sailboat
Note: While this program is still in early stages of development, it is suitable for use in production. If you have any problems/suggestions/questions please let me know in a GitHub Issue. This is my first big open-source project, so feel free to submit a pull-request! Thanks! - Cole Wilson
About
Sailboat is a Python developer's best friend. It's a Python build tool that can do anything you need it to! It suports a countless number of plugins — you can even make your own. Sailboat is made for anyone, whether you are a beginner on your very first project, or a senior software engineer with years of experience.
Let's say that that you have created a basic game, Guess My Number, and you want to send it to all of your friends. There are a lot of different ways you can do this, but using Sailboat is the easiest. All you have to do is type three commands: sail quickstart
, sail build
, and sail release
, and you can have a Homebrew file, a pip
installable package, and a PyInstaller desktop app. So easy!
Sailboat also supports custom subcommands. These don't build your project, but they can add features such as a todo list that help speed up your development process.
Installation
Pip:
pip3 install sailboat
Binary:
Download from latest release.
Homebrew:
brew install cole-wilson/taps/Sailboat
Build From Source:
git clone https://github.com/cole-wilson/sailboat
cd sailboat
python3 setup.py install
Usage:
Sailboat is intended to be used from the command line/terminal.
It is suggested to run sail quickstart
to get started. Then, use sail build
to build your project, and sail release
to release it! Be sure to to look at the subcommand docs for more detail.
(look in table below)
There are two base commands that can be used: sail
and sailboat
. These both do exactly the same thing, there is no difference. sail
will be used in the documentation, as it's shorter easier to type, but you can do whatever.
To get a list of the availible subcommands type sail help
.
To refresh the plugin list, type sail -r
.
There are countless subcommands, but these are the core ones:
subcommand | description |
---|---|
add | Add a plugin to your project. |
build | Build your project for release. |
dev | Run your project without building it. |
git | Manage git for your project. |
github | Manage git for your project. |
plugins | Plugin manager. |
quickstart | Get your project up and running. |
release | Release your project. |
remove | Remove a plugin from you project. |
wizard | Configure you project or a plugin. |
workflow | Generate a GitHub actions workflow file. |
help | Display this message. |
Plugins:
Sailboat uses a plugin based architecture. Every single command or subcommand is a plugin, even the core features. Plugins are registered using the Python entry points system, using the group name sailboat_plugins
. There are four types of plugins:
core
This type of plugin is reserved for 1st party plugins - plugins that are part of the actual Sailboat source. They have unreserved access to all project data, and therefore this type should not be used in custom plugins.
command
command
plugins are most basic form of a plugin. They are called by typing sail <name of plugin>
. They are standalone python scripts that add to the project, like a task list manager.
build
This is perhaps the most common type of plugin, they are run with the build
core plugin, and are used to generate or edit project files. An example would be the PyInstaller plugin, which generates frozen binaries of the project. These should store output in the top level dist
folder, in a subfolder with the name of the project. For example: the PyInstaller plugin saves output in ./dist/pyinstaller
. Build plugins can also contain release
plugins within them.
release
This group of plugins is used by the release
core plugin. They are used to distribute files. For example: the homebrew
release plugin uploads the Homebrew formula to a GitHub repo.
All plugins should be a subclass of sailboat.plugins.Plugin
, a basic class that provide the neccesary functions and registration features. An example command
plugin might look like this:
from sailboat.plugins import Plugin
class Echo(Plugin):
description = "A basic command plugin that echos it's input."
_type = 'command'
setup = {"string_to_echo":"What string should I echo? "} # Used by wizard
def run(self):
string = self.getData('string_to_echo') # Get string to echo.
print(string)
return
Plugins store their data in the sailboat.toml
file, under their type namespace. For example, the above example will store it's data like so:
...
[command.echo]
string_to_echo = "Testing..."
...
A plugin should NEVER edit the sailboat.toml
file on it's own. Instead plugins should use the provided functions OR edit self.data
, a dictionary of the file. Only data stored in the plugins namespace will be preserved. However, a plugin can read from the top level data.
Plugins can get very complex, and therefore useful, but it is too long to put here. Please look at the sailboat.colewilson.xyz/plugins.html
file for details.
Acknowledgements:
Thanks to all the people at PyInstaller, dmgbuild, twine, and GitHub actions who provided ways for me to create this.
Stargazers
Contributors
- Cole Wilson
Contact
Please submit an issue if you have any questions or need help or find a bug. I'm happy to help!