abc
abc is not an official Google product.
Introduction
abc is a command line interface (CLI) to speed up the process of creating new
applications. It achieves this by using a templating system that will allow
users to interactively fork existing templates, while providing neccessary
context, instructions, or requested inputs.
Using this tool will reduce the cognitive load required to set up GitHub actions
properly, or follow development best practices, and avoid copy/pasting from
various sources to start a new project.
This doc contains a User Guide and a
Template Developer Guide.
Command line usage
The abc
command has many subcommands, describes below. In abc versions before
0.9, these commands were called abc templates $SUBCOMMAND
, but as of 0.9 they
are now also available under the shorter form abc $SUBCOMMAND
.
For abc render
Usage: abc render [flags] <template_location>
Example:
abc render --prompt github.com/abcxyz/gcp-org-terraform-template@latest
The <template_location>
parameter is one of these two things:
-
A remote git repository. The subdirectory is optional, defaulting to the root
of the repo. This directory must contain a spec.yaml
. The version suffix
must be either @latest
, long commit SHA, branch name or tag. Short commit
SHA's are not supported and if provided, they will be tried as a branch or tag
name. Examples:
github.com/abcxyz/gcp-org-terraform-template@latest
(no subdirectory)
github.com/abcxyz/abc/t/rest_server@latest
(with subdirectory)
github.com/abcxyz/abc/t/rest_server@v0.2.1
(uses tag instead of "latest")
github.com/abcxyz/abc/t/rest_server@main
(use branch name instead of
"latest")
github.com/abcxyz/abc/t/rest_server@0402ed8413f02e1069c2aec368eca208895918b1
(use ref to long commit SHA)
-
A local directory as an absolute or relative path. This directory must contain
a spec.yaml
. Examples:
/my/template/dir
my/template/dir
./my/template/dir
(equivalent to previous)
Flags
-
--debug-step-diffs
: for template authors, not regular users. This will log
the diffs made by each step as git commits in a tmp git repository. If you
want to see the git logs and diffs with your usual git commands, please
navigate to the tmp folder, otherwise you will need to use a git flag
--git-dir=path/to/tmp/debug/folder
for your commands, e.g.:
git --git-dir=path/to/tmp/debug/folder log
. A warn log will show you where
the tmp repository is.
Note: you must have git installed to use this flag.
-
--debug-scratch-contents
: for template authors, not regular users. This will
print the filename of every file in the scratch directory after executing each
step of the spec.yaml. Useful for debugging errors like
path "src/app.js" doesn't exist in the scratch directory, did you forget to "include" it first?"
.
-
--dest <output_dir>
: the directory on the local filesystem to write output
to. Defaults to the current directory. If it doesn't exist, it will be
created.
-
--input=key=val
: provide an input parameter to the template. key
must be
one of the inputs declared by the template in its spec.yaml
. May be repeated
to provide multiple inputs, like
--input=name=alice --input=email=alice@example.com
.
-
--input-file=file
: provide a YAML file with input(s) to the template. The
file must contain a YAML object whose keys and values are strings. If a key
exists in the file but is also provided as an --input
, the --input
value
takes precedence.
This flag may be repeated, like
--input-file=some-inputs.yaml --input-file=more-inputs.yaml
. When there are
multiple input files, they must not have any overlapping keys.
-
--force-overwrite
: normally, the template rendering operation will abort if
the template would output a file at a location that already exists on the
filesystem. This flag allows it to continue.
-
--keep-temp-dirs
: there are two temp directories created during template
rendering. Normally, they are removed at the end of the template rendering
operation, but this flag causes them to be kept. Inspecting the temp
directories can be helpful in debugging problems with spec.yaml
or with the
abc
command itself. The two temp directories are the "template directory",
into which the template is downloaded, and the "scratch directory", where
files are staged during transformations before being written to the output
directory. Use environment variable ABC_LOG_LEVEL=debug
to see the locations
of the directories.
-
--prompt
: the user will be prompted for inputs that are needed by the
template but are not supplied by --inputs
or --input-file
.
-
--skip-input-validation
: don't run any of the validation rules for template
inputs. This could be useful if a template has overly strict validation logic
and you know for sure that the value you want to use is OK.
Logging
Use the environment variables ABC_LOG_MODE
and ABC_LOG_LEVEL
to configure
logging.
The valid values for ABC_LOG_MODE
are:
text
: (the default) non-JSON logs, best for human readability in a terminal
json
: JSON formatted logs, better for feeding into a program
The valid values for ABC_LOG_LEVEL
are debug
, info
, notice
, warning
,
error
, and emergency
. The default is warn
.
For abc golden-test
The golden-test feature is essentially unit testing for templates. You provide
(1) a set of template input values and (2) the expected output directory
contents. The test framework verifies that the actual output matches the
expected output, using the verify
subcommand. Separately, the record
subcommand helps with capturing the current template output and saving it as the
"expected" output for future test runs. This concept is similar to "snapshot
testing" and
"rpc replay testing." In
addition, the new-test
subcommand creates a new golden test to initialize the
needed golden test directory structure and test.yaml
.
Each test is configured by placing a file named test.yaml
in a subdirectory of
the template named testdata/golden/<your-test-name>
. See below for details on
this file.
Usage:
abc golden-test new-test [options] <test_name> [<location>]
see abc golden-test new-test --help
for supported options.
abc golden-test record [--test-name=<test_name>] [<location>]
abc golden-test verify [--test-name=<test_name>] [<location>]
Note: For new-test
, the <location>
parameter gives the location of the template.
For record
and verify
, <location>
parameter gives the location that include one or more templates and abc cli
will recursively search for templates and tests under the given <location>
.
Examples:
abc golden-test new-test basic examples/templates/render/hello_jupiter
creates a new golden-test for the specific named test called basic
for the
given template
abc golden-test verify examples/templates/render/hello_jupiter
runs all golden-tests for the given template
abc golden-test verify --test-name=example_test examples/templates/render/hello_jupiter
same as above, but only for the specific named tests
abc golden-test verify examples/templates
runs all golden-tests for the templates included in examples/templates
abc golden-test verify --test-name=example examples/templates
same as above, but only for the specific named tests
abc golden-test verify
runs all golden-tests for the templates included in the current directory
abc golden-test record examples/templates/render/hello_jupiter
record the current template output as the desired/expected output for all
tests within the given template, saving to testdata/golden/<test_name>/data
.
abc golden-test record --test-name=one_env,multiple_envs examples/templates/render/for_each_dynamic
same as above, but only for the specific named tests.
abc golden-test record examples/templates
record the all template outputs as the desired/expected outputs for all test cases for the templates under example/templates
directory.
abc golden-test record --test-name=example examples/templates
same as above, but only for the specific named tests.
abc golden-test record
record the all template outputs as the desired/expected outputs for all test cases for the templates under current directory.
For record
and verify
subcommand, the <test_name>
parameter gives the test names to record or verify, if not
specified, all tests will be run against. This flag may be repeated, like
--test-name=test1
, --test-name=test2
, or --test-name=test1,test2
.
For new-test
subcommand, the <location>
parameter gives the location of the template, defaults to the current directory.
For record
and verify
subcommand, the <location>
parameter gives the location that include one or more templates, defaults to the current directory.
For every test case, it is expected that a
testdata/golden/<test_name>/test.yaml
exists to define template input params.
Each "input" in this file must correspond to a template input defined in the
template's spec.yaml
. Each required input in the template's spec.yaml must
have a corresponding input value defined in the test.yaml
. Typically, you will use
golden-test new-test
subcommand to initialize the
needed golden test directory structure and test.yaml
,
but it's also possible to create the
desired goldentest directory structure and test.yaml
by hand.
Example test.yaml:
api_version: 'cli.abcxyz.dev/v1alpha1'
kind: 'GoldenTest'
inputs:
- name: 'my-service-account'
value: 'platform-ops@abcxyz-my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com'
- name: 'my-project-number'
value: '123456789'
The expected/desired test output for each test is stored in
testdata/golden/<test_name>/data
. Typically, you'll use the
golden-test record
subcommand to populate this directory, but it's also
possible to create the desired output files by hand.
Builtin vars in golden tests
In spec.yaml
, there some built-in variables
like _git_tag
that are populated automatically based on the environment. For
unit testing, we need the ability to populate these variables with fixed values
so the test output is the same every time.
To support this, the test.yaml
file may have a top-level field builtin_vars
that sets the value of built-in variables while running the test. For example:
api_version: 'cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta2'
kind: 'GoldenTest'
inputs:
- name: 'some-normal-input'
value: 'some-value'
# For the purposes of this golden test, provide a fake _git_tag value.
builtin_vars:
- name: '_git_tag'
value: 'my-cool-tag'
Technicalities:
- Any built-in variables that are not set by
builtin_vars
will not be in
scope. For example, if your spec.yaml references {{._git_tag}}
, but
test.yaml doesn't provide a value for _git_tag
using builtin_vars
in
test.yaml
, then the golden-test command will fail with an error about an
unknown variable.
- You can't set an arbitrary variable name; only a specific known set of
variable names are allowed (e.g.
_git_sha
, _git_tag
, _flag_dest
).
- Built-in variable names always start with underscore.
For abc describe
The describe command downloads the template and prints out its description, and
describes the inputs that it accepts.
Usage:
abc describe <template_location>
The <template_location>
takes the same value as the
render command.
Example:
Command:
abc describe github.com/abcxyz/guardian/abc.templates/default-workflows@v0.1.0-alpha12
Output:
Description: Generate the Guardian workflows for the Google Cloud organization Terraform intrastructure repo.
Input name: terraform_directory
Description: A sub-directory for all Terraform files
Default: .
Input name: terraform_version
Description: The terraform version to use with Guardian
Default: 1.5.4
Input name: guardian_wif_provider
Description: The Google Cloud workload identity federation provider for Guardian
Input name: guardian_service_account
Description: The Google Cloud service account for Guardian
Rule 0: gcp_matches_service_account(guardian_service_account)
Input name: guardian_state_bucket
Description: The Google Cloud storage bucket for Guardian state
User Guide
Start here if you want to install ("render") a template using this CLI
tool. "Rendering" a template is when you use the abc
CLI to download some
template code, do some substitution to replace parts of it with your own values,
and write the result to a local directory.
Installation
There are two ways to install:
-
The most official way:
-
Go to https://github.com/abcxyz/abc/releases
-
Pick the most recent release that isn't an -alpha
or -rc
or anything,
just vX.Y.Z
-
Download the .tar.gz
file that matches your OS and CPU:
- Linux:
linux_amd64
- Mac:
- M1/M2/later:
darwin_arm64
- Intel:
darwin_amd64
You can use the curl -sSL
command to download. Please substitute the
version number you're downloading:
$ curl -sSL https://github.com/abcxyz/abc/releases/download/v1.2.3/abc_1.2.3_linux_amd64.tar.gz | tar -xzv abc
-
Now you will have an abc
file that you can run. Perhaps place it in your
$PATH
.
-
Alternatively, if you already have a Go programming environment set up, just
run go install github.com/abcxyz/abc/cmd/abc@latest
.
Tab Autocompletion
Optionally, for tab autocompletion, run:
COMP_INSTALL=1 COMP_YES=1 abc
This will add a complete
command to your .bashrc or corresponding file.
Rendering a template
The full user journey looks as follows. For this example, suppose you want to
create a "hello world" Go web service.
-
Set up a directory that will receive the rendered template output, and cd
to it.
- Option A: for local experimentation, you can just write into any directory,
for example:
mkdir ~/template_experiment && cd ~/template_experiment
- Option B: to create a real service that you'll share with others:
- create a new git repo that will contain your new service
- clone it onto your machine (
git clone ...
)
cd
into the git directory you just cloned into
- Create a branch (
git checkout -b template_render
)
- Option C: if you know what you're doing, you can create a local repo using
git init
and worry later about connecting it to an upstream repo.
-
Find the template to install. We assume that you already know the URL of a
template that you want to install by reading docs or through word-of-mouth.
There is a best-effort list of known templates in
template-index.md. For this example, suppose we're
installing the "hello jupiter" example from the abc repo.
-
Run the render
command:
$ abc render \
github.com/abcxyz/abc/examples/templates/render/hello_jupiter@latest
This command will output files in your curent directory that are the result
of executing the template.
-
(Optional) examine the resulting files and try running the code:
$ ls
main.go
$ go run main.go
Hello, jupiter!
-
Git commit, push your branch, create a PR, get it reviewed, and submit it.
$ git add -A
$ git commit -am 'Initial output of template rendering'
$ git push origin template_render:$USER/template_render
# Assuming you're using GitHub, now go create a PR.
Template developer guide
This section explains how you can create a template for others to install (aka
"render").
Concepts
A template is installed from a location that you provide. These locations may be
either a GitHub repository or a local directory. If you install a template from
GitHub, it will be downloaded into a temp directory by abc
.
In essence, a template is a directory containing a "spec file", named
spec.yaml
(example),
and other files such as source code and config files.
Model of operation
Template rendering has a few phases:
- The template is downloaded and unpacked into a temp directory, called the
"template directory."
- The spec.yaml file is loaded and parsed as YAML from the template directory
- Another temp directory called the "scratch directory" is created.
- The steps in the spec.yaml file are executed in sequence:
- Once all steps are executed, the contents of the scratch directory are copied
to the
--dest
directory (which default to your current working directory).
Normally, the template and scratch directories are deleted when rendering
completes. For debugging, you can provide the flag --keep-temp-dirs
to retain
them for inspection.
The spec file
The spec file, named spec.yaml
describes the template, including:
- A human-readable description of the template
- The version of the YAML schema that is used by this file; we may add or remove
fields from spec.yaml
- What inputs are needed from the user (e.g. their GCP service account name or
the port number to listen on)
- The sequence of steps to be executed by the CLI when rendering the template
(e.g. "replace every instance of
__replace_me_service_account__
with the
user-provided input named service_account
).
Here is an example spec file. It has a single templated file, main.go
, and
during template rendering all instances of the word world
are replaced by a
user-provided string. Thus "hello, world" is transformed into "hello, $whatever"
in main.go
.
api_version: 'cli.abcxyz.dev/v1alpha1'
kind: 'Template'
desc:
'An example template that changes a "hello world" program to a "hello whoever"
program'
inputs:
- name: 'whomever'
desc: 'The name of the person or thing to say hello to'
steps:
- desc: 'Include some files and directories'
action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
- desc: 'Replace "world" with user-provided input'
action: 'string_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- to_replace: 'world'
with: '{{.whomever}}'
List of api_versions
The api_version
field controls the interpretation of the YAML file. Some
features are only available in more recent versions.
The currently valid versions are:
api_version |
Supported in abc CLI versions |
Notes |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1alpha1 |
0.0.0 and up |
Initial version |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta1 |
0.2.0 and up |
Adds support for an if predicate on each step in spec.yaml |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta2 |
0.4.0 and up |
Adds: - the top-level ignore field in spec.yaml - Path globs |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta3 |
0.5.0 |
Adds: - _git_* builtin variables |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta4 |
0.6.0 |
Adds: - independent rules |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta5 |
0.6.0 |
Same as v1beta4 for complex reasons |
cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta6 |
0.7.0 |
Adds: the _now_ms variable and formatTime function in Go-templates |
Typically the CLI user will supply certain values as --input=inputname=value
which will be used by the spec file (such as whomever
in the preceding
example). Alternatively, the user can use --prompt
rather than --input
to
enter values interactively.
A template may not need any inputs, in which case the inputs
top-level field
in the spec.yaml can be omitted.
Each input in the inputs
list has these fields:
-
name
: an identifier for this input that will be used in template expressions
(like {{.myinput}}
) and CEL expressions.
-
description
: documentation for the users of your template to help them
understand what value to enter for this input.
-
default
(optional): the string value that will be used if the user doesn't
supply this input. If an input doesn't have a default, then a value for that
input must be given by the CLI user.
-
rules
: a list of validation rule objects. Each rule object has these fields:
-
rule
: a CEL expression that returns true if the input is valid.
This CEL expression has access to all each input value as a CEL variable of
the same name (see examples below). The type in CEL of each input variable
is always string
. You can convert a string of digits to a number using
int(my_input)
if you need to do numeric comparisons; see the
"min_size_bytes" example below.
This CEL expression can call extra CEL functions that we added to address
common validation needs link, such as
gcp_matches_project_id(string)
and gcp_matches_service_account(string)
.
-
message
(optional): a message to show to the CLI user if validation fails.
The template author can use this to tell the user what input format is
valid.
The input validation rules
may be skipped with the --skip-input-validation
flag, documented above.
An example input without a default:
inputs:
- name: 'output_filename'
desc: 'The name of the file to create'
An example input with a default:
inputs:
- name: 'output_filename'
description: 'The name of the file to create'
default: 'out.txt'
An example of parsing an input as an integer:
inputs:
- name: 'disk_size_bytes'
rules:
- rule: 'int(disk_size_bytes)' # Will fail if disk_size_bytes (which is a string) can't be parsed as int
message: 'Must be an integer'
An example input with a validation rule:
inputs:
- name: 'project_id_to_use'
rules:
- rule: 'gcp_matches_project_id(project_id_to_use)'
message: 'Must be a GCP project ID'
An example of validating multiple inputs together:
inputs:
- name: 'min_size_bytes'
- name: 'max_size_bytes'
rules:
- rule: 'int(min_size_bytes) <= int(max_size_bytes)'
message: "the max can't be less than the min"
Top-level rules
Most of the time, validation rules will be part of an inputs
declaration as
described above. But it's also possible to create validation rules that are
independent of any input and go at the topmost scope of the spec file.
To use this feature, your spec.yaml must declare
api_version: cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta4
or greater.
Example:
apiVersion: "cli.abcxyz.dev/v1beta4"
kind: "Template"
desc: "An example of using independent rules"
rules:
- rule: '_git_sha != ""'
message: "this template must be installed from a git repo"
Built-in template variables
Besides the template inputs described above, there are built-in template
variables that are automatically provided. These can be referenced in a
go-template context as {{._my_variable}}
and in a CEL context as
my_variable
. The built-in variables are:
-
_git_sha
: If the template source is a git repo (local or remote), then this
will be set to the hex git SHA of the source. If the template is NOT being
rendered from git (for example, it's being rendered from a local directory
that's not in a git repo), then this variable will exist but its value will be
empty string.
Available in api_version
s v1beta3 and later.
The motivating use case for this is to allow terraform module sources to be
pinned to the same SHA of the template that is being rendered.
Example:
steps:
- desc: 'Replace git_sha_goes_here with actual git sha in terraform files'
action: 'string_replace'
params:
paths: ['*.tf']
replacements:
- to_replace: 'git_sha_goes_here'
with: '{{._git_sha}}'
-
_git_short_sha
: It's like _git_sha
above, except it's only the first 7
characters rather than the full SHA.
Available in api_version
s v1beta3 and later.
-
_git_tag
: If...
- the template source is a git repo (local or remote)
- there is a tag corresponding to the template source SHA
... then _git_tag
will be set to the git tag name. Otherwise _git_tag
will
be an empty string.
There's one rare edge case: if the template source SHA has multiple tags
that point to it, we break the tie as follows. We attempt to parse the tags as
semantic version and take the latest one. If that doesn't work because the
tags are not semver, then we take the lexicographically largest tag name.
Available in api_version
s v1beta3 and later.
-
_flag_dest
: this variable is only in scope within the params
field of a
print
action. It contains the destination directory that the template is
being rendered to. It's intended to be used to show instructions to the user,
like message: "cd into {{._flag_dest}} and run the foo command
.
-
_flag_source
: this variable is only in scope within the params
field of a
print
action. It contains the source directory that the template is being
rendered from.
Templating
Most fields in the spec file can use template expressions that reference the
input values. In the above example, the replacement value of {{.whomever}}
means "the user-provided input value named whomever
." This uses the
text/template templating language that is
part of the Go standard library.
Steps and actions
Each step of the spec file performs a single action. A single step consists of:
- an optional string named
desc
- a required string named
action
- (in
api_version
>= v1beta1) an optional string named if
containing CEL
predicate (more below on CEL).
- a required object named
params
whose fields depend on the action
Example:
desc: 'An optional human-readable description of what this step is for'
action: 'action-name' # One of 'include', 'print', 'append', 'string_replace', 'regex_replace', `regex_name_lookup`, `go_template`, `for_each`
if: 'bool(my_input) || int(my_other_input) > 42' # Optional CEL expression
params:
foo: bar # The params differ depending on the action
Action: include
Copies files or directories from the template directory to the scratch
directory. It's similar to the COPY
command in a Dockerfile.
Params:
-
paths
: a list of files and/or directories to copy. These may use template
expressions or file globs (e.g. {{.my_input}}
, *.txt
). Directories will be
crawled recursively and every file underneath will be processed. By default,
the output location of each file is the same as its location in the template
directory.
-
as
: as list of output locations relative to the output directory. This can
be used to make the output location(s) different than the input locations. If
as
is present, its length must be equal to the length of paths
; that is,
each path must be given an output location. These may use template expressions
(e.g. {{.my_input}}
). If file globs are used in paths
, the corresponding
as
inputs will be treated as directories:
- paths: ['*.txt', '*.md', 'nonglob.json']
as: ['dir1', 'dir2', 'newname.json']
output:
/dir1/file1.txt
/dir1/file2.txt
/dir2/file3.md
/dir2/file4.md
/newname.json
-
skip
: omits some files or directories that might be present in the input
paths. For each path in paths
, if $path/$skip
exists, it won't be included
in the output. This supports use cases like "I want every thing in this
directory except this specific subdirectory and this specific file."
It's not an error if the path to skip wasn't found.
As a special case, the template spec file is automatically skipped and omitted
from the template output when the template has an include
for the path .
.
We assume that when template authors say "copy everything in the template into
the output," they mean "everything except the spec file."
These may use template expressions or file globs (e.g. {{.my_input}}
,
*.txt
).
-
from
: rarely used. The only currently valid value is 'destination'
. This
allows the template to modify a file that is already present on the user's
filesystem. This copies files into the scratch from the destination
directory instead of the template directory. The paths
must point to files
that exist in the destination directory (which defaults to the current working
directory. See the example below.
Examples:
-
A simple include, where each file keeps it location:
- action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['main.go', '{{.user_requested_config}}/config.txt']
-
Using as
to relocate files:
- action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['{{.dbname}}/db.go']
as: ['db.go']
-
Using skip
to omit certain sub-paths:
- action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['configs']
skip: ['unwanted_subdir', 'unwanted_file.txt']
-
Appending to a file that already exists in the destination directory using
from: destination
:
- action: 'include'
params:
from: 'destination'
paths: ['existing_file_in_dest_dir.txt']
- action: 'append'
params:
paths: ['existing_file_in_dest_dir.txt']
with: "I'm a new line at the end of the file"
Action: print
Prints a message to standard output. This can be used to suggest actions to the
user.
Params:
-
message
: the message to show. May use template expressions (e.g.
{{.my_input}}
).
The print action has special access to extra template variables named
_flag_*
containing the values of some of the command line flags. This can
be useful to print a message like
Template rendering is done, now please to go the {{._flag_dest}} directory and run a certain command.
The available values are:
{{._flag_dest}}
: the value of the --dest
flag, e.g. .
{{._flag_source}}
: the template location that's being rendered, e.g.
github.com/abcxyz/abc/t/my_template@latest
Example:
- action: 'print'
params:
message:
'Please go to the GCP console for project {{.project_id}} and click the
thing'
Action: append
Appends a string on the end of a given file. File must already exist. If no
newline at end of with
parameter, one will be added unless
skip_ensure_newline
is set to true
.
If you need to remove an existing trailing newline before appending, use
regex_replace
instead.
Params:
paths
: List of files and/or directory trees to append to end of. May use
template expressions (e.g. {{.my_input}}
). Directories will be crawled
recursively and every file underneath will be processed.
with
: String to append to the file.
skip_ensure_newline
: Bool (default false). When true, a with
not ending in
a newline will result in a file with no terminating newline. If false
, a
newline will be added automatically if not provided.
Example:
- action: 'append'
params:
paths: ['foo.html', 'web/']
with: '</html>\n'
skip_ensure_newline: false
Action: string_replace
Within a given list of files and/or directories, replaces all occurrences of a
given string with a given replacement string.
Params:
paths
: a list of files and/or directories in which to do the replacement.
May use template expressions (e.g. {{.my_input}}
). Directories will be
crawled recursively and every file underneath will be processed.
replacements
: a list of objects, each having the form:
to_replace
: the string to search for. May use template expressions (e.g.
{{.my_input}}
).
with
: the string to replace with. May use template expressions (e.g.
{{.my_input}}
).
Example:
- action: 'string_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- to_replace: 'Alice'
with: '{{.sender_name}}'
- to_replace: 'Bob'
with: '{{.receiver_name}}'
Action: regex_replace
Within a given list of files and/or directories, replace a regular expression
(or a subgroup thereof) with a given string.
Params:
-
paths
: A list of files and/or directories in which to do the replacement.
May use template expressions (e.g. {{.my_input}}
). Directories will be
crawled recursively and every file underneath will be processed.
-
replacements
: a list of objects, each having the form:
-
regex
: an
RE2 regular expression,
optionally containing named subgroups (like (?P<mygroupname>[a-z]+)
. May
use template expressions.
Non-named subgroups (like (abc)|(def)
)are not supported, for the sake of
readability. Use a non-capturing group (like (?:abc)|(?:abc)
) if you need
grouping without capturing.
Note that by default, RE2 doesn't use multiline mode, so ^ and $ will match
the start and end of the entire file, rather than each line. To enter
multiline mode you need to set the flag by including this:
(?m:YOUR_REGEX_HERE)
. More information available in RE2 docs.
-
with
: a string to that will replace regex matches (or, if the
subgroup_to_replace
field is set, will replace only that subgroup). May
use template expressions and may use
Regexp.Expand() syntax (e.g.
${mysubgroup}
).
Regex expansion (e.g. ${mygroup}
) happens before before go-template
expansion (e.g. {{ .myinput }}
; that means you can use a subgroup to name
an input variable, like {{ .${mygroup} }}
. That expression means "the
replacement value is calculated by taking the text of the regex subgroup
named mygroup
and looking up the user-provided input variable having that
name." This is covered in the examples below.
Examples:
-
Find gcp_project_id=(anything)
and replace x
with the user-provided input
named project_id
:
- action: 'regex_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- regex: 'gcp_project_id=[a-z0-9-]+'
with: 'gcp_project_id={{.project_id}}'
-
Do the same thing as above, in a different way:
- action: 'regex_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- regex: 'gcp_project_id=(?P<proj_id>[a-z0-9-]+)'
subgroup_to_replace: 'proj_id'
with: '{{.project_id}}'
-
Even more fancy: replace all instances of gcp_$foo=$bar
with
gcp_$foo=$user_provided_input_named_foo
:
- action: 'regex_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- regex: 'gcp_(?P<input_name>[a-z_]+)=(?P<value>[a-z0-9-]+)'
subgroup_to_replace: 'value'
with: '{{ .${input_name} }}'
-
Replace all instances of template_me_$foo=$bar
with
$foo=$user_provided_input_named_foo
:
- action: 'regex_replace'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- regex: 'template_me_(?P<input_name>[a-z_]+)=(?P<value>[a-z0-9-]+)'
with: '${input_name}={{ .${input_name} }}'
Action: regex_name_lookup
regex_name_lookup
is similar to regex_replace
, but simpler to use, at the
cost of generality. It matches a regular expression and replaces each named
subgroup with the input variable whose name matches the subgroup name.
Params:
paths
: A list of files and/or directories in which to do the replacement.
May use template expressions (e.g. {{.my_input}}
). Directories will be
crawled recursively and every file underneath will be processed.
replacements
: a list of objects, each having the form:
regex
: an
RE2 regular expression
containing one or more named subgroups. Each subgroup will be replaced by
looking up the input variable having the same name as the subgroup.
Example: replace all appearances of template_me
with the input variable named
myinput
:
- action: 'regex_name_lookup'
params:
paths: ['main.go']
replacements:
- regex: '(?P<myinput>template_me)'
Action: go_template
Executes a file as a Go template, replacing the file with the template output.
Params:
paths
: A list of files and/or directories in which to do the replacement.
May use template expressions (e.g. {{.my_input}}
). Directories will be
crawled recursively and every file underneath will be processed. These files
will be rendered with Go's
text/template templating language.
Example:
Suppose you have a file named hello.html
that looks like this, with a
{{.foo}}
template expression:
<html><body>
{{ if .friendly }}
Hello, {{.person_name}}!
{{ else }}
Go jump in a lake, {{.person_name}}.
{{ end }}
</body></html>
This action will replace {{.person_name}}
(and all other template expressions)
with the corresponding inputs:
- action: 'go_template'
params:
paths: ['hello.html']
Action: for_each
The for_each
action lets you execute a sequence of steps repeatedly for each
element of a list. For example, you might want your template to create several
copies of a given file, one per application environment (e.g. production,
staging).
There are two variants of for_each
. One variant accepts a hardcoded YAML list
of values to iterate over in the values
field. The other variant accepts a CEL
expression in the values_from
field that outputs a list of strings.
Variant 1 example: hardcoded list of YAML values:
- desc: 'Iterate over each (hard-coded) environment'
action: 'for_each'
params:
iterator:
key: 'environment'
values: ['production', 'dev']
steps:
- desc: 'Do some action for each environment'
action: 'print'
params:
message: 'Now processing environment named {{.environment}}'
Variant 2 example: a CEL expression that produces the list to iterate over:
- desc: 'Iterate over each environment, produced by CEL as a list'
action: 'for_each'
params:
iterator:
key: 'environment'
values_from: 'comma_separated_environments.split(",")'
steps:
- desc: 'Do some action for each environment'
action: 'print'
params:
message: 'Now processing environment named {{.environment}}'
Params:
iterator
: an object containing the key key
, and exactly one of values
or
values_from
.
key
: the name of the index variable that assumes the value of each element
of the list.
values
: a list of strings to iterate over.
values_from
: a CEL expression that outputs a list of strings.
steps
: a list of steps/actions to execute in the scope of the for_each loop.
It's analogous to the steps
field at the top level of the spec file.
Ignore (Optional)
This ignore
feature is similiar to skip
in include
action, the difference
here is that ignore is global and it applies to every include
action.
We use filepath Match to match the
file and directory paths that should be ignored if included/copied to
destination directory. In addition, we also match file and directory names using
the same accepted patterns.
This section is optional, if not provided, a default ignore list is used:
.DS_Store
, .bin
, and .ssh
, meaning all file and directory matching these
names will be ignored. To set your custom ignore list, please check accepted
patterns here. Note: a leading slash
in a pattern here means the source of the included paths.
Example:
ignore:
# Ignore `.ssh` under root, root is the template dir or destination dir if the
# included paths are from destination.
- '/.ssh'
# Ignore all txt files with name `tmp.txt` recursively (under root and its
# sub-directories).
- 'tmp.txt'
# Ignore all txt files in the sub-directories with folder depth of 2.
- '*/*.txt'
# Ignore all cfg files recursively.
- '*.cfg'
steps:
- desc: 'Include some files and directories'
action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['.ssh', 'src_dir']
- desc: 'Include some files and directories from destination'
action: 'include'
params:
paths: ['dest_dir']
from: 'destination'
Post-rendering validation test (golden test)
We use post-rendering validation tests to record (capture the anticipated
outcome akin to expected output in unit test) and subsequently verify template
rendering results.
To add golden tests to your template, all you need is to create a
testdata/golden
folder under your template, and a
testdata/golden/<test_name>/test.yaml
for each of your tests to define test
metadata and input parameters.
The test.yaml for a post-rendering validation test may look like,
api_version: 'cli.abcxyz.dev/v1alpha1'
kind: 'GoldenTest'
inputs:
- name: 'input_a'
value: 'a'
- name: 'input_b'
value: 'b'
Then you can use abc golden-test
to record (capture the anticipated
outcome akin to expected output in unit test)or verify the tests.
Using CEL
We use the CEL language to allow template authors to embed scripts in the spec
file in certain places. The places you can use CEL are:
- the
from_values
field inside for_each
that produces a list of values to
iterate over
- the
rule
field inside an input
that validates the input and returns a
boolean
- (starting in
api_version
v1beta1) the if
field inside a
step object
CEL, the Common Expression Language), is a
non-Turing complete language that's designed to be easily embedded in programs.
"Expression" means "a computation that produces a value", like 1+1
or
["shark"+"nado", "croco"+"gator"]
.
The CEL expressions you write in your spec file will have access to the template
inputs, as in this example:
For example:
- desc: 'Iterate over each environment, produced by CEL as a list'
action: 'for_each'
params:
iterator:
key: 'env'
values: 'input.comma_separated_environments.split(",")'
The above example also shows the split
function, which is not part of the core
CEL language. It's a "custom function" that we added to CEL to support a common
need for templates (see below).
Custom functions reference
These are the functions that we added that are not normally part of CEL.
-
gcp_matches_project_id(string)
returns whether the input matches the format
of a GCP project ID.
You might want to use this for a template that creates a project or references
an existing project.
Examples:
gcp_matches_project_id("my-project") == true
gcp_matches_project_id("example.com:my-project") == true
-
gcp_matches_service_account(string)
returns whether the input matches a full
GCP service account name. It can be either an API-created service account or a
platform-created service agent.
You might want to use this for a template that requires a reference to an
already-created service account.
Example:
gcp_matches_service_account("platform-ops@abcxyz-my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com") == true
gcp_matches_service_account("platform-ops") == false
-
gcp_matches_service_account_id(string)
returns whether the input matches the
part of a GCP service account name before the "@" sign.
You might want to use this for a template that creates a service account.
Example:
gcp_matches_service_account_id("platform-ops") == true
gcp_matches_service_account_id("platform-ops@abcxyz-my-project.iam.gserviceaccount.com") == false
-
matches_capitalized_bool(string)
: returns whether the input is a stringified
boolean starting with a capitalized letter, as used in Python.
This function doesn't accept boolean inputs because the whole point is that
we're checking the string form of a boolean for its capiltalization.
Examples:
matches_capitalized_bool("True") == true
matches_capitalized_bool("False") == true
matches_capitalized_bool("true") == false
matches_capitalized_bool("false") == false
matches_uncapitalized_bool("something_else") == false
-
matches_uncapitalized_bool(string)
: returns whether the input is a
stringified boolean starting with a capitalized letter, as used in Go,
Terraform, and others.
This function doesn't accept boolean inputs because the whole point is that
we're checking the string form of a boolean for its capiltalization.
Example expressions:
matches_uncapitalized_bool("true") == true
matches_uncapitalized_bool("false") == true
matches_uncapitalized_bool("True") == false
matches_uncapitalized_bool("False") == false
matches_uncapitalized_bool("something_else") == false
-
string.split(split_char)
: we added a "split" method on strings. This has the
same semantics as Go's
strings.Split function.
Example:
"abc,def".split(",") == ["abc", "def"]
Update Checks
abcxyz/abc-updater is run once a day to
check for newer versions of abc
, results are printed to stderr if an update is
available. This check can be disabled by setting the environment variable
ABC_IGNORE_VERSIONS=ALL
. Notifications can be disabled for specific versions
with a list of versions and constraints ABC_IGNORE_VERSIONS=<2.0.0,3.5.0
.
This check is not done on non-release builds, as they don't have canonical
version to check against.