adambrett / shell-wrapper
An object oriented wrapper for shell commands
Installs: 186 100
Dependents: 8
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 1
Watchers: 2
Forks: 3
Open Issues: 4
Requires (Dev)
- mockery/mockery: ^1.5
- phploc/phploc: ^7
- phpmd/phpmd: @stable
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9
- sebastian/phpcpd: ^6
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: 3.*
README
PHP Shell Wrapper is a high level object-oriented wrapper for accessing the program execution functions in PHP.
Its primary purpose is to abstract away low level program execution functions in your application, allowing you to mock PHP Shell Wrapper in your tests, making applications which call shell functions easily testable.
Installation
Using composer:
composer require adambrett/shell-wrapper '~1.0'
Basic Usage
Hello World
Import the required classes into your namespace:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Param; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\Exec;
Instantiate a new shell runner:
$shell = new Exec();
Create the command:
$command = new Command('echo');
Add some parameters:
$command->addParam(new Param('Hello World'));
Now run the command:
$shell->run($command);
Which would run the command:
echo 'Hello World'
Command Builder
Whilst this library is highly object-oriented behind the scenes, you may not
want to use it that way, what's where the Command Builder comes in. The command
builder constructs a Command
object behind the scenes, and then constructs the
correct class for each method called, so you don't have to worry about it.
The Command Builder also has a fluent interface for extra syntactical sugar. Here's the above example re-written using the Command Builder:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\Exec; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Builder as CommandBuilder; $shell = new Exec(); $command = new CommandBuilder('echo'); $command->addParam('Hello World'); $shell->run($command);
And here's a slightly less trivial example:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\Exec; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Builder as CommandBuilder; $shell = new Exec(); $command = new CommandBuilder('phpunit'); $command->addFlag('v') ->addArgument('stop-on-failure') ->addArgument('configuration', '~/phpunit.xml') ->addParam('~/tests/TestCase.php'); $shell->run($command);
Which would run:
phpunit -v --stop-on-failure --configuration '~/phpunit.xml' '~/tests/TestCase.php'
and another:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\Exec; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Builder as CommandBuilder; $shell = new Exec(); $command = new CommandBuilder('/usr/bin/jekyll'); $command->addSubCommand('serve') ->addArgument('watch'); $shell->run($command);
Which would run:
/usr/bin/jekyll serve --watch
Runners
Runners are paths directly in to the
PHP program execution functions, and map to them by name
exactly. Runners should all implement \AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\Runner
,
which means you can type hint on that whenever you need to use a shell and they
should then all be interchangeable.
Some runners will also implement \AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Runners\ReturnValue
,
but only where that is appropriate to the low level function.
Some runners (marked *) only emulate command running. This feature useful for testing.
You can use FakeRunner
in your unit tests to emulate running a command.
You can use DryRunner
for debugging purposes, or when your application uses
a --dry-run
type argument and you want to echo the command rather than run it.
SubCommands
Usage
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\SubCommand; $shell->addSubCommand(new SubCommand($subCommand));
Sub commands will not be escaped or modified in anyway, they are intended for use like so:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Command; use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\SubCommand; $command = new Command('jekyll') $shell->addSubCommand(new SubCommand('build'));
Which would run the command jekyll build
.
Arguments
Usage
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Argument; $shell->addArgument(new Argument($name, $value));
$value
will be automatically escaped behind the scenes, but $name
will not,
so make sure you never have user input in $name
, or if you do, escape it
yourself.
If you want multiple arguments of the same name, then $value
can be an array,
like so:
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Argument; $shell->addArgument(new Argument('exclude', ['.git*', 'cache']));
Which would result in the following:
somecommand --exclude '.git*' --exclude 'cache'
Flags
Usage
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Flag; $shell->addFlag(new Flag($flag));
$flag
will not be escaped, but can be a string rather than a single character,
so new Flag('lla')
is perfectly valid.
Params
Usage
use AdamBrett\ShellWrapper\Command\Param; $shell->addParam(new Param($param));
$param
will be automatically escaped behind the scenes, but will otherwise be
un-altered.
Requirements
- PHP >= 8.1
Contributing
Pull Requests
- Fork the php-shell-wrapper repository
- Create a new branch for each feature or improvement
- Send a pull request from each feature branch to the master branch
Style Guide
This package is compliant with PSR-4 and PSR-12. If you notice compliance oversights, please send a patch via pull request.
Tests
The library is developed using test driven development. All pull requests should be accompanied by passing unit tests with 100% coverage. phpunit is used for testing and mockery is used for mocks.