argparse: command line parser for Erlang

A simple framework to create complex CLI. Inspired by Python argparse.

Follows conventions of Unix Utility Argument Syntax.

argparse [-abcDxyz][-p arg][operand]

Argument parser

Converts list of strings (command line) into an argument map,and a command path; see argparse reference for detailed description.

CLI Framework

Make a step beyond parser, and export existing Erlang functions: cli reference

Basic example

CLI framework is naturally suitable for building small escript-based apps:

#!/usr/bin/env escript

-export([main/1, cli/0, cli/1]).
-behaviour(cli).
-mode(compile). %% evaluated module cannot contain callbacks

main(Args) ->
    cli:run(Args, #{progname => "simple").

cli() ->
    #{arguments => [
        #{name => force, short => $f, type => boolean, default => false},
        #{name => recursive, short => $r, type => boolean, default => false},
        #{name => dir}
    ]}.

cli(#{force := Force, recursive := Recursive, dir := Dir}) ->
    io:format("Removing ~s (force ~s, recursive: ~s)~n",
        [Dir, Force, Recursive]).

The example above does not have sub-commands, and implements optional cli/1 callback, that serves as an entry point with parsed arguments. Help options are added automatically:

$ ./erm --help
usage: erm [-fr] <dir>

Optional arguments:
  dir
  -r  recursive, [false]
  -f  force, [false]

Calc: CLI with multiple commands

Calculator implements several commands, with sub-commands available. Full source code here: doc/examples/escript/calc

Command definitions:

cli() ->
    #{
        commands => #{
            "sum" => #{
                arguments => [
                    #{name => num, nargs => nonempty_list, type => int, help => "Numbers to sum"}
                ]
            },
            "math" => #{
                commands => #{
                    "sin" => #{handler => {math, sin, undefined}},
                    "cos" => #{},
                    "tan" => #{handler => {math, tan, undefined}}
                },
                arguments => [
                    #{name => in, type => float, help => "Input value"}
                ]
            },
            "mul" => #{
                arguments => [
                    #{name => left, type => int},
                    #{name => right, type => int}
                ]
            }
        }
    }.

Calculator provides "sum" command that prints a sum of integer numbers:

$ ./calc sum 1 2 3
6

Math sub-commands provide trigonometric functions:

$ ./calc math cos 1.4
0.16996714290024104
$ ./calc math sin 1.4
0.9854497299884601

Complex applications

CLI framework is capable of handling releases containing hundreds of modules implementing cli behaviour. Commands may be exported from multiple modules and applications. cli framework makes best efforts to merge commands exported, format usage output and error messages.

See example: doc/examples/multi

This example contains two modules, multi_math.erl and multi_string.erl.

Use rebar3 escriptize to build the application. Try various commands, e.g. ./multi math cos 1.0, or ./multi string lexemes 1+2+3+4 -s + to get a feeling!

Argument parser alone

It is possible to use argument parser alone, without CLI framework:

#!/usr/bin/env escript

main(Args) ->
    #{force := Force, recursive := Recursive, dir := Dir} =
        argparse:parse(Args, cli()),
    io:format("Removing ~s (force: ~s, recursive: ~s)~n",
        [Dir, Force, Recursive]).

cli() ->
    #{arguments => [
        #{name => force, short => $f, type => boolean, default => false},
        #{name => recursive, short => $r, type => boolean, default => false},
        #{name => dir}
    ]}.

Help and usage information

CLI framework automatically prints usage, if command line parser reports an error. An attempt is made to guess most relevant command.

Build

This project requires OTP-22 or above. Simple integration is available via Hex and rebar3.

{deps, [argparse]}.

Expected features

To be considered after 1.0.0:

Changelog

Version 0.1.0: