.. highlight:: kotlin .. raw:: html CLI UX Guide ============ Command line options -------------------- Command line utilities should use picocli (http://picocli.info) to provide a unified interface and follow the conventions in the picocli documentation, some of the more important of which are repeated below. Option names ~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Options should be specified on the command line using a double dash, e.g. ``--parameter``. * Options that consist of multiple words should be separated via hyphens e.g. ``--my-multiple-word-parameter-name``. Short names ~~~~~~~~~~~ * Where possible a POSIX style short option should be provided for ease of use (see http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap12.html#tag_12_02). * These should be prefixed with a single hyphen. * For example ``-V`` for ``--verbose``, ``-d`` for ``--dev-mode``. * Consider adding short options for commands that would be ran regularly as part of troubleshooting/operational processes. * Short options should not be used for commands that would be used just once, for example initialising/registration type tasks. * The picocli interface allows combinations of options without parameters, for example, ```-v`` and ```-d`` can be combined as ``-vd``. Positional parameters ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Parameters specified without an option should ideally all be part of a list. * For example, in ``java -jar test.jar file1 file2 file3``, the parameters file1, file2 and file3 should be a list of files that are all acted on together (e.g. a list of CorDapps). * Avoid using positional parameters to mean different things, which involves someone remembering in which order things need to be specified. * For example, avoid ``java -jar test.jar configfile1 cordapp1 cordapp2`` where parameter 1 is the config file and any subsequent parameters are the CorDapps. * Use ``java -jar test.jar cordapp1 cordapp2 --config-file configfile1`` instead. Standard options ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * A ``--help`` option should be provided which details all possible options with a brief description and any short name equivalents. A ``-h`` short option should also be provided. * A ``--version`` option that should output the version number of the software. A ``-V`` short option should also be provided. * A ``--logging-level`` option should be provided which specifies the logging level to be used in any logging files. Acceptable values should be ``DEBUG``, ``TRACE``, ``INFO``, ``WARN`` and ``ERROR``. * ``--verbose`` and ``--log-to-console`` options should be provided (both equivalent) which specifies that logging output should be displayed in the console. A ``-v`` short option should also be provided. * A ``--install-shell-extensions`` option should be provided that creates and installs a bash completion file. Defaults ~~~~~~~~ * Flags should have sensible defaults. * Boolean flags should always default to false. Specifying the flag without a parameter should set it to true. For example ``--use-something` should be equal to ``--use-something=true`` and no option should be equal to ``--my-flag=false``. * Do a bit of work to figure out reasonable defaults. Nobody likes having to set a dozen flags before the tool will cooperate. Adding a new option ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Boolean options should start with is, has or with. For example, ``--is-cheesy``, ``--with-cheese``, ``--has-cheese-on``. * Any new options must be documented in the docsite and via the ``--help`` screen. * Never use acronyms in option names and try and make them as descriptive as possible. Parameter stability ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * Avoid removing parameters. If, for some reason, a parameter needs to be renamed, add a new parameter with the new name and deprecate the old parameter, or alternatively keep both versions of the parameter. The ``CordaCliWrapper`` base class ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The ``CordaCliWrapper`` base class from the ``cliutils`` module should be used as a base where practicable, this will provide a set of default options out of the box. In order to use it, create a class containing your command line options using the syntax provided at (see the `picocli`_ website for more information) .. container:: codeset .. sourcecode:: kotlin import net.corda.cliutils.ExitCodes import net.corda.cliutils.CordaCliWrapper class UsefulUtilityExitCodes: ExitCodes { companion object { val APPLICATION_SPECIFIC_ERROR_CODE: Int = 100 } } class UsefulUtility : CordaCliWrapper( "useful-utility", // the alias to be used for this utility in bash. When --install-shell-extensions is run // you will be able to invoke this command by running from the command line "A command line utility that is super useful!" // A description of this utility to be displayed when --help is run ) { @Option(names = ["--extra-usefulness", "-e"], // A list of the different ways this option can be referenced description = ["Use this option to add extra usefulness"] // Help description to be displayed for this option ) private var extraUsefulness: Boolean = false // This default option will be shown in the help output override fun runProgram(): Int { // override this function to run the actual program try { // do some stuff } catch (KnownException: ex) { return UsefulUtilityExitCodes.APPLICATION_SPECIFIC_ERROR_CODE // return a special exit code for known exceptions } return UsefulUtilityExitCodes.SUCCESS // this is the exit code to be returned to the system inherited from the ExitCodes base class } } Then in your ``main()`` method: .. container:: codeset .. sourcecode:: kotlin import net.corda.cliutils.start fun main(args: Array) { UsefulUtility().start(args) } Application behavior -------------------- * Set exit codes using exitProcess. * Zero means success. * Other numbers mean errors. * Setting a unique error code (starting from 1) for each thing that can conceivably break makes your tool shell-scripting friendly. * Make sure all exit codes are documented with recommended remedies where applicable. * Your ``--help`` text or other docs should ideally include examples. Writing examples is also a good way to find out if your program requires a dozen flags to do anything. * Don’t print logging output to the console unless the user requested it via a ``-–verbose`` flag (conventionally shortened to ``-v``). Logs should be either suppressed or saved to a text file during normal usage, except for errors, which are always OK to print. * Don't print stack traces to the console. Stack traces can be added to logging files, but the user should see as meaningful error description as possible.