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d569f087 1# QMK CLI Development
2
3This document has useful information for developers wishing to write new `qmk` subcommands.
4
5# Overview
6
7The QMK CLI operates using the subcommand pattern made famous by git. The main `qmk` script is simply there to setup the environment and pick the correct entrypoint to run. Each subcommand is a self-contained module with an entrypoint (decorated by `@cli.subcommand()`) that performs some action and returns a shell returncode, or None.
8
9# Subcommands
10
11[MILC](https://github.com/clueboard/milc) is the CLI framework `qmk` uses to handle argument parsing, configuration, logging, and many other features. It lets you focus on writing your tool without wasting your time writing glue code.
12
13Subcommands in the local CLI are always found in `qmk_firmware/lib/python/qmk/cli`.
14
15Let's start by looking at an example subcommand. This is `lib/python/qmk/cli/hello.py`:
16
17```python
18"""QMK Python Hello World
19
20This is an example QMK CLI script.
21"""
22from milc import cli
23
24
25@cli.argument('-n', '--name', default='World', help='Name to greet.')
26@cli.subcommand('QMK Hello World.')
27def hello(cli):
28 """Log a friendly greeting.
29 """
30 cli.log.info('Hello, %s!', cli.config.hello.name)
31```
32
33First we import the `cli` object from `milc`. This is how we interact with the user and control the script's behavior. We use `@cli.argument()` to define a command line flag, `--name`. This also creates a configuration variable named `hello.name` (and the corresponding `user.name`) which the user can set so they don't have to specify the argument. The `cli.subcommand()` decorator designates this function as a subcommand. The name of the subcommand will be taken from the name of the function.
34
35Once inside our function we find a typical "Hello, World!" program. We use `cli.log` to access the underlying [Logger Object](https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/logging.html#logger-objects), whose behavior is user controllable. We also access the value for name supplied by the user as `cli.config.hello.name`. The value for `cli.config.hello.name` will be determined by looking at the `--name` argument supplied by the user, if not provided it will use the value in the `qmk.ini` config file, and if neither of those is provided it will fall back to the default supplied in the `cli.argument()` decorator.
36
37# User Interaction
38
39MILC and the QMK CLI have several nice tools for interacting with the user. Using these standard tools will allow you to colorize your text for easier interactions, and allow the user to control when and how that information is displayed and stored.
40
41## Printing Text
42
43There are two main methods for outputting text in a subcommand- `cli.log` and `cli.echo()`. They operate in similar ways but you should prefer to use `cli.log.info()` for most general purpose printing.
44
45You can use special tokens to colorize your text, to make it easier to understand the output of your program. See [Colorizing Text](#colorizing-text) below.
46
47Both of these methods support built-in string formatting using python's [printf style string format operations](https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/stdtypes.html#old-string-formatting). You can use tokens such as `%s` and `%d` within your text strings then pass the values as arguments. See our Hello, World program above for an example.
48
49You should never use the format operator (`%`) directly, always pass values as arguments.
50
51### Logging (`cli.log`)
52
53The `cli.log` object gives you access to a [Logger Object](https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/logging.html#logger-objects). We have configured our log output to show the user a nice emoji for each log level (or the log level name if their terminal does not support unicode.) This way the user can tell at a glance which messages are most important when something goes wrong.
54
55The default log level is `INFO`. If the user runs `qmk -v <subcommand>` the default log level will be set to `DEBUG`.
56
57| Function | Emoji |
58|----------|-------|
59| cli.log.critical | `{bg_red}{fg_white}¬_¬{style_reset_all}` |
60| cli.log.error | `{fg_red}☒{style_reset_all}` |
61| cli.log.warning | `{fg_yellow}⚠{style_reset_all}` |
62| cli.log.info | `{fg_blue}Ψ{style_reset_all}` |
63| cli.log.debug | `{fg_cyan}☐{style_reset_all}` |
64| cli.log.notset | `{style_reset_all}¯\\_(o_o)_/¯` |
65
66### Printing (`cli.echo`)
67
68Sometimes you simply need to print text outside of the log system. This is appropriate if you are outputting fixed data or writing out something that should never be logged. Most of the time you should prefer `cli.log.info()` over `cli.echo`.
69
70### Colorizing Text
71
72You can colorize the output of your text by including color tokens within text. Use color to highlight, not to convey information. Remember that the user can disable color, and your subcommand should still be usable if they do.
73
74You should generally avoid setting the background color, unless it's integral to what you are doing. Remember that users have a lot of preferences when it comes to their terminal color, so you should pick colors that work well against both black and white backgrounds.
75
76Colors prefixed with 'fg' will affect the foreground (text) color. Colors prefixed with 'bg' will affect the background color.
77
78| Color | Background | Extended Background | Foreground | Extended Foreground|
79|-------|------------|---------------------|------------|--------------------|
80| Black | {bg_black} | {bg_lightblack_ex} | {fg_black} | {fg_lightblack_ex} |
81| Blue | {bg_blue} | {bg_lightblue_ex} | {fg_blue} | {fg_lightblue_ex} |
82| Cyan | {bg_cyan} | {bg_lightcyan_ex} | {fg_cyan} | {fg_lightcyan_ex} |
83| Green | {bg_green} | {bg_lightgreen_ex} | {fg_green} | {fg_lightgreen_ex} |
84| Magenta | {bg_magenta} | {bg_lightmagenta_ex} | {fg_magenta} | {fg_lightmagenta_ex} |
85| Red | {bg_red} | {bg_lightred_ex} | {fg_red} | {fg_lightred_ex} |
86| White | {bg_white} | {bg_lightwhite_ex} | {fg_white} | {fg_lightwhite_ex} |
87| Yellow | {bg_yellow} | {bg_lightyellow_ex} | {fg_yellow} | {fg_lightyellow_ex} |
88
89There are also control sequences that can be used to change the behavior of
90ANSI output:
91
92| Control Sequences | Description |
93|-------------------|-------------|
94| {style_bright} | Make the text brighter |
95| {style_dim} | Make the text dimmer |
96| {style_normal} | Make the text normal (neither `{style_bright}` nor `{style_dim}`) |
97| {style_reset_all} | Reset all text attributes to default. (This is automatically added to the end of every string.) |
98| {bg_reset} | Reset the background color to the user's default |
99| {fg_reset} | Reset the foreground color to the user's default |
100
101# Arguments and Configuration
102
103QMK handles the details of argument parsing and configuration for you. When you add a new argument it is automatically incorporated into the config tree based on your subcommand's name and the long name of the argument. You can access this configuration in `cli.config`, using either attribute-style access (`cli.config.<subcommand>.<argument>`) or dictionary-style access (`cli.config['<subcommand>']['<argument>']`).
104
105Under the hood QMK uses [ConfigParser](https://docs.python.org/3/library/configparser.html) to store configurations. This gives us an easy and straightforward way to represent the configuration in a human-editable way. We have wrapped access to this configuration to provide some nicities that ConfigParser does not normally have.
106
107## Reading Configuration Values
108
109You can interact with `cli.config` in all the ways you'd normally expect. For example the `qmk compile` command gets the keyboard name from `cli.config.compile.keyboard`. It does not need to know whether that value came from the command line, an environment variable, or the configuration file.
110
111Iteration is also supported:
112
113```
114for section in cli.config:
115 for key in cli.config[section]:
116 cli.log.info('%s.%s: %s', section, key, cli.config[section][key])
117```
118
119## Setting Configuration Values
120
121You can set configuration values in the usual ways.
122
123Dictionary style:
124
125```
126cli.config['<section>']['<key>'] = <value>
127```
128
129Attribute style:
130
131```
132cli.config.<section>.<key> = <value>
133```
134
135## Deleting Configuration Values
136
137You can delete configuration values in the usual ways.
138
139Dictionary style:
140
141```
142del(cli.config['<section>']['<key>'])
143```
144
145Attribute style:
146
147```
148del(cli.config.<section>.<key>)
149```
150
151## Writing The Configuration File
152
153The configuration is not written out when it is changed. Most commands do not need to do this. We prefer to have the user change their configuration deliberitely using `qmk config`.
154
155You can use `cli.save_config()` to write out the configuration.
156
157## Excluding Arguments From Configuration
158
159Some arguments should not be propagated to the configuration file. These can be excluded by adding `arg_only=True` when creating the argument.
160
161Example:
162
163```
164@cli.argument('-o', '--output', arg_only=True, help='File to write to')
165@cli.argument('filename', arg_only=True, help='Configurator JSON file')
166@cli.subcommand('Create a keymap.c from a QMK Configurator export.')
167def json_keymap(cli):
168 pass
169```
170
171You will only be able to access these arguments using `cli.args`. For example:
172
173```
174cli.log.info('Reading from %s and writing to %s', cli.args.filename, cli.args.output)
175```
f7bdc54c 176
177# Testing, and Linting, and Formatting (oh my!)
178
179We use nose2, flake8, and yapf to test, lint, and format code. You can use the `pytest` and `pyformat` subcommands to run these tests:
180
181### Testing and Linting
182
183 qmk pytest
184
185### Formatting
186
187 qmk pyformat
188
189## Formatting Details
190
191We use [yapf](https://github.com/google/yapf) to automatically format code. Our configuration is in the `[yapf]` section of `setup.cfg`.
192
193?> Tip- Many editors can use yapf as a plugin to automatically format code as you type.
194
195## Testing Details
196
197Our tests can be found in `lib/python/qmk/tests/`. You will find both unit and integration tests in this directory. We hope you will write both unit and integration tests for your code, but if you do not please favor integration tests.
198
199If your PR does not include a comprehensive set of tests please add comments like this to your code so that other people know where they can help:
200
201 # TODO(unassigned/<yourGithubUsername>): Write <unit|integration> tests
202
203We use [nose2](https://nose2.readthedocs.io/en/latest/getting_started.html) to run our tests. You can refer to the nose2 documentation for more details on what you can do in your test functions.
204
205## Linting Details
206
207We use flake8 to lint our code. Your code should pass flake8 before you open a PR. This will be checked when you run `qmk pytest` and by CI when you submit a PR.