Cobra provides its own program that will create your application and add any commands you want. It's the easiest way to incorporate Cobra into your application.
Install the cobra generator with the command go install github.com/spf13/cobra-cli@latest
.
Go will automatically install it in your $GOPATH/bin
directory which should be in your $PATH.
Once installed you should have the cobra-cli
command available. Confirm by typing cobra-cli
at a
command line.
There are only two operations currently supported by the Cobra generator:
The cobra-cli init [app]
command will create your initial application code
for you. It is a very powerful application that will populate your program with
the right structure so you can immediately enjoy all the benefits of Cobra.
It can also apply the license you specify to your application.
With the introduction of Go modules, the Cobra generator has been simplified to take advantage of modules. The Cobra generator works from within a Go module.
If you already have a module, skip this step.
If you want to initialize a new Go module:
- Create a new directory
cd
into that directory- run
go mod init <MODNAME>
e.g.
cd $HOME/code
mkdir myapp
cd myapp
go mod init github.com/spf13/myapp
From within a Go module run cobra-cli init
. This will create a new barebones project
for you to edit.
You should be able to run your new application immediately. Try it with
go run main.go
.
You will want to open up and edit 'cmd/root.go' and provide your own description and logic.
e.g.
cd $HOME/code/myapp
cobra init
go run main.go
Cobra init can also be run from a subdirectory such as how the cobra generator itself is organized. This is useful if you want to keep your application code separate from your library code.
You can provide it your author name with the --author
flag.
e.g. cobra-cli init --author "Steve Francia [email protected]"
You can provide a license to use with --license
e.g. cobra-cli init --license apache
Use the --viper
flag to automatically setup viper
Viper is a companion to Cobra intended to provide easy handling of environment variables and config files and seamlessly connecting them to the application flags.
Once a cobra application is initialized you can continue to use the Cobra generator to
add additional commands to your application. The command to do this is cobra-cli add
.
Let's say you created an app and you wanted the following commands for it:
- app serve
- app config
- app config create
In your project directory (where your main.go file is) you would run the following:
cobra-cli add serve
cobra-cli add config
cobra-cli add create -p 'configCmd'
cobra-cli add
supports all the same optional flags as cobra-cli init
does (described above).
You'll notice that this final command has a -p
flag. This is used to assign a
parent command to the newly added command. In this case, we want to assign the
"create" command to the "config" command. All commands have a default parent of rootCmd if not specified.
By default cobra-cli
will append Cmd
to the name provided and uses this name for the internal variable name. When specifying a parent, be sure to match the variable name used in the code.
Note: Use camelCase (not snake_case/kebab-case) for command names.
Otherwise, you will encounter errors.
For example, cobra-cli add add-user
is incorrect, but cobra-cli add addUser
is valid.
Once you have run these three commands you would have an app structure similar to the following:
▾ app/
▾ cmd/
config.go
create.go
serve.go
root.go
main.go
At this point you can run go run main.go
and it would run your app. go run main.go serve
, go run main.go config
, go run main.go config create
along
with go run main.go help serve
, etc. would all work.
You now have a basic Cobra-based application up and running. Next step is to edit the files in cmd and customize them for your application.
For complete details on using the Cobra library, please read the The Cobra User Guide.
Have fun!
The Cobra generator will be easier to use if you provide a simple configuration file which will help you eliminate providing a bunch of repeated information in flags over and over.
An example ~/.cobra.yaml file:
author: Steve Francia <[email protected]>
license: MIT
viper: true
You can also use built-in licenses. For example, GPLv2, GPLv3, LGPL, AGPL, MIT, 2-Clause BSD or 3-Clause BSD.
You can specify no license by setting license
to none
or you can specify
a custom license:
author: Steve Francia <[email protected]>
year: 2020
license:
header: This file is part of CLI application foo.
text: |
{{ .copyright }}
This is my license. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
My license is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I must
master my life.
In the above custom license configuration the copyright
line in the License
text is generated from the author
and year
properties. The content of the
LICENSE
file is
Copyright © 2020 Steve Francia <[email protected]>
This is my license. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
My license is my best friend. It is my life. I must master it as I must
master my life.
The header
property is used as the license header files. No interpolation is
done. This is the example of the go file header.
/*
Copyright © 2020 Steve Francia <[email protected]>
This file is part of CLI application foo.
*/