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Wrap up your bash scripts into a modern CLI today. Graduate to a full-blown golang app tomorrow.

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Variant

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Build modern command line applications in YAML and any scripting language of your choice, and eventually enhance it with golang

CircleCI

Integrations: GitHub Actions

$ cat <<EOF | variant init mycmd
tasks:
  hello:
   parameters:
   - name: target
   script: |
     echo Hello {{ get "target" }}!
EOF
#!/usr/bin/env variant

tasks:
  hello:
   parameters:
   - name: target
   script: |
     echo Hello {{ get "target" }}!
$ ./mycmd hello --target variant
mycmd ≫ starting task hello
Hello variant!

You can then build a single go executable of your command and finally enhance it with golang code.

Rationale

Automating DevOps workflows is difficult because it often involve multiple executables like shell/ruby/perl/etc scripts and commands.

Because those executables vary in:

  • Their quality; from scripts written in a day, intended as a one-off command, but which wind up sticking around for months or even years, to serious commands which are well-designed and written in richer programming languages with adequate tests.
  • Their interface; some passing parameters via environment variables, others having application specific command-line flags, or configuration files.

Writing a single tool which

  • wires up all the executables
  • re-implements all the things currently done in various tools

is time-consuming.

Install

To install the latest version, run:

curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/variantdev/get/master/get | INSTALL_TO=/usr/local/bin sh

To install a specific version, run with the VERSION shell variable:

curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/variantdev/get/master/get | INSTALL_TO=/usr/local/bin VERSION=v0.35.1 sh

Getting Started

Create a yaml file named myfirstcmd containing:

#!/usr/bin/env variant

tasks:
  bar:
    script: |
      echo "dude"
  foo:
    parameters:
    - name: bar
      type: string
      description: "the bar"
    - name: environment
      type: string
      default: "heaven"
    script: |
      echo "Hello {{ get "bar" }} you are in the {{ get "environment" }}"

Now run your command by:

$ chmod +x ./myfirstcmd
$ ./myfirstcmd
Usage:
  myfirstcmd [command]

Available Commands:
  bar
  env         Print currently selected environment
  foo
  help        Help about any command
  ls          test
  version     Print the version number of this command

Flags:
  -c, --config-file string   Path to config file
  -h, --help                 help for myfirstcmd
      --logtostderr          write log messages to stderr (default true)
  -o, --output string        Output format. One of: json|text|bunyan (default "text")
  -v, --verbose              verbose output

Use "myfirstcmd [command] --help" for more information about a command.

Each task in the myfirstcmd is given a sub-command. Run myfirstcmd foo to run the task named foo:

$ ./myfirstcmd foo
Hello dude you are in the heaven

Look at the substring dude contained in the output above. The value dude is coming from the the parameter bar of the task foo. As we didn't specify the value for the parameter, variant automatically runs the task bar to fulfill it.

To confirm that the task bar is emitting the value dude, try running it:

$ ./myfirstcmd bar
INFO[0000] ≫ sh -c echo "dude"
dude

To specify the value, use the corresponding command-line flag automatically created and named after the parameter bar:

$ ./myfirstcmd foo --bar=folk
Hello folk you are in the heaven

Alternatively, you can source the value from a YAML file.

Create myfirstcmd.yaml containing:

foo:
  bar: variant

Now your task sources variant as the value for the parameter:

$ ./myfirstcmd foo
Hello variant you are in the heaven

Releasing a variant-made command

While Variant makes it easy for you to develop a modern CLI without recompiling, it is able to produce a single executable binary of your command.

Example: examples/hello

Write a small shell script that wraps your variant command into a simple golang program:

$ cat <<EOF > main.go
package main
import "github.com/mumoshu/variant/cmd"
func main() {
    cmd.YAML(\`
$(cat yourcmd)
\`)
}
EOF

$ cat <<EOF > Gopkg.toml
[[constraint]]
  name = "github.com/mumoshu/variant"
  version = "v0.24.0"
EOF

And then build with the standard golang toolchain:

$ dep ensure
$ go build -o dist/yourcmd .
$ ./mycli --target variant
Hello variant!

It is recommended to version-control the produced Gopkg.toml and Gopkg.lock because it is just more straight-forward than managing embedded version of em in the shell snippet.

It is NOT recommended to version-control main.go. One of the benefits of Variant is you don't need to recompile while developing. So it is your Variant command written in YAML that should be version-controlled, rather than main.go which is necessary only while releasing.

How it works

Variant is a framework to build a CLI application which becomes the single entry point to your DevOps workflows.

It consists of:

  • YAML-based DSL
    • to define a CLI app's commands, inputs
    • which allows splitting commands into separate source files, decoupled from each others
  • Ways to configure your apps written using Variant via:
    • defaults
    • environment variables
    • command-line parameters
    • application specific configuration files
    • environment specific configuration files
  • DI container
    • to implicitly inject required inputs to a commands from configuration files or outputs from another commands
    • to explicit inject inputs to commands and its dependencies via command-line parameters

Features

  • Default Command
  • Task grouping
  • Dependency injection

Default Command

The top-level script is executed whenever there's no sub-task that matches the provided command-line arguments.

In the below example, ./mycmd bar runs the task bar, while ./mycmd foo bar fails with an "unknown command" error:

tasks:
  bar:
    script: |
      echo bar

While in the next example, ./mycmd foo bar runs the root task(=the top-level script):

script: |
  echo {{ index .args 0 }}


tasks:
  bar:
    script: |
       echo bar

Dependency injection

An input named myinput for the task mytask can be one of follows, in order of precedence:

  • Value of the command-line option --myinput
  • Value of the configuration variable mytask.myinput
    • from the environment specific config file: config/environments/<environment name>.yaml
    • from the common config file: <command name>.yaml(normally var.yaml)
  • Output of the task myinput

Environments

You can switch environment (or context) in which a task is executed by running var env set <env name>.

$ var env set dev
$ var test
#=> reads inputs from var.yaml + config/environments/dev.yaml

$ var env set prod
$ var test
#=> reads inputs from var.yaml + config/environments/prod.yaml

Environment Variables

variant takes a few envvars for configuration.

VARIANT_RUN: Additional command-line arguments to be added to the actual args. For instance, VARIANT_RUN="bar baz" variant foo --color=false is equivalent to variant foo --color=false bar baz.

VARIANT_RUN_TRIM_PREFIX: Prefix to be removed from the VARIANT_RUN. For intance, VARIANT_RUN="/myslashcmd --foo=bar" variant mycmd is equivalent to variant mycmd --foo=bar.

VARIANT_GITHUB_COMMENT(_ON_[SUCCESS|FAILURE]): (GitHub Actions v2 only) When this variables is set to a non-empty value, variant tries to obtain the "source" GitHub issue/pull request that triggered the run, and sends a issue/pr comment containing the result. Great for giving feedbacks to whom run the variant task from e.g. GitHub comment.

FAQ

Please see the collection of answered questions in our GitHub issues labeled "question".

Integrations and useful companion tools

  • Use liujianping/job for timeouts, retries, scheduled runs, etc.
  • Use davidovich/summon to bundle assets into your variant command by using the golang module system and gobin

Alternatives

Interesting Readings

Future Goals

  • Runners to run tasks in places other than the host running your Variant app
    • Docker
    • Kubernetes
    • etc
  • Tools/instructions to package your Variant app for easier distribution
    • Single docker image containing
      • all the scripts written directly in the yaml
      • maybe all the scripts referenced from scripts in the yaml
      • maybe all the commands run via the host runner
  • Integration with job queues
    • to ensure your tasks are run reliably, at-least-once, tolerating temporary failures

License

Apache License 2.0

Attribution

We use:

  • semtag for automated semver tagging. I greatly appreciate the author(pnikosis)'s effort on creating it and their kindness to share it!

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Wrap up your bash scripts into a modern CLI today. Graduate to a full-blown golang app tomorrow.

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