Shellfish

Shellfish is a library to include interactive shells within a program. This may be useful when building terminal application where a persistent state is needed, so a basic cli is not enough; but a full tui is over the scope of the project. Shellfish provides a middle way, allowing interactive command editing whilst saving a state that all commands are given access to.

The shell

By default the shell contains only 3 built-in commands:

The last two are identical, only the names differ.

When a command is added by the user (see bellow) the help is automatically generated and displayed. Keep in mind this help should be kept rather short, and any additional help should be through a dedicated help option.

Features

The following features are available: * rustyline, for better input. * app, for command line argument parsing. * async, for async. This can be coupled with tokio or async_std * clap, for integration with the clap library.

Example

The following code creates a basic shell, with the added commands: * greet, greets the user. * echo, echoes the input. * count, increments a counter. * cat, it is cat.

Also, if run with arguments than the shell is run non-interactvely.

```rust use shellfish::{app, Command, Shell}; use std::convert::TryInto; use std::error::Error; use std::fmt; use std::ops::AddAssign; use async_std::prelude::*; use std::pin::Pin;

extern crate async_std;

[macro_use]

extern crate shellfish;

[async_std::main]

async fn main() -> Result<(), Box> { // Define a shell let mut shell = Shell::newasync(0u64, "<[Shellfish Example]>-$ ");

// Add some commands
shell.commands.insert(
    "greet",
    Command::new("greets you.".to_string(), greet),
);

shell.commands.insert(
    "echo",
    Command::new("prints the input.".to_string(), echo),
);

shell.commands.insert(
    "count",
    Command::new("increments a counter.".to_string(), count),
);

shell.commands.insert(
    "cat",
    Command::new_async(
        "Displays a plaintext file.".to_string(),
        async_fn!(u64, cat)
    ).await,
);

// Check if we have > 2 args, if so no need for interactive shell
let mut args = std::env::args();
if args.nth(1).is_some() {
    // Create the app from the shell.
    let mut app: app::App<u64, app::DefaultAsyncCLIHandler> =
        app::App::try_from_async(shell)?;

    // Set the binary name
    app.handler.proj_name = Some("shellfish-example".to_string());
    app.load_cache()?;

    // Run it
    app.run_args_async().await?;
} else {
    // Run the shell
    shell.run_async().await?;
}
Ok(())

}

/// Greets the user fn greet(state: &mut u64, args: Vec) -> Result<(), Box> { let arg = args.get(1).okor_else(|| Box::new(GreetingError))?; println!("Greetings {}, my good friend.", arg); Ok(()) }

/// Echos the input fn echo(_state: &mut u64, args: Vec) -> Result<(), Box> { let mut args = args.iter(); args.next(); for arg in args { print!("{} ", arg); } println!(); Ok(()) }

/// Acts as a counter fn count(state: &mut u64, args: Vec) -> Result<(), Box> { state.addassign(1); println!("You have used this counter {} times", state); Ok(()) }

/// Asynchronously reads a file async fn cat(state: &mut u64, args: Vec) -> Result<(), Box> { use asyncstd::fs;

if let Some(file) = args.get(1) {
    let mut contents = String::new();
    let mut file = fs::File::open(file).await?;
    file.read_to_string(&mut contents).await?;
    println!("{}", contents);
}

Ok(())

}

/// Greeting error

[derive(Debug)]

pub struct GreetingError;

impl fmt::Display for GreetingError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { write!(f, "No name specified") } }

impl Error for GreetingError {} ```

Clap support

clap allows for much cleaner and easier handling of command line arguments, as can be seen below:

```rust /// Simple command to greet a person /// /// This command will greet the person based of a multitide /// of option flags, see below.

[derive(Parser, Debug)]

[clap(author, version, about)]

struct Args { /// Name of the person to greet name: String,

/// Age of the person to greet
#[clap(short, long)]
age: Option<u8>,

/// Whether to be formal or note
#[clap(short, long)]
formal: bool,

}

fn main() -> Result<(), Box> { // Define a shell let mut shell = Shell::new((), "<[Shellfish CLAP Example]>-$ "); shell.commands.insert("greet", clap_command!((), Args, greet)); shell.run()?;

Ok(())

}

fn greet(state: &mut (), args: Args) -> Result<(), Box> { //-- snip --// } ```

For larger projects it is recommended to use clap to cut down on boiler-plait.