README ¶
binenv
The last binary you'll ever install.
TOC
- binenv
What
binenv
will help you download, install and manage the binaries programs
(a.k.a. distributions) you need in you everyday DevOps life (e.g. kubectl,
helm, ...).
Think of it as a tfenv
+ tgenv
+ helmenv
+ ...
Now you can install your favorite utility just by typing binenv install something
.
Quick start
Linux (bash/zsh)
wget -q https://github.com/devops-works/binenv/releases/latest/download/binenv_linux_amd64 -O binenv
chmod +x binenv
./binenv update --cache
./binenv install binenv
rm binenv
if [[ -n $BASH ]]; then ZESHELL=bash; fi
if [[ -n $ZSH_NAME ]]; then ZESHELL=zsh; fi
echo $ZESHELL
echo 'export PATH=~/.binenv:$PATH' >> ~/.${ZESHELL}rc
echo "source <(binenv completion ${ZESHELL})" >> ~/.${ZESHELL}rc
exec $SHELL
MacOS (with bash)
wget -q https://github.com/devops-works/binenv/releases/latest/download/binenv_darwin_amd64 -O binenv
chmod +x binenv
./binenv update --cache
./binenv install binenv
rm binenv
echo 'export PATH=~/.binenv:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc
echo 'source <(binenv completion bash)' >> ~/.bashrc
exec $SHELL
Windows
binenv does not support windows.
Install
- download a suitable
binenv
(yes, but wait !) for your architecture/OS at http://github.com/devops-works/binenv/releases.
wget -q https://github.com/devops-works/binenv/releases/latest/download/binenv-<OS>-<ARCH>
- rename it
mv binaryname binenv
- make it executable
chmod +x binenv
- execute an update
./binenv update
- now install
binenv
withbinenv
(so meta)
./binenv install binenv <version>
- you can now remove the downloaded file
rm binenv
- prepend
~/.binenv
to your path in your~/.bashrc
or~/.zshrc
or ...
export PATH=~/.binenv:$PATH
- while you're at it, install the completion (replace
bash
with your shell)
source <(binenv completion bash)
- "restart" your shell
exec $SHELL
See a walkthough on asciinema.org:
Updating binenv
Just run binenv install binenv
This is the whole point.
Supported "distributions"
"Distributions" are installable binaries. We just had to find a name ¯\(ツ)/¯.
Currently supported distributions are:
- ali
- annie
- argocd
- asciinema-edit
- awless
- awstaghelper
- bat
- binenv
- bomberman
- buildx
- cli53
- consul
- dive
- doctl
- duf
- dw-query-digest
- fzf
- gh
- gitjacker
- glab
- glow
- gocloc
- goreleaser
- grizzly
- gws
- hadolint
- helm
- helmfile
- hey
- hcloud
- httpx
- hugo
- imgpkg
- k6
- k9s
- kapp
- kbld
- ketall
- kind
- krew
- kops
- kube-bench
- kubeconf
- kubectl
- kubectx
- kubens
- kubeseal
- kustomize
- lazygit
- logcli
- loki
- minikube
- naabu
- nomad
- onefetch
- oto
- pass-checker
- packer
- pluto
- pomerium
- pomerium-cli
- popeye
- promtail
- rancher[^1]
- saml2aws
- scan-exporter
- shaloc
- sops
- ssllabs-scan
- starship
- stern
- subfinder
- tanka
- teler
- terraform
- terraform-inventory
- terragrunt
- tflint
- toji
- traefik
- trivy
- upx
- vagrant
- vault
- vmctl
- yh
- yq
- ytt
The always up-to-date list is here.
Open an issue (or send a PR) if you need one that is not in the list.
[^1]: cli for rancher 1.x
Usage
Updating available distributions versions
In order to update the list of installable version for distributions, you need
to update the version list (usually located in $XDG_CONFIG/cache.json
or
~/.config/binenv/cache.json
).
This is done automatically when invoking binenv update
.
Without arguments, it will fetch the cache from this repo. This cache is generated automatically daily.
Using the -f
argument, binenv
will retrieve available versions for all
distributions (watch out for Github API rate limits, but see
below).
With a distribution passed as an argument (e.g. binenv update kubectl
), it
will only update installable versions for kubectl
.
Note that Github enforces rate limits (e.g. 60 unauthenticated API requests per
hours). So you should update all distributions (e.g. binenv update -f
) with
caution. binenv
will stop updating distributions when you only have 4
unauthenticated API requests left.
GitHub tokens are also supported to avoid being rate-limited and fetch releases from their respective sources.
Updating versions using a token
To avoid being rate limited, you can also use a personal access token.
- go to Settings/Personal Access Tokens/New personal access token
- click "Generate token"
To use the token, just export it in the GITHUB_TOKEN environment variable:
export GITHUB_TOKEN=aaa...bbb
Update available distributions
Distributions are maintained in this file.
To benefit from new additions, you need to update the distribution list from time to time.
This list is usually located in your home directory under
$XDG_CONFIG/distributions.yaml
(often ~/.config/binenv/distribution.yaml
).
To update only distributions:
binenv update --distributions # or -d
To update distributions and their versions:
binenv update --all # or -a
Examples
binenv update
: update available versions for all distributions from github cachebinenv update -f
: update available versions for all distributions from all releasesbinenv update -d
: update available distributionsbinenv update kubectl helm
: update available versions forkubectl
andhelm
Searching distributions
The search
command lets you search a distribution by name or description:
$ binenv search kube
binenv: One binary to rule them all. Manage all those pesky binaries (kubectl, helm, terraform, ...) easily.
helm: The Kubernetes Package Manager
helmfile: Deploy Kubernetes Helm Charts
k9s: Kubernetes CLI To Manage Your Clusters In Style!
ketall: Like `kubectl get all`, but get really all resources
... (lots of things with "kube" in it)
Installing new versions
After updating the list, you might want to install a shiny new version. No
problem,binenv install
has you covered.
If you want the latest non-prerelease version for something, just run:
binenv install something
If you want a specific version:
binenv install something 1.2.3
Note that completion works, so don't be afraid to use it.
You can also install several distribution versions at the same time:
binenv install something 1.2.3 somethingelse 4.5.6
Using the --dry-run
flag (a.k.a -n
) will show what would be installed.
Examples
binenv install kubectl
: install latest non-prereleasekubectl version
binenv install kubectl 1.18.8
: installkubectl
version 1.18.8binenv install kubectl 1.18.8 helm 3.3.0
: installkubectl
version 1.18.8 andhelm
3.3.0
Listing versions
You can list available, installed and activated distribution versions using
binenv versions
.
When invoked without arguments, all version of all distributions will be printed.
With distributions as arguments, only versions for those distributions will be printed.
In the output, versions printed in reverse mode are the currently selected (a.k.a. active) versions (see Selecting versions below.
Versions in bold are installed.
All other versions are available to be installed.
Examples
$ binenv versions
terraform: 0.13.1 (/home/you/some/dir) 0.13.0 0.13.0-rc1 0.13.0-beta3 0.13.0-beta2 0.13.0-beta1 0.12.29 0.12.28 0.12.27 0.12.26 0.12.25 0.12.24 0.12.23 0.12.22 0.12.21 0.12.20 0.12.19 0.12.18 0.12.17 0.12.16 0.12.15 0.12.14 0.12.13 0.12.12 0.12.11 0.12.10 0.12.9 0.12.8 0.12.7 0.12.6
terragrunt: 0.23.38 0.23.37 0.23.36 0.23.35 0.23.34 0.23.33 0.23.32 0.23.31 0.23.30 0.23.29 0.23.28 0.23.27 0.23.26 0.23.25 0.23.24 0.23.23 0.23.22 0.23.21 0.23.20 0.23.19 0.23.18 0.23.17 0.23.16 0.23.15 0.23.14 0.23.13 0.23.12 0.23.11 0.23.10 0.23.9
toji: 0.2.4 (default) 0.2.2
vault: 1.5.3 1.5.2 1.5.1 1.5.0 1.5.0-rc 1.4.6 1.4.5 1.4.4 1.4.3 1.4.2 1.4.1 1.4.0 1.4.0-rc1 1.4.0-beta1 1.3.10 1.3.9 1.3.8 1.3.7 1.3.6 1.3.5 1.3.4 1.3.3 1.3.2 1.3.1 1.3.0 1.3.0-beta1 1.2.7 1.2.6 1.2.5 1.2.4
...
(the output above does not show bold or reverse terminal output)
Freezing versions
When the versions
command is invoked with the --freeze
option, it will
write a .binenv.lock
style file on stdout.
This way you can "lock" the dependencies for your project just by issuing:
cd myproject
binenv versions --freeze > .binenv.lock
You can the commit this file to your project so everyone will use the same distributions versions when in this repository. See Selecting Versions for more information on this file.
Note that currently selected versions for all distributions will be outputted. You might want to trim stuff you do not use from the file.
Uninstalling versions
If you need to clean up a bit, you can uninstall a specific version, or all versions for a distribution. In the latter case, a confirmation will be asked.
The command accepts:
- a single argument (remove all versions for distributions)
- an even count of arguments (distribution / version pairs)
Examples
binenv uninstall kubectl 1.18.8 helm 3.3.0
: uninstallkubectl
version 1.18.8 andhelm
3.3.0binenv uninstall kubectl 1.18.8 kubectl 1.16.15
: uninstallkubectl
versions 1.18.8 and 1.16.15binenv uninstall kubectl
: removes allkubectl
versions
Completion
Install completion for your shell. See binenv help completion
for in-depth
info.
Selecting versions
To specify which version to use, you have to create a .binenv.lock
file in
the directory. Note that only semver is supported.
This file has the following structure:
<distributionA><constraintA>
<distributionB><constraintB>
...
For instance:
kubectl=1.18.8
terraform>0.12
terragrunt~>0.23.0
You can then commit the file in your project to ensure everyone in your team is on the same page.
The constraint operators are:
=
: version must match exactly!=
: version must not match>
: version must be strictly higher<
: version must be strictly lower>=
: version must be at least<=
: version must be at most~>
: version must be at least this one in the same but match the same minor versions
Version selection process
When you execute a distribution (e.g. you run kubectl
), binenv
runs it
under the hood. Before running it, it will check which version it should use.
For this, it will check for a .binenv.lock
file in the current directory.
If none is found, it will check in the parent folder. No lock file ? Check in
parent folder again. this process continues until binenv
reaches your home
directory.
If no version requirements are found at this point, binenv
will use the last
non-prerelease version installed.
Install versions form .binenv.lock
Install versions specified in .binenv.lock
file, you can use the --lock
(a.k.a. -l
) flag.
Example
$ cat .binenv.lock
terraform>0.13.0
helmfile<0.125.0
hadolint<1.17.0
$ binenv install -l
2020-08-29T11:39:18+02:00 WRN installing "terraform" (0.13.1) to satisfy constraint "terraform>0.13.0"
fetching terraform version 0.13.1 100% |█████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████| (33/33 MB, 3.274 MB/s) [10s:0s]
2020-08-29T11:39:29+02:00 WRN installing "helmfile" (0.124.0) to satisfy constraint "helmfile<0.125.0"
fetching helmfile version 0.124.0 100% |█████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████| (45/45 MB, 1.404 MB/s) [31s:0s]
2020-08-29T11:40:02+02:00 WRN installing "hadolint" (1.16.3) to satisfy constraint "hadolint<1.17.0"
fetching hadolint version 1.16.3 100% |███████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████████| (3.5/3.5 MB, 431.886 kB/s) [8s:0s]
$
Removing binenv stuff
binenv
stores downloaded binaries in ~/.binenv/binaries
, and a cache in
~/.config/binenv/
(or whatever your XDG_CONFIG
variable points to).
To wipe everything clean:
rm -rfi ~/.binenv ~/.config/binenv/
Don't forget to remove the PATH
and the completion you might have changed in
your shell rc file.
Status
This is really super alpha and has only be tested on Linux & MacOS. YMMV on other platforms.
There are no tests. I will probably go to hell for this.
FAQ
I installed a binary but is still see the system (or wrong) version
Try to rehash your binaries (hash -r
in bash or rehash
in Zsh).
After installing a distribution, I get a "shim: no such file or directory"
If you see something like:
2020-11-10T09:01:20+01:00 ERR unable to install "kubectl" (1.19.3) error="unable to find shim file: stat /Users/foo/.binenv/shim: no such file or directory"
you probably did not follow the installation instructions.
Running ./binenv update binenv && ./binenv install binenv
should correct the
problem.
I don't like binenv, are there alternatives ?
Sorry to hear that. Don't hesitate opening an issue or sending a PR is something does not fit your use case
Some nice alternatives exist:
Distributions file format
TBD
Contributions
Welcomed !
We will need other installation mechanisms (see https://github.com/devops-works/binenv/tree/master/internal/install).
Licence
MIT
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.