->{cmdline_aliases} = {f=>{} },
            },
        );
        Perinci::CmdLine->new(url => '/main/f1')->run;

   Overriding common option
       Example: My function has argument named 'format', but it is blocked by common option
       '--format'!

       To add/remove/rename common options, see the documentation on "common_opts" attribute. In
       this case, you want:

        delete $cmd->common_opts->{format};
        #delete $cmd->common_opts->{format_options}; # you might also want this

       or perhaps rename it:

        $cmd->common_opts->{output_format} = $cmd->common_opts->{format};
        delete $cmd->common_opts->{format};

INPUT

   Accepting input from STDIN (or files)
       If you specify 'cmdline_src' to 'stdin' to a 'str' argument, the argument's value will be
       retrieved from standard input if not specified. Example:

        use Perinci::CmdLine;
        $SPEC{cmd} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                arg => {
                    schema => 'str*',
                    cmdline_src => 'stdin',
                },
            },
        };
        sub cmd {
            my %args = @_;
            [200, "OK", "arg is '$args{arg}'"];
        }
        Perinci::CmdLine->new(url=>'/main/cmd')->run;

       When run from command line:

        % cat file.txt
        This is content of file.txt
        % cat file.txt | cmd
        arg is 'This is content of file.txt'

       If your function argument is an array, array of lines will be provided to your function.

       Note that this will glob the whole content of input into memory. If you want streaming,
       see the next section.

   Accept streaming input
       To accept streaming input, you specify one or more of your arguments as "stream=>1". Also,
       these arguments need to specify their source either from file, STDIN, or STDIN/files, by
       setting "cmdline_src => file|stdin|stdin_or_files", because otherwise, just receiving
       value from command-line option like "--arg val" is not very interesting :-). You will
       receive your function argument as a coderef which you can call repeatedly until input is
       exhausted (at the point of which the coderef will return undef).

        $SPEC{perl_wc} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                input => {
                    schema => 'str*',
                    stream => 1,
                    cmdline_src => 'stdin_or_files',
                },
            },
        };
        sub perl_wc {
            my %args = @_;
            my $input = $args{input};

            my $chars = 0;
            my $words = 0;
            my $lines = 0;
            while (my $line = $input->()) {
                $lines++;
                $chars += length($line);
                chomp $line;
                my @w = split /[ \t]+/o, $line; $words += @w;
            }

            [200, "OK", {chars=>$chars, words=>$words, lines=>$lines}];
        }

       When run:

        % ls -l | perl_wc
        +-------+-------+
        | key   | value |
        +-------+-------+
        | chars |  1995 |
        | lines |    42 |
        | words |    61 |
        +-------+-------+

       Note: by default you will get string/text input line-by-line, and for binary ("buf")
       per-64k. This will be configurable in the future.

       If argument type is not simple (e.g. an array or hash), then JSON stream input will be
       assumed. This means, each line of input will be parsed as JSON.

OUTPUT

   Default output format
       TODO

   Removing borders
       By default, the text format produces bordered tables in interactive mode, e.g.  if you
       have this program:

        $SPEC{foo} = {v=>1.1};
        sub foo {
            [200, "OK", [[1,2], [3,4], [5,6]]];
        }
        use Perinci::CmdLine::Any;
        Perinci::CmdLine::Any->new(url => '/main/foo')->run;

       and you run it, you will have:

        % foo
        +---+---+
        | 1 | 2 |
        | 3 | 4 |
        | 5 | 6 |
        +---+---+

       and if you use "--format text-simple", only then it will become a tab-separated format:

        % foo --format text-simple
        1       2
        3       4
        5       6

       But if you don't like this formatting and want to default to simpler formatting by
       default, you can add "cmdline.default_format" attribute to your function metadata:

        $SPEC{foo} = {v=>1.1, 'cmdline.default_format' => 'text-simple'};

       Using this attribute, you can also default to JSON, and so on if you want.

       You can also do this on a per-result basis, by adding "cmdline.default_format" attribute
       in your result metadata, e.g.:

        sub foo {
            [200, "OK", [[1,2], [3,4], [5,6]], {'cmdline.default_format'=>'text-simple'}];
        }

   Streaming output
       To produce streaming output, set "stream=>1" in "result" spec in function metadata. Then
       in your function, return a subroutine reference that will allow caller to read data from.

        $SPEC{nat} = {
            v => 1.1,
            summary => 'Generate an infinite sequence of natural numbers',
            args => {},
            result => {
                stream => 1,
                schema => 'str*',
            },
        };
        sub nat {
            my $n = 1;
            [200, "OK", sub { $n++ }];
        }

       If result type is not simple (e.g. an array or hash), then each record will be encoded
       into JSON, to produce JSON stream.

   Adding support for new format
       TODO

   Pager
       TODO

SUBCOMMANDS

   Default subcommand
       A default subcommand can be defined. This subcommand is selected without user specifying
       it the first command-line argument. A real-world example of this is from
       File::Trash::Undoable. The trash-u command is by default selecting the "trash" subcommand:

        % trash-u file1 file2

       is equivalent to:

        % trash-u --cmd trash file1 file2

       To select another subcommand other than "trash", an explicit option is needed:

        % trash-u --list-contents ; # select the list_contents subcommand
        % trash-u --cmd empty     ; # select the empty subcommand

       This is done via something like:

        Perinci::CmdLine->new(
            subcommands => {
                trash => { url=>... },
                empty => { url=>... },
                list_contents => { url=>... },
            },
            default_subcommand => 'trash',
        )->run;

   Default subcommand (override via first command-line argument)
       There is also a choice to specify a default subcommand which is overrideable via first
       command-line argument. A real-world example of this is from App::GitUtils. If the gu
       command is specified without any argument:

        % gu

       then it is equivalent to:

        % gu info

       but user can specify other subcommands:

        % gu post-commit

       This is accomplished by setting:

        Perinci::CmdLine::Any->new(
            subcommands => {
                info        => {...},
                run_hooks   => {...},
                post_commit => {...},
                ...
            },
            default_subcommand => 'info',
            get_subcommand_from_arg => 2,
        )->run;

   Dynamic list of subcommands
       TODO

CONFIGURATION

   Basics
       In the function-centric world of Perinci::CmdLine, configuration is just another way to
       supply values to function arguments (before being potentially overridden by command-line
       arguments). Configuration files are written in IOD format, which is basically "INI with
       extra features". By default, configuration files are searched in "/etc" and then your home
       directory, with the name of program_name + ".conf". So if you have:

        # ~/prog.conf
        foo=1
        bar=2

       and:

        # prog
        #!perl
        use Perinci::CmdLine::Any;
        $SPEC{prog} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                foo => {},
                bar => {},
            },
        };
        sub prog {
            my %args = @_;
            [200, "OK", "foo is $args{foo}, while bar is $args{bar}"];
        }
        Perinci::CmdLine::Any->new(url=>'/main/prog')->run;

       When you run:

        % prog

       you'll get:

        foo is 1, while bar is 2

       Multiple configuration files will be merged, so if you have:

        # /etc/prog.conf
        foo=1
        bar=2

        # ~/prog.conf
        foo=10

       you'll get:

        foo is 10, while bar is 2

   Configuration profiles
       Configuration file can store more than one set of arguments, through specially named
       sections, called profiles:

        # ~/prog.conf
        foo=1
        bar=2

        [profile=p1]
        foo=21
        bar=22

        [profile=p2]
        foo=31
        bar=32

       Running the program:

        % prog
        foo is 1, while bar is 2
        % prog --config-profile p1
        foo is 21, while bar is 22
        % prog --config-profile p2
        foo is 31, while bar is 32

   Configuration with subcommands
       TODO

   Ignoring configuration files
       If you don't want to use any configuration files, you can use:

        % prog --noconfig ...

   DEBUGGING
       TODO

   REMOTE FUNCTION

COMPLETION

   Custom completion
       By default, Perinci::Sub::Complete's "complete_arg_val()" can employ some heuristics to
       complete argument values, e.g. from the "in" clause or "max" and "min":

        $SPEC{set_ticket_status} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                ticket_id => { ... },
                status => {
                    schema => ['str*', in => [qw/new open stalled resolved rejected/],
                },
            },
        }

       But if you want to supply custom completion, the Rinci::function specification allows
       specifying a "completion" property for your argument, for example:

        use Complete::Util qw(complete_array_elem);
        $SPEC{del_user} = {
            v => 1.1,
            args => {
                username => {
                    schema => 'str*',
                    req => 1,
                    pos => 0,
                    completion => sub {
                        my %args = @_;

                        # get list of users from database or whatever
                        my @users = ...;
                        complete_array_elem(array=>\@users, word=>$args{word});
                    },
                },
                ...
            },
        };

       You can use completion your command-line program:

        % del-user --username <tab>
        % del-user <tab> ; # since the 'username' argument has pos=0

   My custom completion does not work, how do I debug it?
       Completion works by the shell invoking our (the same) program with "COMP_LINE" and
       "COMP_POINT" environment variables. You can do something like this to see debugging
       information:

        % COMP_LINE='myprog --arg x' COMP_POINT=13 PERL5OPT=-MLog::Any::App TRACE=1 myprog --arg x

       XXX mention about "testcomp".

   I18N

OTHERS

   Modifying common options
   Customizing help message
   Shell tab completion
   Dealing with binary data
   (Client) (Server) Dealing with binary data
       The choice as JSON as the network transport protocol for Riap (because it is the lowest
       common denominator across languages like JavaScript, PHP, Python, Ruby, Perl) makes
       dealing with binary data requires an extra step or two. The Perinci::CmdLine framework are
       equipped with some features to make this simpler and more convenient.

       First, to make a function that accepts binary data (in its arguments), you need to specify
       the argument type as "buf". To return binary data as result, you need to specify
       "result"'s schema type as "buf". Example:

        package MyLib;
        our %SPEC;
        $SPEC{gzip} = {
            v => 1.1,
            summary => 'Gzip some data',
            args => {
                data => {
                    summary => 'Data to compress',
                    schema => 'buf*',
                    req => 1,
                },
            },
        };
        sub gzip {
            require IO::Compress::Gzip;

            my %args = @_;
            my $compressed;
            IO::Compress::Gzip::gzip($args{data} => $compressed)
                or return [500, "Compression failed"];
            [200, "OK", $compressed];
        }

       If you use this function in Perinci::CmdLine, you will get the command-line option
       "--data-base64" in addition to the usual "--data". With "--data-base64", you can specify
       binary data including NUL bytes from the command-line.

       If you specify the argument as accepting data from stdin or files like this:

            args => {
                data => {
                    summary => 'Data to compress',
                    schema => 'buf*',
                    req => 1,
                    cmdline_src => 'stdin_or_files',
                },
            },

       you can pass binary data, e.g.:

        % yourprog < /some/bindata

       Perinci::CmdLine will take care of encoding this data to network server when you specify
       "riap_version" attribute to 1.2. So this process is transparent to you.

       When outputing binary result, in the "text" output formats, Perinci::CmdLine will also
       print the binary result from server as-is without any newline added.  So you can pipe
       binary data to files/processes unmodified.

SEE ALSO

       Perinci::CmdLine::Manual

HOMEPAGE

       Please visit the project's homepage at <https://metacpan.org/release/Perinci-CmdLine>.

SOURCE

       Source repository is at <https://github.com/perlancar/perl-Perinci-CmdLine>.

BUGS

       Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Perinci-CmdLine>

       When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing
       test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.

AUTHOR

       perlancar <perlancar@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       This software is copyright (c) 2015 by perlancar@cpan.org.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
       the Perl 5 programming language system itself.