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giter8

Giter8 is a command line tool to generate files and directories from templates published on github. It's implemented in Scala and runs through the Simple Build Tool launcher, but it can produce output for any purpose.

Installation

If you haven't already setup sbt, you need to go do that. Then...

Make sure that the sbt is on your path. You should be able to run it from any directory and be prompted to create a new project (and then abort).

You need to create a new g8 script also on your executable path. For unix-like shells, it should contain:

#!/bin/sh
sbt @.giter8.launchconfig "$@"

And it should be executable:

$ chmod a+x g8

The parameter passed to sbt tells its launcher to use the given launch configuration instead of starting sbt itself. The launcher will look for the configuration in several places; one of these is your home directory, and giter8's launch configuration is prefixed with a dot so that you can store it there without it being all up in your face.

Here is a launch configuration for the current version of giter8. You can paste it into a file ~/.giter8.launchconfig

[app]
  version: 0.2.0
  org: net.databinder
  name: giter8
  class: giter8.Giter8
[scala]
  version: 2.8.1
[repositories]
  local
  maven-local
  scala-tools-releases
  maven-central
[boot]
  directory: /path/to/home/.giter8/boot

There is one thing you need to change in it, however! The last line specifies the "boot" directory, where versions of giter8 will be downloaded and stored. You may keep these anywhere that your user account is permitted to write; we recommend using .giter8/boot under your home directory. Note that tilde (~) is not supported by the launcher so you'll need to enter the full path.

To make sure everything is working, try running g8 with no parameters. It should download giter8 and its dependencies, then print a usage message.

When it's time to upgrade to a new version of giter8, you'll only need to adjust the version number in .giter8.launcher.

Giter8 is also installable with the OS X package manager Homebrew:

$ brew update && brew install giter8

Usage

Template repositories must reside on github and be named with the suffix ".g8". We're keeping a list of templates on the wiki, and you can query github to list all templates with a ".g8" suffix from the command line:

$ g8 --list

To apply a template, for example, softprops/unfiltered.g8:

$ g8 softprops/unfiltered.g8

You can also drop the suffix and it will be assumed:

$ g8 softprops/unfiltered

Either way, giter8 resolves this to the softprops/unfiltered.g8 repository and queries github for the project's template parameters. You'll be prompted for each parameter, with its default value in square brackets:

name [My Web Project]: 

Enter your own value or press enter to accept the default. After all the values have been supplied, giter8 fetches the templates, applies the parameters, and writes them to your filesystem. If the template has a "name" parameter it will be used to create base directory within the current directory. (Typically, this is the base directory for a new project). If the template does not have a "name" parameter, giter8 will output its files and directories within the current directory, skipping over any files that already exist.

Once you become familiar with a template's parameters, you can enter them on the command line and skip the interaction:

$ g8 softprops/unfiltered.g8 --name=my-new-website

Any parameters that are not supplied will be assigned their default values.

Making your own templates

The g8 runtime looks for templates in the src/main/g8 directory of a given github project. This structure is used so that it is easy (but not required) for the template itself to be an sbt project. That way, an sbt plugin can be employed to locally test templates before pushing changes to github.

The easy way to start a new template project is with a giter8 template made expressly for that purpose:

$ g8 n8han/giter8

This will create an sbt project with stub template sources nested under src/main/g8. The file default.properties defines template fields and their default values using the Java properties file format. Every other file in that directory and below it is a template source.

StringTemplate, wrapped by Scalasti, is the engine for giter8 templates, so template fields in source files are bracketed with the $ character. For example, a "classname" field might be referenced in the source as:

class $classname$ {

The "name" field, if defined, is treated specially by giter8. It is assumed to be the name of a project being created, so the g8 runtime creates a directory based off that name (with spaces and capitals replaced) that will contain the template output. If no name field is specified in the template, g8's output goes to the user's current working directory. In both cases, directories nested under the template's source directory are reproduced in its output. File and directory names also participate in template expansion, e.g.

src/main/g8/src/main/scala/$classname$.scala

If you enter sbt's interactive mode in the base directory of a template project, the action "sbt-test" will apply the template in the default output directory (under target/g8) and run sbt update test for that project in a forked process. This is a good sanity check for templates that are supposed to produce sbt projects.

But what if your template is not for an sbt project? Such as:

src/main/g8/default.properties
src/main/g8/TodaysMenu.html

You can still use sbt's interactive mode to test the template. The lower level write-templates action will apply default field values to the template and write it to the same target/g8 directory.

As soon as you push your template to github (be sure to name the project with a ".g8" extension) you can test it with the actual g8 runtime. When you're ready, add your template project to the the wiki so other giter8 users can find it.

Question(s) that will probably be frequent

Isn't this like Lifty?

Nope. Lifty is an sbt processor, meaning it runs inside of sbt itself. You can't run sbt or any processor until you have a project to run it in. Giter8 addresses step 1 of sbt project creation. You could use giter8 create a Lift project, then run Lifty inside it for fine tuning. You can also use giter8 to produce things that are not sbt projects at all.

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A command line tool for templates published to github.

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