NAME
App::Cmd::Command - a base class for App::Cmd commands
VERSION
version 0.336
PERL VERSION
This library should run on perls released even a long time ago. It should work on any version of perl released in the last five years.
Although it may work on older versions of perl, no guarantee is made that the minimum required version will not be increased. The version may be increased for any reason, and there is no promise that patches will be accepted to lower the minimum required perl.
METHODS
prepare
my ($cmd, $opt, $args) = $class->prepare($app, @args);
This method is the primary way in which App::Cmd::Command objects are built. Given the remaining command line arguments meant for the command, it returns the Command object, parsed options (as a hashref), and remaining arguments (as an arrayref).
In the usage above, $app
is the App::Cmd object that is invoking the command.
new
This returns a new instance of the command plugin. Probably only prepare
should use this.
execute
$command_plugin->execute(\%opt, \@args);
This method does whatever it is the command should do! It is passed a hash reference of the parsed command-line options and an array reference of left over arguments.
If no execute
method is defined, it will try to call run
-- but it will warn about this behavior during testing, to remind you to fix the method name!
app
This method returns the App::Cmd object into which this command is plugged.
usage
This method returns the usage object for this command. (See Getopt::Long::Descriptive).
command_names
This method returns a list of command names handled by this plugin. The first item returned is the 'canonical' name of the command.
If this method is not overridden by an App::Cmd::Command subclass, it will return the last part of the plugin's package name, converted to lowercase. For example, YourApp::Cmd::Command::Init will, by default, handle the command "init".
Subclasses should generally get the superclass value of command_names
and then append aliases.
usage_desc
This method should be overridden to provide a usage string. (This is the first argument passed to describe_options
from Getopt::Long::Descriptive.)
If not overridden, it returns "%c COMMAND %o"; COMMAND is the first item in the result of the command_names
method.
opt_spec
This method should be overridden to provide option specifications. (This is list of arguments passed to describe_options
from Getopt::Long::Descriptive, after the first.)
If not overridden, it returns an empty list.
validate_args
$command_plugin->validate_args(\%opt, \@args);
This method is passed a hashref of command line options (as processed by Getopt::Long::Descriptive) and an arrayref of leftover arguments. It may throw an exception (preferably by calling usage_error
, below) if they are invalid, or it may do nothing to allow processing to continue.
usage_error
$self->usage_error("This command must not be run by root!");
This method should be called to die with human-friendly usage output, during validate_args
.
abstract
This method returns a short description of the command's purpose. If this method is not overridden, it will return the abstract from the module's Pod. If it can't find the abstract, it will look for a comment starting with "ABSTRACT:" like the ones used by Pod::Weaver::Section::Name.
description
This method can be overridden to provide full option description. It is used by the built-in help command.
If not overridden, it uses Pod::Usage to extract the description from the module's Pod DESCRIPTION section or the empty string.
AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <cpan@semiotic.systems>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2023 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.