Audit for existence and version number of cli tools.
Project description
cli_tool_audit
Verify that a list of cli tools are available. Like a requirements.txt for cli tools, but without an installer component. Intended to work with cli tools regardless to how they were installed, e.g. via pipx, npm, etc.
If 100% of your tools are installed by the same package manager that can install tools from a list with desired versions, then you don't need this tool.
Some useful scenarios:
- Validating a developer's workstation instead of an "install everything" script.
-
- Validating a CI environment and failing the build when configuration has drifted
- Validating an end user's environment before running an app where you can't install all the dependencies for them.
How it works
You declare a list of cli commands and version ranges.
The tool will run tool --version
for each tool and make best efforts to parse the result and compare it to the
desired version range.
The tool then can either output a report with warnings or signal failure if something is missing, the wrong version or can't be determined.
There is no universal method for getting a version number from a CLI tool, nor is there a universal orderable version number system, so the outcome of many check may be limited to an existence check or exact version number check.
Here is an example run.
❯ cli_tool_audit audit
+--------+--------------------------+--------+----------+------------+----------+
| Tool | Found | Parsed | Desired | Status | Modified |
+--------+--------------------------+--------+----------+------------+----------+
| java | openjdk version "17.0.6" | 17.0.6 | >=17.0.6 | Compatible | 01/18/23 |
| make | GNU Make 3.81 | 3.81.0 | >=3.81 | Compatible | 11/24/06 |
| | Copyright ( | | | | |
| python | Python 3.11.1 | 3.11.1 | >=3.11.1 | Compatible | 01/13/24 |
+--------+--------------------------+--------+----------+------------+----------+
Installation
You will need to install it to your virtual environment if tools you are looking for are in your virtual environment. If all the tools are global then you can pipx install. It is on the roadmap to support a pipx install for all scenarios.
pipx install cli-tool-audit
Usage
Generate minimal config for a few tools.
cli_tool_audit freeze python java make rustc
Copy result of above into your pyproject.toml. Edit as needed, especially if you don't want snapshot versioning, which is probably too strict.
Audit the environment with the current configuration.
cli_tool_audit audit
All commands
❯ cli_tool_audit --help
usage: cli_tool_audit [-h] [-V] [--verbose] [--demo {pipx,venv,npm}]
{interactive,freeze,audit,single,read,create,update,delete} ...
Audit for existence and version number of cli tools.
positional arguments:
{interactive,freeze,audit,single,read,create,update,delete}
Subcommands.
interactive Interactively edit configuration
freeze Freeze the versions of specified tools
audit Audit environment with current configuration
single Audit one tool without configuration file
read Read and list all tool configurations
create Create a new tool configuration
update Update an existing tool configuration
delete Delete a tool configuration
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-V, --version Show program's version number and exit.
--verbose verbose output
--demo {pipx,venv,npm}
Demo for values of npm, pipx or venv
Examples:
# Audit and report using pyproject.toml
cli_tool_audit audit
# Generate config for snapshots
cli_tool_audit freeze python java make rustc
Note. If you use the create/update commands and specify the --version
switch, it must have an equal sign.
Here is how to generate a freeze, a list of current versions by snapshot, for a lis tof tools. All tools will be
check with --version
unless they are well known.
cli_tool_audit freeze python java make rustc
This is for programmatic usage.
import cli_tool_audit
print(cli_tool_audit.validate(file_path="pyproject.toml"))
The configuration file lists the tools you expect how hints on how detect the version.
[tool.cli-tools]
# Typical example
pipx = { version = ">=1.0.0", version_switch = "--version" }
# Restrict to specific OS
brew = { version = ">=0.1.0", if_os="darwin" }
# Pin to a snapshot of the output of `poetry --version`
poetry = {version = "Poetry (version 1.5.1)", schema="snapshot"}
# Don't attempt to run `notepad --version`, just check if it is on the path
notepad = { schema = "existence" }
# Any version.
vulture = { version = "*" }
# Supports ^ and ~ version ranges.
shellcheck = { version = "^0.8.0" }
# Uses semver's compatibility logic, which is not the same as an exact match.
rustc = { version = "1.67.0" }
See semver3 for compatibility logic for versions without operators/symbols.
See poetry for version range specifiers.
See stackoverflow for os names.
Demos
Demos will discover a bunch of executables as installed in the local virtual environment, installed by pipx or installed by npm. It will then assume that we want the current or any version and run an audit. Since we know these files already exist, the failures are centered on failing to execute, failing to guess the version switch, failure to parse the switch or the tool's version switch returning a version incompatible to what the package manager reports.
cli_tool_audit --demo=pipx --verbose
cli_tool_audit --demo=venv --verbose
cli_tool_audit --demo=npm --verbose
How does this relate to package managers, e.g. apt, pipx, npm, choco, etc.
Package managers do far more than check for the existence of a tool. They will install it, at the desired version and make sure that tools and their transitive dependencies are compatible.
What they can't do is verify what other package managers have done.
This captures your desired tools, versions and guarantees you have them by installing them.
# list everything available on one machine
pip freeze>requirements.txt
# install it on another.
pip install -r requirements.txt
This is the same thing, but for windows and .net centric apps.
choco export requirements.txt
choco install -y requirements.txt
There are similar patterns, for apt, brew, npm, and so on.
It would be foolish to try to create a package manager that supports other package managers, so features in that vein are out of scope.
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