Mercurial > piecrust2
view docs/api/02_components/01_commands.md @ 613:e2e955a3bb25
publish: Add publish command.
* Add `shell` publisher.
* Refactor admin panel's publishing backend to use that, along with the new
PID file support.
author | Ludovic Chabant <ludovic@chabant.com> |
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date | Thu, 04 Feb 2016 08:05:03 -0800 |
parents | dce482f7c62d |
children |
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--- title: Chef Commands --- To provide new `chef` commands, you need to override the `getCommands` method of your plugin, and return command instances: ```python class MyPlugin(PieCrustPlugin): name = 'myplugin' def getCommands(self): return [ MyNewCommand()] ``` To create a command class, inherit from the `ChefCommand` base class: ```python from piecrust.commands.base import ChefCommand class MyNewCommand(ChefCommand): def __init__(self): super(MyNewCommand, self).__init__() self.name = 'foobar' self.description = "Does some foobar thing." def setupParser(self, parser, app): parser.add_argument('thing') def run(self, ctx): print("Doing %s" % ctx.args.thing) ``` * The `name` will be used for command line invocation, _i.e._ your new command will be invoked with `chef foobar`. * The `description` will be used for help pages like `chef --help`. * The `setupParser` method passes an `argparse.ArgumentParser` and a `PieCrust` application. You're supposed to setup the syntax for your commend there. * The `run` method is called when your command is executed. The `ctx` object contains a couple useful things, among others: * `args` is the namespace obtained from running `parse_args`. It has all the values of the arguments for your command. * `app` is the instance of the current `PieCrust` application. * For the other things, check-out `piecrust.commands.base.CommandContext`.