Execute CLI commands from your F# code in F# style!
Fli is part of the F# Advent Calendar 2022: A little story about Fli
- Starting processes easily
- Execute CLI commands in your favourite shell
- F# computation expression syntax
- Wrap authenticated CLI tools
- No external dependencies
Get it from Nuget: dotnet add package Fli
open Fli
and start
For example:
cli {
Shell CMD
Command "echo Hello World!"
}
|> Command.execute
that starts CMD.exe
as Shell and echo Hello World!
is the command to execute.
Run a file with PowerShell from a specific directory:
cli {
Shell PWSH
Command "test.bat"
WorkingDirectory (Environment.GetFolderPath Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile)
}
|> Command.execute
Executing programs with arguments:
cli {
Exec "path/to/executable"
Arguments "--info"
}
|> Command.execute
an example with git
:
cli {
Exec "git"
Arguments ["commit"; "-m"; "\"Fixing issue #1337.\""]
}
|> Command.execute
Add a verb to your executing program:
cli {
Exec "adobe.exe"
Arguments (Path.Combine ((Environment.GetFolderPath Environment.SpecialFolder.UserProfile), "test.pdf"))
Verb "open"
}
|> Command.execute
or open a file in the default/assigned program:
cli {
Exec "test.pdf"
}
|> Command.execute
(Hint: if file extension is not assigned to any installed program, it will throw a System.NullReferenceException
)
Write output to a specific file:
cli {
Exec "dotnet"
Arguments "--list-sdks"
Output @"absolute\path\to\dotnet-sdks.txt"
}
|> Command.execute
Write output to a function (logging, printing, etc.):
let log (output: string) = Debug.Log($"CLI log: {output}")
cli {
Exec "dotnet"
Arguments "--list-sdks"
Output log
}
|> Command.execute
Add environment variables for the executing program:
cli {
Exec "git"
EnvironmentVariables [("GIT_AUTHOR_NAME", "Jon Doe"); ("GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL", "[email protected]")]
Output ""
}
|> Command.execute
Hint: Output ""
will be ignored. This is for conditional cases, e.g.: Output (if true then logFilePath else "")
.
Add credentials to program:
cli {
Exec "program"
Credentials ("domain", "bobk", "password123")
}
|> Command.execute
Hint: Running a process as a different user is supported on all platforms. Other options (Domain, Password) are only available on Windows. As an alternative for not Windows based systems there is:
cli {
Exec "path/to/program"
Username "admin"
}
|> Command.execute
For Windows applications it's possible to set their visibility. There are four possible values: Hidden
, Maximized
, Minimized
and Normal
. The default is Hidden
.
cli {
Exec @"C:\Windows\regedit.exe"
WindowStyle Normal
}
|> Command.execute
Command.execute
returns record: type Output = { Id: int; Text: string option; ExitCode: int; Error: string option }
which has getter methods to get only one value:
toId: Output -> int
toText: Output -> string
toExitCode: Output -> int
toError: Output -> string
example:
cli {
Shell CMD
Command "echo Hello World!"
}
|> Command.execute // { Id = 123; Text = Some "Hello World!"; ExitCode = 0; Error = None }
|> Output.toText // "Hello World!"
// same with Output.toId:
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute // { Id = 123; Text = Some "Hello World!"; ExitCode = 0; Error = None }
|> Output.toId // 123
// same with Output.toExitCode:
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute // { Id = 123; Text = Some "Hello World!"; ExitCode = 0; Error = None }
|> Output.toExitCode // 0
// in case of an error:
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute // { Id = 123; Text = None; ExitCode = 1; Error = Some "This is an error!" }
|> Output.toError // "This is an error!"
throwIfErrored: Output -> Output
throw: (Output -> bool) -> Output -> Output
Output.throw
and Output.throwIfErrored
are assertion functions that if something's not right it will throw an exception.
That is useful for build scripts to stop the execution immediately, here is an example:
cli {
Exec "dotnet"
Arguments [| "build"; "-c"; "Release" |]
WorkingDirectory "src/"
}
|> Command.execute // returns { Id = 123; Text = None; ExitCode = 1; Error = Some "This is an error!" }
|> Output.throwIfErrored // <- Exception thrown!
|> Output.toError
or, you can define when to "fail":
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute // returns { Id = 123; Text = "An error occured: ..."; ExitCode = 1; Error = Some "Error detail." }
|> Output.throw (fun output -> output.Text.Contains("error")) // <- Exception thrown!
|> Output.toError
There are printing methods in Output
too:
printId: Output -> unit
printText: Output -> unit
printExitCode: Output -> unit
printError: Output -> unit
Instead of writing:
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute
|> Output.toText
|> printfn "%s"
For a little shorter code you can use:
cli { ... }
|> Command.execute
|> Output.printText
Command.toString
concatenates only the executing shell/program + the given commands/arguments:
cli {
Shell PS
Command "Write-Host Hello World!"
}
|> Command.toString // "powershell.exe -Command Write-Host Hello World!"
and:
cli {
Exec "cmd.exe"
Arguments [ "/C"; "echo"; "Hello World!" ]
}
|> Command.toString // "cmd.exe /C echo Hello World!"
ShellContext
operations (cli { Shell ... }
):
Operation | Type |
---|---|
Shell |
Fli.Shells |
Command |
string |
Input |
string |
Output |
Fli.Outputs |
WorkingDirectory |
string |
WindowStyle |
Fli.WindowStyle |
EnvironmentVariable |
string * string |
EnvironmentVariables |
(string * string) list |
Encoding |
System.Text.Encoding |
CancelAfter |
int |
ExecContext
operations (cli { Exec ... }
):
Operation | Type |
---|---|
Exec |
string |
Arguments |
string / string seq / string list / string array |
Input |
string |
Output |
Fli.Outputs |
Verb |
string |
Username |
string |
Credentials |
string * string * string |
WorkingDirectory |
string |
WindowStyle |
Fli.WindowStyle |
EnvironmentVariable |
string * string |
EnvironmentVariables |
(string * string) list |
Encoding |
System.Text.Encoding |
CancelAfter |
int |
Currently provided Fli.Shells
:
CMD
runs eithercmd.exe /c ...
orcmd.exe /k ...
(ifInput
is provided)PS
runspowershell.exe -Command ...
PWSH
runspwsh.exe -Command ...
WSL
runswsl.exe -- ...
SH
runssh -c ...
BASH
runsbash -c ...
ZSH
runszsh -c ...
CUSTOM (shell: string * flag: string)
runs the specifiedshell
with the specified starting argument (flag
)
Provided Fli.Outputs
:
File of string
a string with an absolute path of the output file.StringBuilder of StringBuilder
a StringBuilder which will be filled with the output text.Custom of Func<string, unit>
a custom function (string -> unit
) that will be called with the output string (logging, printing etc.).
Provided Fli.WindowStyle
:
Hidden
(default)Maximized
Minimized
Normal
Open an issue or start a discussion.
Use CE's for CLI commands came in mind while using FsHttp.