# Podman CLI The following is an example of how to add a new primary command (`manifest`) and a sub-command (`inspect`) to the Podman CLI. This is example code, the production code has additional error checking and the business logic provided. See items below for details on building, installing, contributing to Podman: - [Readme](README.md) - [Contributing](../../CONTRIBUTING.md) - [Podman Usage](../../transfer.md) - [Trouble Shooting](../../troubleshooting.md) - [Code Of Conduct](../../CODE-OF-CONDUCT.md) ## Adding a new command `podman manifest` ```shell script $ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest ``` Create the file ```$GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest/manifest.go``` ```go package manifest import ( "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/registry" "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/validate" "github.com/containers/podman/pkg/domain/entities" "github.com/spf13/cobra" ) var ( // podman _manifests_ manifestCmd = &cobra.Command{ Use: "manifest", Short: "Manage manifests", Args: cobra.ExactArgs(1), Long: "Manage manifests", Example: "podman manifest IMAGE", TraverseChildren: true, RunE: validate.SubCommandExists, // Report error if there is no sub command given } ) func init() { // Subscribe command to podman registry.Commands = append(registry.Commands, registry.CliCommand{ Command: manifestCmd, }) } ``` To "wire" in the `manifest` command, edit the file ```$GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/main.go``` to add: ```go package main import _ "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest" ``` ## Adding a new sub command `podman manifest list` Create the file ```$GOPATH/src/github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/manifest/inspect.go``` ```go package manifest import ( "github.com/containers/podman/cmd/podman/registry" "github.com/containers/podman/pkg/domain/entities" "github.com/spf13/cobra" ) var ( // podman manifests _inspect_ inspectCmd = &cobra.Command{ Use: "inspect IMAGE", Short: "Display manifest from image", Long: "Displays the low-level information on a manifest identified by image name or ID", RunE: inspect, Annotations: map[string]string{ // Add this annotation if this command cannot be run rootless // registry.ParentNSRequired: "", }, Example: "podman manifest inspect DEADBEEF", } ) func init() { // Subscribe inspect sub command to manifest command registry.Commands = append(registry.Commands, registry.CliCommand{ Command: inspectCmd, // The parent command to proceed this command on the CLI Parent: manifestCmd, }) // This is where you would configure the cobra flags using inspectCmd.Flags() } // Business logic: cmd is inspectCmd, args is the positional arguments from os.Args func inspect(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) error { // Business logic using registry.ImageEngine() // Do not pull from libpod directly use the domain objects and types return nil } ``` ## Helper functions The complete set can be found in the `validate` package, here are some examples: - `cobra.Command{ Args: validate.NoArgs }` used when the command does not accept errors - `cobra.Command{ Args: validate.IdOrLatestArgs }` used to ensure either a list of ids given or the --latest flag - `cobra.Command{ RunE: validate.SubCommandExists }` used to validate a subcommand given to a command - `validate.ChoiceValue` used to create a `pflag.Value` that validate user input against a provided slice of values. For example: ```go flags := cobraCommand.Flags() created := validate.ChoiceValue(&opts.Sort, "command", "created", "id", "image", "names", "runningfor", "size", "status") flags.Var(created, "sort", "Sort output by: "+created.Choices()) ``` ## Adding CLI flags When adding adding a new cli option that accepts a string array, there are two options to choose from: `StringSlice()` and `StringArray()`. They differ slightly in their behavior: `StringSlice()` allows the values to be comma separated so `--opt v1,v2 --opt v3` results in `[]string{"v1", "v2", "v3"}`, while `StringArray()` would result in `[]string{"v1,v2", "v3"}`. Thus it is impossible to use values with comma in `StringSlice()`, which makes it unsuitable for flags that accept arbitrary values such as file paths as example. Also, because `StringSlice()` uses the csv lib to parse the values, it has special escaping rules for things like quotes, see https://github.com/containers/podman/issues/20064 for an example of how complicated things can get because of this. Thus use `StringSlice()` only when the option accepts predefined values that do not contain special characters, for example `--cap-add` and `--cap-drop` are a good example for this. Using `--cap-add NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW` is equal to `--cap-add NET_ADMIN --cap-add NET_RAW` so it is better suited to save some typing for users. When in doubt always choose `StringArray()` over `StringSlice()`.