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A lightweight terminal emulator written in CSS3 and Javascript.

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Bash

A lightweight terminal emulator written in CSS3 and Javascript. You can write your own commands on top of the core terminal. Great for showing off your open source projects!

Getting Started

You can clone or download the repository from GitHub or install through Bower:

bower install bash --save

Usage

Add the core script and stylesheet to your page with:

<link rel="stylesheet" href="bash.css" />
<script src="bash.js"></script>

Add the scaffolding to your HTML:

<div class="bash">
    <div class="window">
        <div class="header">
            <a href="#" class="button close"></a>
            <a href="#" class="button min"></a>
            <a href="#" class="button max"></a>
            <span class="maxer">&lsaquo; &rsaquo;</span>
            <span>Project &#8212; Bash &#8212; 80x24</span>
        </div>
        <div class="terminal"></div>
    </div>
</div>

You can also include a theme CSS file after the core which are located in the themes folder. Execute Bash.js by creating a new instance. The bash object accepts a selector (usually .bash) and an array of options. A demo with defaults is show below:

var container = document.querySelector('.bash');
var bsh = new Bash(container, {
    computer: 'ttys000',       // Name of the computer (string)
    help: undefined,           // Optional help text (string)
    prompt: 'user@home:~$',    // Shell prompt symbol (string or array)
    name: undefined,           // Name of custom function (string)
    function: undefined,       // Custom function definition (function)
    demo: false                // Enable demonstration mode (boolean)
});

The function property takes two parameters: bash (the terminal instance) and next (the callback). You can use them like so:

function: function(bash, next) {
    bash.post('Hello, world!', 0, false, true, function () {
        return next();
    }
});

The bash.post function takes five parameters as shown in the previous example. Let's examine each one:

bash.post(
    'Hello, world!',    // The message
    0,                  // The delay
    false,              // Add a prompt before the message? (Demo mode only)
    true,               // Is this message a comment / feedback?
    function () {}      // The callback, fired once the message is posted.
);

You can use the echo and clear commands.

Examples

An example of a custom function that runs a Gruntfile:

var container = document.querySelector('.bash');
var bsh = new Bash(container, {
    name: 'grunt',
    prompt: '$',
    function: function(bash, next) {
        bash.post('Running "jshint:gruntfile" (jshint) task', 0, false, true);
        bash.post('>> 1 file lint free.', 500, false, true);
        bash.post('&nbsp;', 600);
        bash.post('Running "uglify:dist" (uglify) task', 700, false, true);
        bash.post('File "dist/scripts.min.js" created.', 1600, false, true);
        bash.post('Uncompressed size: 389 bytes.', 1800, false, true);
        bash.post('&nbsp;', 1900);
        bash.post('Done, without errors.', 2000, false, true, function() {
            return next();
        });
    }
});

An example of a demonstration function that emulates installing NPM packages and running the Node application:

var container = document.querySelector('.bash');
var bsh = new Bash(container, {
    demo: true,
    prompt: ['~', '$'],
    function: function(bash, next) {
        bash.post('npm install --production', 0, true);
        bash.post('npm start', 500, true);
        bash.post('&nbsp;', 600);
        bash.post('&nbsp;', 600);
        bash.post('# You\'re done!', 1500, false, true, function() {
            return next();
        });
    }
});