diff --git a/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/.bin/postject b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/.bin/postject new file mode 120000 index 00000000000000..3123676caa2cea --- /dev/null +++ b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/.bin/postject @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +../postject/dist/cli.js \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/LICENSE b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/LICENSE new file mode 100644 index 00000000000000..10f997ab104594 --- /dev/null +++ b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/LICENSE @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +(The MIT License) + +Copyright (c) 2011 TJ Holowaychuk + +Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining +a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the +'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including +without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, +distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to +permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to +the following conditions: + +The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be +included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. + +THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, +EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF +MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. +IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY +CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, +TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE +SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. diff --git a/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/Readme.md b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/Readme.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000000..39c248b0439789 --- /dev/null +++ b/test/fixtures/postject-copy/node_modules/commander/Readme.md @@ -0,0 +1,1118 @@ +# Commander.js + +[![Build Status](https://github.com/tj/commander.js/workflows/build/badge.svg)](https://github.com/tj/commander.js/actions?query=workflow%3A%22build%22) +[![NPM Version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/commander.svg?style=flat)](https://www.npmjs.org/package/commander) +[![NPM Downloads](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/commander.svg?style=flat)](https://npmcharts.com/compare/commander?minimal=true) +[![Install Size](https://packagephobia.now.sh/badge?p=commander)](https://packagephobia.now.sh/result?p=commander) + +The complete solution for [node.js](http://nodejs.org) command-line interfaces. + +Read this in other languages: English | [简体中文](./Readme_zh-CN.md) + +- [Commander.js](#commanderjs) + - [Installation](#installation) + - [Quick Start](#quick-start) + - [Declaring _program_ variable](#declaring-program-variable) + - [Options](#options) + - [Common option types, boolean and value](#common-option-types-boolean-and-value) + - [Default option value](#default-option-value) + - [Other option types, negatable boolean and boolean|value](#other-option-types-negatable-boolean-and-booleanvalue) + - [Required option](#required-option) + - [Variadic option](#variadic-option) + - [Version option](#version-option) + - [More configuration](#more-configuration) + - [Custom option processing](#custom-option-processing) + - [Commands](#commands) + - [Command-arguments](#command-arguments) + - [More configuration](#more-configuration-1) + - [Custom argument processing](#custom-argument-processing) + - [Action handler](#action-handler) + - [Stand-alone executable (sub)commands](#stand-alone-executable-subcommands) + - [Life cycle hooks](#life-cycle-hooks) + - [Automated help](#automated-help) + - [Custom help](#custom-help) + - [Display help after errors](#display-help-after-errors) + - [Display help from code](#display-help-from-code) + - [.name](#name) + - [.usage](#usage) + - [.description and .summary](#description-and-summary) + - [.helpOption(flags, description)](#helpoptionflags-description) + - [.addHelpCommand()](#addhelpcommand) + - [More configuration](#more-configuration-2) + - [Custom event listeners](#custom-event-listeners) + - [Bits and pieces](#bits-and-pieces) + - [.parse() and .parseAsync()](#parse-and-parseasync) + - [Parsing Configuration](#parsing-configuration) + - [Legacy options as properties](#legacy-options-as-properties) + - [TypeScript](#typescript) + - [createCommand()](#createcommand) + - [Node options such as `--harmony`](#node-options-such-as---harmony) + - [Debugging stand-alone executable subcommands](#debugging-stand-alone-executable-subcommands) + - [Display error](#display-error) + - [Override exit and output handling](#override-exit-and-output-handling) + - [Additional documentation](#additional-documentation) + - [Support](#support) + - [Commander for enterprise](#commander-for-enterprise) + +For information about terms used in this document see: [terminology](./docs/terminology.md) + +## Installation + +```sh +npm install commander +``` + +## Quick Start + +You write code to describe your command line interface. +Commander looks after parsing the arguments into options and command-arguments, +displays usage errors for problems, and implements a help system. + +Commander is strict and displays an error for unrecognised options. +The two most used option types are a boolean option, and an option which takes its value from the following argument. + +Example file: [split.js](./examples/split.js) + +```js +const { program } = require('commander'); + +program + .option('--first') + .option('-s, --separator '); + +program.parse(); + +const options = program.opts(); +const limit = options.first ? 1 : undefined; +console.log(program.args[0].split(options.separator, limit)); +``` + +```console +$ node split.js -s / --fits a/b/c +error: unknown option '--fits' +(Did you mean --first?) +$ node split.js -s / --first a/b/c +[ 'a' ] +``` + +Here is a more complete program using a subcommand and with descriptions for the help. In a multi-command program, you have an action handler for each command (or stand-alone executables for the commands). + +Example file: [string-util.js](./examples/string-util.js) + +```js +const { Command } = require('commander'); +const program = new Command(); + +program + .name('string-util') + .description('CLI to some JavaScript string utilities') + .version('0.8.0'); + +program.command('split') + .description('Split a string into substrings and display as an array') + .argument('', 'string to split') + .option('--first', 'display just the first substring') + .option('-s, --separator ', 'separator character', ',') + .action((str, options) => { + const limit = options.first ? 1 : undefined; + console.log(str.split(options.separator, limit)); + }); + +program.parse(); +``` + +```console +$ node string-util.js help split +Usage: string-util split [options] + +Split a string into substrings and display as an array. + +Arguments: + string string to split + +Options: + --first display just the first substring + -s, --separator separator character (default: ",") + -h, --help display help for command + +$ node string-util.js split --separator=/ a/b/c +[ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] +``` + +More samples can be found in the [examples](https://github.com/tj/commander.js/tree/master/examples) directory. + +## Declaring _program_ variable + +Commander exports a global object which is convenient for quick programs. +This is used in the examples in this README for brevity. + +```js +// CommonJS (.cjs) +const { program } = require('commander'); +``` + +For larger programs which may use commander in multiple ways, including unit testing, it is better to create a local Command object to use. + +```js +// CommonJS (.cjs) +const { Command } = require('commander'); +const program = new Command(); +``` + +```js +// ECMAScript (.mjs) +import { Command } from 'commander'; +const program = new Command(); +``` + +```ts +// TypeScript (.ts) +import { Command } from 'commander'; +const program = new Command(); +``` + +## Options + +Options are defined with the `.option()` method, also serving as documentation for the options. Each option can have a short flag (single character) and a long name, separated by a comma or space or vertical bar ('|'). + +The parsed options can be accessed by calling `.opts()` on a `Command` object, and are passed to the action handler. + +Multi-word options such as "--template-engine" are camel-cased, becoming `program.opts().templateEngine` etc. + +An option and its option-argument can be separated by a space, or combined into the same argument. The option-argument can follow the short option directly or follow an `=` for a long option. + +```sh +serve -p 80 +serve -p80 +serve --port 80 +serve --port=80 +``` + +You can use `--` to indicate the end of the options, and any remaining arguments will be used without being interpreted. + +By default options on the command line are not positional, and can be specified before or after other arguments. + +There are additional related routines for when `.opts()` is not enough: + +- `.optsWithGlobals()` returns merged local and global option values +- `.getOptionValue()` and `.setOptionValue()` work with a single option value +- `.getOptionValueSource()` and `.setOptionValueWithSource()` include where the option value came from + +### Common option types, boolean and value + +The two most used option types are a boolean option, and an option which takes its value +from the following argument (declared with angle brackets like `--expect `). Both are `undefined` unless specified on command line. + +Example file: [options-common.js](./examples/options-common.js) + +```js +program + .option('-d, --debug', 'output extra debugging') + .option('-s, --small', 'small pizza size') + .option('-p, --pizza-type ', 'flavour of pizza'); + +program.parse(process.argv); + +const options = program.opts(); +if (options.debug) console.log(options); +console.log('pizza details:'); +if (options.small) console.log('- small pizza size'); +if (options.pizzaType) console.log(`- ${options.pizzaType}`); +``` + +```console +$ pizza-options -p +error: option '-p, --pizza-type ' argument missing +$ pizza-options -d -s -p vegetarian +{ debug: true, small: true, pizzaType: 'vegetarian' } +pizza details: +- small pizza size +- vegetarian +$ pizza-options --pizza-type=cheese +pizza details: +- cheese +``` + +Multiple boolean short options may be combined together following the dash, and may be followed by a single short option taking a value. +For example `-d -s -p cheese` may be written as `-ds -p cheese` or even `-dsp cheese`. + +Options with an expected option-argument are greedy and will consume the following argument whatever the value. +So `--id -xyz` reads `-xyz` as the option-argument. + +`program.parse(arguments)` processes the arguments, leaving any args not consumed by the program options in the `program.args` array. The parameter is optional and defaults to `process.argv`. + +### Default option value + +You can specify a default value for an option. + +Example file: [options-defaults.js](./examples/options-defaults.js) + +```js +program + .option('-c, --cheese ', 'add the specified type of cheese', 'blue'); + +program.parse(); + +console.log(`cheese: ${program.opts().cheese}`); +``` + +```console +$ pizza-options +cheese: blue +$ pizza-options --cheese stilton +cheese: stilton +``` + +### Other option types, negatable boolean and boolean|value + +You can define a boolean option long name with a leading `no-` to set the option value to false when used. +Defined alone this also makes the option true by default. + +If you define `--foo` first, adding `--no-foo` does not change the default value from what it would +otherwise be. + +Example file: [options-negatable.js](./examples/options-negatable.js) + +```js +program + .option('--no-sauce', 'Remove sauce') + .option('--cheese ', 'cheese flavour', 'mozzarella') + .option('--no-cheese', 'plain with no cheese') + .parse(); + +const options = program.opts(); +const sauceStr = options.sauce ? 'sauce' : 'no sauce'; +const cheeseStr = (options.cheese === false) ? 'no cheese' : `${options.cheese} cheese`; +console.log(`You ordered a pizza with ${sauceStr} and ${cheeseStr}`); +``` + +```console +$ pizza-options +You ordered a pizza with sauce and mozzarella cheese +$ pizza-options --sauce +error: unknown option '--sauce' +$ pizza-options --cheese=blue +You ordered a pizza with sauce and blue cheese +$ pizza-options --no-sauce --no-cheese +You ordered a pizza with no sauce and no cheese +``` + +You can specify an option which may be used as a boolean option but may optionally take an option-argument +(declared with square brackets like `--optional [value]`). + +Example file: [options-boolean-or-value.js](./examples/options-boolean-or-value.js) + +```js +program + .option('-c, --cheese [type]', 'Add cheese with optional type'); + +program.parse(process.argv); + +const options = program.opts(); +if (options.cheese === undefined) console.log('no cheese'); +else if (options.cheese === true) console.log('add cheese'); +else console.log(`add cheese type ${options.cheese}`); +``` + +```console +$ pizza-options +no cheese +$ pizza-options --cheese +add cheese +$ pizza-options --cheese mozzarella +add cheese type mozzarella +``` + +Options with an optional option-argument are not greedy and will ignore arguments starting with a dash. +So `id` behaves as a boolean option for `--id -5`, but you can use a combined form if needed like `--id=-5`. + +For information about possible ambiguous cases, see [options taking varying arguments](./docs/options-taking-varying-arguments.md). + +### Required option + +You may specify a required (mandatory) option using `.requiredOption()`. The option must have a value after parsing, usually specified on the command line, or perhaps from a default value (say from environment). The method is otherwise the same as `.option()` in format, taking flags and description, and optional default value or custom processing. + +Example file: [options-required.js](./examples/options-required.js) + +```js +program + .requiredOption('-c, --cheese ', 'pizza must have cheese'); + +program.parse(); +``` + +```console +$ pizza +error: required option '-c, --cheese ' not specified +``` + +### Variadic option + +You may make an option variadic by appending `...` to the value placeholder when declaring the option. On the command line you +can then specify multiple option-arguments, and the parsed option value will be an array. The extra arguments +are read until the first argument starting with a dash. The special argument `--` stops option processing entirely. If a value +is specified in the same argument as the option then no further values are read. + +Example file: [options-variadic.js](./examples/options-variadic.js) + +```js +program + .option('-n, --number ', 'specify numbers') + .option('-l, --letter [letters...]', 'specify letters'); + +program.parse(); + +console.log('Options: ', program.opts()); +console.log('Remaining arguments: ', program.args); +``` + +```console +$ collect -n 1 2 3 --letter a b c +Options: { number: [ '1', '2', '3' ], letter: [ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] } +Remaining arguments: [] +$ collect --letter=A -n80 operand +Options: { number: [ '80' ], letter: [ 'A' ] } +Remaining arguments: [ 'operand' ] +$ collect --letter -n 1 -n 2 3 -- operand +Options: { number: [ '1', '2', '3' ], letter: true } +Remaining arguments: [ 'operand' ] +``` + +For information about possible ambiguous cases, see [options taking varying arguments](./docs/options-taking-varying-arguments.md). + +### Version option + +The optional `version` method adds handling for displaying the command version. The default option flags are `-V` and `--version`, and when present the command prints the version number and exits. + +```js +program.version('0.0.1'); +``` + +```console +$ ./examples/pizza -V +0.0.1 +``` + +You may change the flags and description by passing additional parameters to the `version` method, using +the same syntax for flags as the `option` method. + +```js +program.version('0.0.1', '-v, --vers', 'output the current version'); +``` + +### More configuration + +You can add most options using the `.option()` method, but there are some additional features available +by constructing an `Option` explicitly for less common cases. + +Example files: [options-extra.js](./examples/options-extra.js), [options-env.js](./examples/options-env.js), [options-conflicts.js](./examples/options-conflicts.js), [options-implies.js](./examples/options-implies.js) + +```js +program + .addOption(new Option('-s, --secret').hideHelp()) + .addOption(new Option('-t, --timeout ', 'timeout in seconds').default(60, 'one minute')) + .addOption(new Option('-d, --drink ', 'drink size').choices(['small', 'medium', 'large'])) + .addOption(new Option('-p, --port ', 'port number').env('PORT')) + .addOption(new Option('--donate [amount]', 'optional donation in dollars').preset('20').argParser(parseFloat)) + .addOption(new Option('--disable-server', 'disables the server').conflicts('port')) + .addOption(new Option('--free-drink', 'small drink included free ').implies({ drink: 'small' })); +``` + +```console +$ extra --help +Usage: help [options] + +Options: + -t, --timeout timeout in seconds (default: one minute) + -d, --drink drink cup size (choices: "small", "medium", "large") + -p, --port port number (env: PORT) + --donate [amount] optional donation in dollars (preset: "20") + --disable-server disables the server + --free-drink small drink included free + -h, --help display help for command + +$ extra --drink huge +error: option '-d, --drink ' argument 'huge' is invalid. Allowed choices are small, medium, large. + +$ PORT=80 extra --donate --free-drink +Options: { timeout: 60, donate: 20, port: '80', freeDrink: true, drink: 'small' } + +$ extra --disable-server --port 8000 +error: option '--disable-server' cannot be used with option '-p, --port ' +``` + +Specify a required (mandatory) option using the `Option` method `.makeOptionMandatory()`. This matches the `Command` method [.requiredOption()](#required-option). + +### Custom option processing + +You may specify a function to do custom processing of option-arguments. The callback function receives two parameters, +the user specified option-argument and the previous value for the option. It returns the new value for the option. + +This allows you to coerce the option-argument to the desired type, or accumulate values, or do entirely custom processing. + +You can optionally specify the default/starting value for the option after the function parameter. + +Example file: [options-custom-processing.js](./examples/options-custom-processing.js) + +```js +function myParseInt(value, dummyPrevious) { + // parseInt takes a string and a radix + const parsedValue = parseInt(value, 10); + if (isNaN(parsedValue)) { + throw new commander.InvalidArgumentError('Not a number.'); + } + return parsedValue; +} + +function increaseVerbosity(dummyValue, previous) { + return previous + 1; +} + +function collect(value, previous) { + return previous.concat([value]); +} + +function commaSeparatedList(value, dummyPrevious) { + return value.split(','); +} + +program + .option('-f, --float ', 'float argument', parseFloat) + .option('-i, --integer ', 'integer argument', myParseInt) + .option('-v, --verbose', 'verbosity that can be increased', increaseVerbosity, 0) + .option('-c, --collect ', 'repeatable value', collect, []) + .option('-l, --list ', 'comma separated list', commaSeparatedList) +; + +program.parse(); + +const options = program.opts(); +if (options.float !== undefined) console.log(`float: ${options.float}`); +if (options.integer !== undefined) console.log(`integer: ${options.integer}`); +if (options.verbose > 0) console.log(`verbosity: ${options.verbose}`); +if (options.collect.length > 0) console.log(options.collect); +if (options.list !== undefined) console.log(options.list); +``` + +```console +$ custom -f 1e2 +float: 100 +$ custom --integer 2 +integer: 2 +$ custom -v -v -v +verbose: 3 +$ custom -c a -c b -c c +[ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] +$ custom --list x,y,z +[ 'x', 'y', 'z' ] +``` + +## Commands + +You can specify (sub)commands using `.command()` or `.addCommand()`. There are two ways these can be implemented: using an action handler attached to the command, or as a stand-alone executable file (described in more detail later). The subcommands may be nested ([example](./examples/nestedCommands.js)). + +In the first parameter to `.command()` you specify the command name. You may append the command-arguments after the command name, or specify them separately using `.argument()`. The arguments may be `` or `[optional]`, and the last argument may also be `variadic...`. + +You can use `.addCommand()` to add an already configured subcommand to the program. + +For example: + +```js +// Command implemented using action handler (description is supplied separately to `.command`) +// Returns new command for configuring. +program + .command('clone [destination]') + .description('clone a repository into a newly created directory') + .action((source, destination) => { + console.log('clone command called'); + }); + +// Command implemented using stand-alone executable file, indicated by adding description as second parameter to `.command`. +// Returns `this` for adding more commands. +program + .command('start ', 'start named service') + .command('stop [service]', 'stop named service, or all if no name supplied'); + +// Command prepared separately. +// Returns `this` for adding more commands. +program + .addCommand(build.makeBuildCommand()); +``` + +Configuration options can be passed with the call to `.command()` and `.addCommand()`. Specifying `hidden: true` will +remove the command from the generated help output. Specifying `isDefault: true` will run the subcommand if no other +subcommand is specified ([example](./examples/defaultCommand.js)). + +For safety, `.addCommand()` does not automatically copy the inherited settings from the parent command. There is a helper routine `.copyInheritedSettings()` for copying the settings when they are wanted. + +### Command-arguments + +For subcommands, you can specify the argument syntax in the call to `.command()` (as shown above). This +is the only method usable for subcommands implemented using a stand-alone executable, but for other subcommands +you can instead use the following method. + +To configure a command, you can use `.argument()` to specify each expected command-argument. +You supply the argument name and an optional description. The argument may be `` or `[optional]`. +You can specify a default value for an optional command-argument. + +Example file: [argument.js](./examples/argument.js) + +```js +program + .version('0.1.0') + .argument('', 'user to login') + .argument('[password]', 'password for user, if required', 'no password given') + .action((username, password) => { + console.log('username:', username); + console.log('password:', password); + }); +``` + + The last argument of a command can be variadic, and only the last argument. To make an argument variadic you + append `...` to the argument name. A variadic argument is passed to the action handler as an array. For example: + +```js +program + .version('0.1.0') + .command('rmdir') + .argument('') + .action(function (dirs) { + dirs.forEach((dir) => { + console.log('rmdir %s', dir); + }); + }); +``` + +There is a convenience method to add multiple arguments at once, but without descriptions: + +```js +program + .arguments(' '); +``` + +#### More configuration + +There are some additional features available by constructing an `Argument` explicitly for less common cases. + +Example file: [arguments-extra.js](./examples/arguments-extra.js) + +```js +program + .addArgument(new commander.Argument('', 'drink cup size').choices(['small', 'medium', 'large'])) + .addArgument(new commander.Argument('[timeout]', 'timeout in seconds').default(60, 'one minute')) +``` + +#### Custom argument processing + +You may specify a function to do custom processing of command-arguments (like for option-arguments). +The callback function receives two parameters, the user specified command-argument and the previous value for the argument. +It returns the new value for the argument. + +The processed argument values are passed to the action handler, and saved as `.processedArgs`. + +You can optionally specify the default/starting value for the argument after the function parameter. + +Example file: [arguments-custom-processing.js](./examples/arguments-custom-processing.js) + +```js +program + .command('add') + .argument('', 'integer argument', myParseInt) + .argument('[second]', 'integer argument', myParseInt, 1000) + .action((first, second) => { + console.log(`${first} + ${second} = ${first + second}`); + }) +; +``` + +### Action handler + +The action handler gets passed a parameter for each command-argument you declared, and two additional parameters +which are the parsed options and the command object itself. + +Example file: [thank.js](./examples/thank.js) + +```js +program + .argument('') + .option('-t, --title ', 'title to use before name') + .option('-d, --debug', 'display some debugging') + .action((name, options, command) => { + if (options.debug) { + console.error('Called %s with options %o', command.name(), options); + } + const title = options.title ? `${options.title} ` : ''; + console.log(`Thank-you ${title}${name}`); + }); +``` + +If you prefer, you can work with the command directly and skip declaring the parameters for the action handler. The `this` keyword is set to the running command and can be used from a function expression (but not from an arrow function). + +Example file: [action-this.js](./examples/action-this.js) + +```js +program + .command('serve') + .argument('