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  • License
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  • Updated 12 months ago

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Repository Details

A CLI tool to build beautiful rich text command-line interfaces with type validation.
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Piou

Python versions Latest PyPI version CircleCI Latest conda-forge version

A CLI tool to build beautiful command-line interfaces with type validation.

It is as simple as

from piou import Cli, Option

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


@cli.command(cmd='foo', help='Run foo command')
def foo_main(
        bar: int = Option(..., help='Bar positional argument (required)'),
        baz: str = Option(..., '-b', '--baz', help='Baz keyword argument (required)'),
        foo: str = Option(None, '--foo', help='Foo keyword argument'),
):
    """
    A longer description on what the function is doing.
    You can run it with:
    ```bash
     poetry run python -m piou.test.simple foo 1 -b baz
    ```
    And you are good to go!
    """
    pass


if __name__ == '__main__':
    cli.run()

The output will look like this:

  • python -m piou.test.simple -h

example

  • python -m piou.test.simple foo -h

example

Why ?

I could not find a library that provided:

  • the same developer experience than FastAPI
  • customization of the interface (to build a CLI similar to the one of Poetry)
  • type validation / casting

Typer is the closest alternative in terms of experience but lacks the possibility to format the output is a custom way using external libraries (like Rich).

Piou provides all these possibilities and lets you define your own Formatter.

Install

You can install piou with either:

  • pip install piou
  • conda install piou -c conda-forge

Features

Commands

from piou import Cli, Option

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


@cli.command(cmd='foo',
             help='Run foo command')
def foo_main(
        foo1: int = Option(..., help='Foo arguments'),
        foo2: str = Option(..., '-f', '--foo2', help='Foo2 arguments'),
        foo3: str = Option(None, '-g', '--foo3', help='Foo3 arguments'),
):
    pass


@cli.command(cmd='bar',
             help='Run bar command')
def bar_main(
        foo1: int = Option(..., help='Foo arguments'),
        foo2: str = Option(..., '-f', '--foo2', help='Foo2 arguments'),
        foo3: str = Option(None, '-g', '--foo3', help='Foo3 arguments'),
):
    pass


if __name__ == '__main__':
    cli.run()

In this case, foo1 is a positional argument while foo2 and foo3 are keyword arguments.

You can optionally specify global options that will be passed to all commands:

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')

cli.add_option('-q', '--quiet', help='Do not output any message')

The description can also be extracted from the function docstring. Both functions here return the same description.

@cli.command(cmd='bar', description='Run foo command')
def bar_main():
    pass


@cli.command(cmd='bar2')
def bar_2_main():
    """
    Run foo command
    """
    pass

A command can also be asynchronous, it will be run automatically using asyncio.run.

@cli.command(cmd='bar', help='Run foo command')
async def bar_main():
    pass

Command Groups / Sub-commands

You can group commands into sub-commands:

from piou import Cli, Option

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


@cli.command(cmd='foo', help='Run foo command')
def foo_main():
    pass


sub_cmd = cli.add_sub_parser(cmd='sub', help='A sub command')
sub_cmd.add_option('--test', help='Test mode')


@sub_cmd.command(cmd='bar', help='Run bar command')
def sub_bar_main(**kwargs):
    pass


@sub_cmd.command(cmd='foo', help='Run foo command')
def sub_foo_main(
        test: bool,
        foo1: int = Option(..., help='Foo argument'),
        foo2: str = Option(..., '-f', '--foo2', help='Foo2 argument'),
):
    pass


if __name__ == '__main__':
    cli.run()

So when running python run.py sub -h it will output the following:

example

Options processor

Sometimes, you want to run a function using the global arguments before running the actual command (for instance initialize a logger based on the verbose level).

To do so, you use set_options_processor that will receive all the current global options of the CLI.

from piou import Cli

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')

cli.add_option('--verbose', help='Increase verbosity')


def processor(verbose: bool):
    print(f'Processing {verbose=}')


cli.set_options_processor(processor)

You can also use the decorator syntax:

from piou import Cli, Option

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


@cli.processor()
def processor(verbose: bool = Option(False, '--verbose', help='Increase verbosity')):
    print(f'Processing {verbose=}')

By default, when a processor is set, the global arguments will not be passed downstream. If you still want them to be passed to the functions by setting

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool', propagate_options=True)

or in the case of a sub-command

cli.add_sub_parser(cmd='sub', help='A sub command', propagate_options=True)

Derived Options

Sometimes, you want to reuse the options in multiple command and group them into a single output to pass to the command. For instance, you might want to group a connection string parameter to connect to a database. Here is a full example:

from piou import Cli, Option, Derived, Password
import psycopg2

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


def get_pg_conn(
        pg_user: str = Option('postgres', '--pg-user'),
        pg_pwd: Password = Option('postgres', '--pg-pwd'),
        pg_host: str = Option('localhost', '--pg-host'),
        pg_port: int = Option(5432, '--pg-port'),
        pg_db: str = Option('postgres', '--pg-db')

):
    conn = psycopg2.connect(dbname=pg_db, user=pg_user, password=pg_pwd,
                            host=pg_host, port=pg_port)
    return conn


@cli.command(help='Run foo command')
def foo(pg_conn=Derived(get_pg_conn)):
    ...


@cli.command(help='Run bar command')
def bar(pg_conn=Derived(get_pg_conn)):
    ...

You can also pass dynamic derived functions to avoid duplicating the derived logic:

import os
from typing import Literal
from piou import Cli, Option, Derived

cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool')


def get_pg_url_dynamic(source: Literal['db1', 'db2']):
    _source_upper = source.upper()
    _host_arg = f'--host-{source}'
    _db_arg = f'--{source}'

    def _derived(
            # We need to specify the `arg_name` here
            pg_host: str = Option(os.getenv(f'PG_HOST_{_source_upper}', 'localhost'),
                                  _host_arg, arg_name=_host_arg),
            pg_db: str = Option(os.getenv(f'PG_DB_{_source_upper}', source),
                                _db_arg, arg_name=_db_arg),
    ):
        return f'postgresql://postgres:postgres@{pg_host}:5432/{pg_db}'

    return _derived


@cli.command(help='Run dynamic command')
def dynamic(url_1: str = Derived(get_pg_url_dynamic('db1')),
            url_2: str = Derived(get_pg_url_dynamic('db2'))):
    ...

So that the output will look like this:

dynamic-derived

On Command Run

If you want to get the command name and arguments information that are passed to it (in case of general purpose debugging for instance), you can pass on_cmd_run to the CLI.

from piou import Cli, Option, CommandMeta, Derived


def on_cmd_run(meta: CommandMeta):
    pass


cli = Cli(description='A CLI tool',
          on_cmd_run=on_cmd_run)


def processor(a: int = Option(1, '-a'),
              b: int = Option(2, '-b')):
    return a + b


@cli.command()
def test(
        value: int = Derived(processor),
        bar: str = Option(None, '--bar')
):
    pass

In this case, meta will be equal to:

CommandMeta(cmd_name='test',
            fn_args={'bar': 'bar', 'value': 5},
            cmd_args={'a': 3, 'b': 2, 'bar': 'bar'})

Help / Errors Formatter

You can customize the help and the different errors displayed by the CLI by passing a Formatter. The default one is the Rich formatter based on the Rich package:

  • cmd_color: set the color of the command in the help
  • option_color: set the color of the positional / keyword arguments in the help
  • default_color: set the color of the default values in the help
  • show_default: show the default values if the keyword arguments (if available)

You can create your own Formatter by subclassing the Formatter class (see the Rich formatter for example).

The Rich Formatter supports the Password type that will hide the default value when printing help.
For instance:

from piou import Password, Option


def test(pg_pwd: Password = Option('postgres', '--pg-pwd')):
    ...

Complete example

You can try a more complete example by running python -m piou.test -h

Moving from argparse

If you are migrating code from argparse to piou here are some differences:

1. choices:

add_argument('--pick', choices=['foo', 'bar'])
can be replaced with the following:

  • pick: Literal['foo', 'bar'] = Option(None, '--pick')
  • pick: Literal['foo'] | Literal['bar'] = Option(None, '--pick')
  • pick: str = Option(None, '--pick', choices=['foo', 'bar'])

Notes:

  • You can disable the case sensitivity by passing Option(None, '--pick', case_sentitive=False)
  • Specifying both a Literal type and choices will raise an error.

2. action=store_true:

add_argument('--verbose', action='store_true')
can be replaced with
verbose: bool = Option(False, '--verbose')