A library to create a command-line program from a function
Project description
autocommand
A library to automatically generate and run simple argparse parsers from function signatures.
Installation
Autocommand is installed via pip:
$ pip install autocommand
Usage
Autocommand turns a function into a command-line program. It converts the function’s parameter signature into command-line arguments, and automatically runs the function if the module was called as __main__. In effect, it lets your create a smart main function.
from autocommand import autocommand
# This program takes exactly one argument and echos it.
@autocommand(__name__)
def echo(thing):
print(thing)
$ python echo.py hello hello $ python echo.py -h usage: echo [-h] thing positional arguments: thing optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit $ python echo.py hello world # too many arguments usage: echo.py [-h] thing echo.py: error: unrecognized arguments: world
As you can see, autocommand converts the signature of the function into an argument spec. When you run the file as a program, autocommand collects the command-line arguments and turns them into function arguments. The function is executed with these arguments, and then the program exits with the return value of the function, via sys.exit. Autocommand also automatically creates a usage message, which can be invoked with -h or --help, and automatically prints an error message when provided with invalid arguments.
Types
You can use a type annotation to give an argument a type. Any type (or in fact any callable) that returns an object when given a string argument can be used, though there are a few special cases that are described later.
@autocommand(__name__)
def net_client(host, port: int):
...
Autocommand will catch TypeErrors raised by the type during argument parsing, so you can supply a callable and do some basic argument validation as well.
Trailing Arguments
You can add a *args parameter to your function to give it trailing arguments. The command will collect 0 or more trailing arguments and supply them to args as a tuple. If a type annotation is supplied, the type is applied to each argument.
#Write the contents of each file, one by one
@autocommand(__name__)
def cat(*files):
for filename in files:
with open(filename) as file:
for line in file:
print(line.rstrip())
$ python cat.py -h usage: ipython [-h] [file [file ...]] positional arguments: file optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit
Options
To create --option switches, just assign a default. Autocommand will automatically create --long and -short switches.
@autocommand(__name__)
def do_with_config(argument, config='~/foo.conf'):
pass
$ python example.py -h usage: example.py [-h] [-c CONFIG] argument positional arguments: argument optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -c CONFIG, --config CONFIG
The option’s type is automatically deduced from the default, unless one is explicitly given in an annotation:
@autocommand(__name__)
def http_connect(host, port=80):
print('{}:{}'.format(host, port))
$ python http.py -h usage: http.py [-h] [-p PORT] host positional arguments: host optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -p PORT, --port PORT $ python http.py localhost localhost:80 $ python http.py localhost -p 8080 localhost:8080 $ python http.py localhost -p blah usage: http.py [-h] [-p PORT] host http.py: error: argument -p/--port: invalid int value: 'blah'
None
If an option is given a default value of None, it reads in a value as normal, but supplies None if the option isn’t provided.
Switches
If an argument is given a default value of True or False, or given an explicit bool type, it becomes an option switch.
@autocommand(__name__)
def example(verbose=False, quiet=False):
pass
$ python example.py -h usage: example.py [-h] [-v] [-q] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose -q, --quiet
Autocommand attempts to do the “correct thing” in these cases- if the default is True, then supplying the switch makes the argument False; if the type is bool and the default is some other True value, then supplying the switch makes the argument False, while not supplying the switch makes the argument the default value.
Autocommand also supports the creation of switch inverters. Pass add_nos=True to autocommand to enable this.
@autocommand(__name__, add_nos=True)
def example(verbose=False):
pass
$ python example.py -h usage: ipython [-h] [-v] [--no-verbose] optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose --no-verbose
Using the –no- version of a switch will pass the opposite value in as a function argument. If multiple switches are present, the last one takes precedence.
Files
If the default value is a file object, such as sys.stdout, then autocommand just looks for a string, for a file path. It doesn’t do any special checking on the string, though (such as checking if the file exists); it’s better to let the client decide how to handle errors in this case. Instead, it provides a special context manager called smart_open, which behaves exactly like open if a filename or other openable type is provided, but also lets you use already open files:
from autocommand import autocommand, smart_open
import sys
# Write the contents of stdin, or a file, to stdout
@autocommand(__name__)
def write_out(infile=sys.stdin):
with smart_open(infile) as f:
for line in f:
print(line.rstrip())
# If a file was opened, it is closed here. If it was just stdin, it is untouched.
$ echo "Hello World!" | python write_out.py | tee hello.txt Hello World! $ python write_out.py --infile hello.txt Hello World!
Descriptions and docstrings
The autocommand decorator accepts description and epilog kwargs, corresponding to the description and epilog of the ArgumentParser. If no description is given, but the decorated function has a docstring, then it is taken as the description for the ArgumentParser. You can also provide both the description and epilog in the docstring by splitting it into two sections with 4 or more - characters.
@autocommand(__name__)
def copy(infile=sys.stdin, outfile=sys.stdout):
'''
Copy an the contents of a file (or stdin) to another file (or stdout)
----------
Some extra documentation in the epilog
'''
with smart_open(infile) as istr:
with smart_open(outfile, 'w') as ostr:
for line in istr:
ostr.write(line)
$ python copy.py -h usage: copy.py [-h] [-i INFILE] [-o OUTFILE] Copy an the contents of a file (or stdin) to another file (or stdout) optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -i INFILE, --infile INFILE -o OUTFILE, --outfile OUTFILE Some extra documentation in the epilog $ echo "Hello World" | python copy.py --outfile hello.txt $ python copy.py --infile hello.txt --outfile hello2.txt $ python copy.py --infile hello2.txt Hello World
Parameter descriptions
You can also attach description text to individual parameters in the annotation. To attach both a type and a description, supply them both in any order in a tuple
@autocommand(__name__)
def copy_net(
infile: 'The name of the file to send',
host: 'The host to send the file to',
port: (int, 'The port to connect to')):
'''
Copy a file over raw TCP to a remote destination.
'''
# Left as an exercise to the reader
Decorators and wrappers
Autocommand automatically follows wrapper chains created by @functools.wraps. This means that you can apply other wrapping decorators to your main function, and autocommand will still correctly detect the signature.
from functools import wraps
from autocommand import autocommand
def print_yielded(func):
'''
Convert a generator into a function that prints all yielded elements
'''
@wraps(func)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
for thing in func(*args, **kwargs):
print(thing)
return wrapper
@autocommand(__name__,
description= 'Print all the values from START to STOP, inclusive, in steps of STEP',
epilog= 'STOP and STEP default to 1')
@print_yielded
def seq(stop, start=1, step=1):
for i in range(start, stop + 1, step):
yield i
$ seq.py -h usage: seq.py [-h] [-s START] [-S STEP] stop Print all the values from START to STOP, inclusive, in steps of STEP positional arguments: stop optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -s START, --start START -S STEP, --step STEP STOP and STEP default to 1
Even though autocommand is being applied to the wrapper returned by print_yielded, it still retreives the signature of the underlying seq function to create the argument parsing.
Custom Parser
While autocommand’s automatic parser generator is a powerful convenience, it doesn’t cover all of the different features that argparse provides. If you need these features, you can provide your own parser as a kwarg to autocommand:
from argparse import ArgumentParser
from autocommand import autocommand
parser = ArgumentParser()
# autocommand can't do optional positonal parameters
parser.add_argument('arg', nargs='?')
# or mutually exclusive options
group = parser.add_mutually_exclusive_group()
group.add_argument('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true')
group.add_argument('-q', '--quiet', action='store_true')
@autocommand(__name__, parser=parser)
def main(arg, verbose, quiet):
print(arg, verbose, quiet)
$ python parser.py -h usage: write_file.py [-h] [-v | -q] [arg] positional arguments: arg optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit -v, --verbose -q, --quiet $ python parser.py None False False $ python parser.py hello hello False False $ python parser.py -v None True False $ python parser.py -q None False True $ python parser.py -vq usage: parser.py [-h] [-v | -q] [arg] parser.py: error: argument -q/--quiet: not allowed with argument -v/--verbose
Any parser should work fine, so long as each of the parser’s arguments has a corresponding parameter in the decorated main function. The order of parameters doesn’t matter, as long as they are all present. Note that when using a custom parser, autocommand doesn’t modify the parser or the retrieved arguments. This means that no description/epilog will be added, and the function’s type annotations and defaults (if present) will be ignored.
Testing and Library use
The decorated function is only called and exited from if the first argument to autocommand is '__main__' or True. If it is neither of these values, or no argument is given, then a new main function is created by the decorator. This function has the signature main(argv=None), and is intended to be called with arguments as if via main(sys.argv[1:]). The function has the attributes parser and main, which are the generated ArgumentParser and the original main function that was decorated. This is to facilitate testing and library use of your main. Calling the function triggers a parse_args() with the supplied arguments, and returns the result of the main function. Note that, while it returns instead of calling sys.exit, the parse_args() function will raise a SystemExit in the event of a parsing error or -h/--help argument.
@autocommand()
def test_prog(arg1, arg2: int, quiet=False, verbose=False):
if not quiet:
print(arg1, arg2)
if verbose:
print("LOUD NOISES")
return 0
print(test_prog(['-v', 'hello', '80']))
$ python test_prog.py hello 80 LOUD NOISES 0
If the function is called with no arguments, sys.argv[1:] is used. This is to allow the autocommand function to be used as a setuptools entry point.
Exceptions and limitations
There are a few possible exceptions that autocommand can raise. All of them derive from autocommand.AutocommandError.
If an invalid annotation is given (that is, it isn’t a type, str, (type, str), or (str, type), an AnnotationError is raised. The type may be any callable, as described in the Types section.
If the function has a **kwargs parameter, a KWargError is raised.
If, somehow, the function has a positional-only parameter, a PositionalArgError is raised. This means that the argument doesn’t have a name, which is currently not possible with a plain def or lambda, though many built-in functions have this kind of parameter.
There are a few argparse features that are not supported by autocommand.
It isn’t possible to have an optional positional argument (as opposed to a --option). POSIX thinks this is bad form anyway.
It isn’t possible to have mutually exclusive arguments or options
It isn’t possible to have subcommands or subparsers, though I’m working on a few solutions involving classes or nested function definitions to allow this.
Development
Autocommand cannot be important from the project root; this is to enforce separation of concerns and prevent accidental importing of setup.py or tests. To develop, install the project in editable mode:
$ python setup.py develop
This will create a link to the source files in the deployment directory, so that any source changes are reflected when it is imported.
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