包详细信息

commander

tj781.4mMIT13.1.0

the complete solution for node.js command-line programs

commander, command, option, parser

自述文件

Commander.js

Build Status NPM Version NPM Downloads Install Size

The complete solution for node.js command-line interfaces.

Read this in other languages: English | 简体中文

For information about terms used in this document see: terminology

Installation

npm install commander

Quick Start

You write code to describe your command line interface. Commander looks after parsing the arguments into options and command-arguments, displays usage errors for problems, and implements a help system.

Commander is strict and displays an error for unrecognised options. The two most used option types are a boolean option, and an option which takes its value from the following argument.

Example file: split.js

const { program } = require('commander');

program
  .option('--first')
  .option('-s, --separator <char>')
  .argument('<string>');

program.parse();

const options = program.opts();
const limit = options.first ? 1 : undefined;
console.log(program.args[0].split(options.separator, limit));
$ node split.js -s / --fits a/b/c
error: unknown option '--fits'
(Did you mean --first?)
$ node split.js -s / --first a/b/c
[ 'a' ]

Here is a more complete program using a subcommand and with descriptions for the help. In a multi-command program, you have an action handler for each command (or stand-alone executables for the commands).

Example file: string-util.js

const { Command } = require('commander');
const program = new Command();

program
  .name('string-util')
  .description('CLI to some JavaScript string utilities')
  .version('0.8.0');

program.command('split')
  .description('Split a string into substrings and display as an array')
  .argument('<string>', 'string to split')
  .option('--first', 'display just the first substring')
  .option('-s, --separator <char>', 'separator character', ',')
  .action((str, options) => {
    const limit = options.first ? 1 : undefined;
    console.log(str.split(options.separator, limit));
  });

program.parse();
$ node string-util.js help split
Usage: string-util split [options] <string>

Split a string into substrings and display as an array.

Arguments:
  string                  string to split

Options:
  --first                 display just the first substring
  -s, --separator <char>  separator character (default: ",")
  -h, --help              display help for command

$ node string-util.js split --separator=/ a/b/c
[ 'a', 'b', 'c' ]

More samples can be found in the examples directory.

Declaring program variable

Commander exports a global object which is convenient for quick programs. This is used in the examples in this README for brevity.

// CommonJS (.cjs)
const { program } = require('commander');

For larger programs which may use commander in multiple ways, including unit testing, it is better to create a local Command object to use.

// CommonJS (.cjs)
const { Command } = require('commander');
const program = new Command();
// ECMAScript (.mjs)
import { Command } from 'commander';
const program = new Command();
// TypeScript (.ts)
import { Command } from 'commander';
const program = new Command();

Options

Options are defined with the .option() method, also serving as documentation for the options. Each option can have a short flag (single character) and a long name, separated by a comma or space or vertical bar ('|'). To allow a wider range of short-ish flags than just single characters, you may also have two long options. Examples:

program
  .option('-p, --port <number>', 'server port number')
  .option('--trace', 'add extra debugging output')
  .option('--ws, --workspace <name>', 'use a custom workspace')

The parsed options can be accessed by calling .opts() on a Command object, and are passed to the action handler.

Multi-word options such as "--template-engine" are camel-cased, becoming program.opts().templateEngine etc.

An option and its option-argument can be separated by a space, or combined into the same argument. The option-argument can follow the short option directly or follow an = for a long option.

serve -p 80
serve -p80
serve --port 80
serve --port=80

You can use -- to indicate the end of the options, and any remaining arguments will be used without being interpreted.

By default, options on the command line are not positional, and can be specified before or after other arguments.

There are additional related routines for when .opts() is not enough:

  • .optsWithGlobals() returns merged local and global option values
  • .getOptionValue() and .setOptionValue() work with a single option value
  • .getOptionValueSource() and .setOptionValueWithSource() include where the option value came from

Common option types, boolean and value

The two most used option types are a boolean option, and an option which takes its value from the following argument (declared with angle brackets like --expect <value>). Both are undefined unless specified on command line.

Example file: options-common.js

program
  .option('-d, --debug', 'output extra debugging')
  .option('-s, --small', 'small pizza size')
  .option('-p, --pizza-type <type>', 'flavour of pizza');

program.parse(process.argv);

const options = program.opts();
if (options.debug) console.log(options);
console.log('pizza details:');
if (options.small) console.log('- small pizza size');
if (options.pizzaType) console.log(`- ${options.pizzaType}`);
$ pizza-options -p
error: option '-p, --pizza-type <type>' argument missing
$ pizza-options -d -s -p vegetarian
{ debug: true, small: true, pizzaType: 'vegetarian' }
pizza details:
- small pizza size
- vegetarian
$ pizza-options --pizza-type=cheese
pizza details:
- cheese

Multiple boolean short options may be combined following the dash, and may be followed by a single short option taking a value. For example -d -s -p cheese may be written as -ds -p cheese or even -dsp cheese.

Options with an expected option-argument are greedy and will consume the following argument whatever the value. So --id -xyz reads -xyz as the option-argument.

program.parse(arguments) processes the arguments, leaving any args not consumed by the program options in the program.args array. The parameter is optional and defaults to process.argv.

Default option value

You can specify a default value for an option.

Example file: options-defaults.js

program
  .option('-c, --cheese <type>', 'add the specified type of cheese', 'blue');

program.parse();

console.log(`cheese: ${program.opts().cheese}`);
$ pizza-options
cheese: blue
$ pizza-options --cheese stilton
cheese: stilton

Other option types, negatable boolean and boolean|value

You can define a boolean option long name with a leading no- to set the option value to false when used. Defined alone this also makes the option true by default.

If you define --foo first, adding --no-foo does not change the default value from what it would otherwise be.

Example file: options-negatable.js

program
  .option('--no-sauce', 'Remove sauce')
  .option('--cheese <flavour>', 'cheese flavour', 'mozzarella')
  .option('--no-cheese', 'plain with no cheese')
  .parse();

const options = program.opts();
const sauceStr = options.sauce ? 'sauce' : 'no sauce';
const cheeseStr = (options.cheese === false) ? 'no cheese' : `${options.cheese} cheese`;
console.log(`You ordered a pizza with ${sauceStr} and ${cheeseStr}`);
$ pizza-options
You ordered a pizza with sauce and mozzarella cheese
$ pizza-options --sauce
error: unknown option '--sauce'
$ pizza-options --cheese=blue
You ordered a pizza with sauce and blue cheese
$ pizza-options --no-sauce --no-cheese
You ordered a pizza with no sauce and no cheese

You can specify an option which may be used as a boolean option but may optionally take an option-argument (declared with square brackets like --optional [value]).

Example file: options-boolean-or-value.js

program
  .option('-c, --cheese [type]', 'Add cheese with optional type');

program.parse(process.argv);

const options = program.opts();
if (options.cheese === undefined) console.log('no cheese');
else if (options.cheese === true) console.log('add cheese');
else console.log(`add cheese type ${options.cheese}`);
$ pizza-options
no cheese
$ pizza-options --cheese
add cheese
$ pizza-options --cheese mozzarella
add cheese type mozzarella

Options with an optional option-argument are not greedy and will ignore arguments starting with a dash. So id behaves as a boolean option for --id -5, but you can use a combined form if needed like --id=-5.

For information about possible ambiguous cases, see options taking varying arguments.

Required option

You may specify a required (mandatory) option using .requiredOption(). The option must have a value after parsing, usually specified on the command line, or perhaps from a default value (say from environment). The method is otherwise the same as .option() in format, taking flags and description, and optional default value or custom processing.

Example file: options-required.js

program
  .requiredOption('-c, --cheese <type>', 'pizza must have cheese');

program.parse();
$ pizza
error: required option '-c, --cheese <type>' not specified

Variadic option

You may make an option variadic by appending ... to the value placeholder when declaring the option. On the command line you can then specify multiple option-arguments, and the parsed option value will be an array. The extra arguments are read until the first argument starting with a dash. The special argument -- stops option processing entirely. If a value is specified in the same argument as the option then no further values are read.

Example file: options-variadic.js

program
  .option('-n, --number <numbers...>', 'specify numbers')
  .option('-l, --letter [letters...]', 'specify letters');

program.parse();

console.log('Options: ', program.opts());
console.log('Remaining arguments: ', program.args);
$ collect -n 1 2 3 --letter a b c
Options:  { number: [ '1', '2', '3' ], letter: [ 'a', 'b', 'c' ] }
Remaining arguments:  []
$ collect --letter=A -n80 operand
Options:  { number: [ '80' ], letter: [ 'A' ] }
Remaining arguments:  [ 'operand' ]
$ collect --letter -n 1 -n 2 3 -- operand
Options:  { number: [ '1', '2', '3' ], letter: true }
Remaining arguments:  [ 'operand' ]

For information about possible ambiguous cases, see options taking varying arguments.

Version option

The optional version method adds handling for displaying the command version. The default option flags are -V and --version, and when present the command prints the version number and exits.

program.version('0.0.1');
$ ./examples/pizza -V
0.0.1

You may change the flags and description by passing additional parameters to the version method, using the same syntax for flags as the option method.

program.version('0.0.1', '-v, --vers', 'output the current version');

More configuration

You can add most options using the .option() method, but there are some additional features available by constructing an Option explicitly for less common cases.

Example files: options-extra.js, options-env.js, options-conflicts.js, options-implies.js

program
  .addOption(new Option('-s, --secret').hideHelp())
  .addOption(new Option('-t, --timeout <delay>', 'timeout in seconds').default(60, 'one minute'))
  .addOption(new Option('-d, --drink <size>', 'drink size').choices(['small', 'medium', 'large']))
  .addOption(new Option('-p, --port <number>', 'port number').env('PORT'))
  .addOption(new Option('--donate [amount]', 'optional donation in dollars').preset('20').argParser(parseFloat))
  .addOption(new Option('--disable-server', 'disables the server').conflicts('port'))
  .addOption(new Option('--free-drink', 'small drink included free ').implies({ drink: 'small' }));
$ extra --help
Usage: help [options]

Options:
  -t, --timeout <delay>  timeout in seconds (default: one minute)
  -d, --drink <size>     drink cup size (choices: "small", "medium", "large")
  -p, --port <number>    port number (env: PORT)
  --donate [amount]      optional donation in dollars (preset: "20")
  --disable-server       disables the server
  --free-drink           small drink included free
  -h, --help             display help for command

$ extra --drink huge
error: option '-d, --drink <size>' argument 'huge' is invalid. Allowed choices are small, medium, large.

$ PORT=80 extra --donate --free-drink
Options:  { timeout: 60, donate: 20, port: '80', freeDrink: true, drink: 'small' }

$ extra --disable-server --port 8000
error: option '--disable-server' cannot be used with option '-p, --port <number>'

Specify a required (mandatory) option using the Option method .makeOptionMandatory(). This matches the Command method .requiredOption().

Custom option processing

You may specify a function to do custom processing of option-arguments. The callback function receives two parameters, the user specified option-argument and the previous value for the option. It returns the new value for the option.

This allows you to coerce the option-argument to the desired type, or accumulate values, or do entirely custom processing.

You can optionally specify the default/starting value for the option after the function parameter.

Example file: options-custom-processing.js

function myParseInt(value, dummyPrevious) {
  // parseInt takes a string and a radix
  const parsedValue = parseInt(value, 10);
  if (isNaN(parsedValue)) {
    throw new commander.InvalidArgumentError('Not a number.');
  }
  return parsedValue;
}

function increaseVerbosity(dummyValue, previous) {
  return previous + 1;
}

function collect(value, previous) {
  return previous.concat([value]);
}

function commaSeparatedList(value, dummyPrevious) {
  return value.split(',');
}

program
  .option('-f, --float <number>', 'float argument', parseFloat)
  .option('-i, --integer <number>', 'integer argument', myParseInt)
  .option('-v, --verbose', 'verbosity that can be increased', increaseVerbosity, 0)
  .option('-c, --collect <value>', 'repeatable value', collect, [])
  .option('-l, --list <items>', 'comma separated list', commaSeparatedList)
;

program.parse();

const options = program.opts();
if (options.float !== undefined) console.log(`float: ${options.float}`);
if (options.integer !== undefined) console.log(`integer: ${options.integer}`);
if (options.verbose > 0) console.log(`verbosity: ${options.verbose}`);
if (options.collect.length > 0) console.log(options.collect);
if (options.list !== undefined) console.log(options.list);
$ custom -f 1e2
float: 100
$ custom --integer 2
integer: 2
$ custom -v -v -v
verbose: 3
$ custom -c a -c b -c c
[ 'a', 'b', 'c' ]
$ custom --list x,y,z
[ 'x', 'y', 'z' ]

Commands

You can specify (sub)commands using .command() or .addCommand(). There are two ways these can be implemented: using an action handler attached to the command, or as a stand-alone executable file (described in more detail later). The subcommands may be nested (example).

In the first parameter to .command() you specify the command name. You may append the command-arguments after the command name, or specify them separately using .argument(). The arguments may be <required> or [optional], and the last argument may also be variadic....

You can use .addCommand() to add an already configured subcommand to the program.

For example:

// Command implemented using action handler (description is supplied separately to `.command`)
// Returns new command for configuring.
program
  .command('clone <source> [destination]')
  .description('clone a repository into a newly created directory')
  .action((source, destination) => {
    console.log('clone command called');
  });

// Command implemented using stand-alone executable file, indicated by adding description as second parameter to `.command`.
// Returns `this` for adding more commands.
program
  .command('start <service>', 'start named service')
  .command('stop [service]', 'stop named service, or all if no name supplied');

// Command prepared separately.
// Returns `this` for adding more commands.
program
  .addCommand(build.makeBuildCommand());

Configuration options can be passed with the call to .command() and .addCommand(). Specifying hidden: true will remove the command from the generated help output. Specifying isDefault: true will run the subcommand if no other subcommand is specified (example).

You can add alternative names for a command with .alias(). (example)

.command() automatically copies the inherited settings from the parent command to the newly created subcommand. This is only done during creation, any later setting changes to the parent are not inherited.

For safety, .addCommand() does not automatically copy the inherited settings from the parent command. There is a helper routine .copyInheritedSettings() for copying the settings when they are wanted.

Command-arguments

For subcommands, you can specify the argument syntax in the call to .command() (as shown above). This is the only method usable for subcommands implemented using a stand-alone executable, but for other subcommands you can instead use the following method.

To configure a command, you can use .argument() to specify each expected command-argument. You supply the argument name and an optional description. The argument may be <required> or [optional]. You can specify a default value for an optional command-argument.

Example file: argument.js

program
  .version('0.1.0')
  .argument('<username>', 'user to login')
  .argument('[password]', 'password for user, if required', 'no password given')
  .action((username, password) => {
    console.log('username:', username);
    console.log('password:', password);
  });

The last argument of a command can be variadic, and only the last argument. To make an argument variadic you append ... to the argument name. A variadic argument is passed to the action handler as an array. For example:

program
  .version('0.1.0')
  .command('rmdir')
  .argument('<dirs...>')
  .action(function (dirs) {
    dirs.forEach((dir) => {
      console.log('rmdir %s', dir);
    });
  });

There is a convenience method to add multiple arguments at once, but without descriptions:

program
  .arguments('<username> <password>');

More configuration

There are some additional features available by constructing an Argument explicitly for less common cases.

Example file: arguments-extra.js

program
  .addArgument(new commander.Argument('<drink-size>', 'drink cup size').choices(['small', 'medium', 'large']))
  .addArgument(new commander.Argument('[timeout]', 'timeout in seconds').default(60, 'one minute'))

Custom argument processing

You may specify a function to do custom processing of command-arguments (like for option-arguments). The callback function receives two parameters, the user specified command-argument and the previous value for the argument. It returns the new value for the argument.

The processed argument values are passed to the action handler, and saved as .processedArgs.

You can optionally specify the default/starting value for the argument after the function parameter.

Example file: arguments-custom-processing.js

program
  .command('add')
  .argument('<first>', 'integer argument', myParseInt)
  .argument('[second]', 'integer argument', myParseInt, 1000)
  .action((first, second) => {
    console.log(`${first} + ${second} = ${first + second}`);
  })
;

Action handler

The action handler gets passed a parameter for each command-argument you declared, and two additional parameters which are the parsed options and the command object itself.

Example file: thank.js

program
  .argument('<name>')
  .option('-t, --title <honorific>', 'title to use before name')
  .option('-d, --debug', 'display some debugging')
  .action((name, options, command) => {
    if (options.debug) {
      console.error('Called %s with options %o', command.name(), options);
    }
    const title = options.title ? `${options.title} ` : '';
    console.log(`Thank-you ${title}${name}`);
  });

If you prefer, you can work with the command directly and skip declaring the parameters for the action handler. The this keyword is set to the running command and can be used from a function expression (but not from an arrow function).

Example file: action-this.js

program
  .command('serve')
  .argument('<script>')
  .option('-p, --port <number>', 'port number', 80)
  .action(function() {
    console.error('Run script %s on port %s', this.args[0], this.opts().port);
  });

You may supply an async action handler, in which case you call .parseAsync rather than .parse.

async function run() { /* code goes here */ }

async function main() {
  program
    .command('run')
    .action(run);
  await program.parseAsync(process.argv);
}

A command's options and arguments on the command line are validated when the command is used. Any unknown options or missing arguments or excess arguments will be reported as an error. You can suppress the unknown option check with .allowUnknownOption(). You can suppress the excess arguments check with .allowExcessArguments().

Stand-alone executable (sub)commands

When .command() is invoked with a description argument, this tells Commander that you're going to use stand-alone executables for subcommands. Commander will search the files in the directory of the entry script for a file with the name combination command-subcommand, like pm-install or pm-search in the example below. The search includes trying common file extensions, like .js. You may specify a custom name (and path) with the executableFile configuration option. You may specify a custom search directory for subcommands with .executableDir().

You handle the options for an executable (sub)command in the executable, and don't declare them at the top-level.

Example file: pm

program
  .name('pm')
  .version('0.1.0')
  .command('install [package-names...]', 'install one or more packages')
  .command('search [query]', 'search with optional query')
  .command('update', 'update installed packages', { executableFile: 'myUpdateSubCommand' })
  .command('list', 'list packages installed', { isDefault: true });

program.parse(process.argv);

If the program is designed to be installed globally, make sure the executables have proper modes, like 755.

Life cycle hooks

You can add callback hooks to a command for life cycle events.

Example file: hook.js

program
  .option('-t, --trace', 'display trace statements for commands')
  .hook('preAction', (thisCommand, actionCommand) => {
    if (thisCommand.opts().trace) {
      console.log(`About to call action handler for subcommand: ${actionCommand.name()}`);
      console.log('arguments: %O', actionCommand.args);
      console.log('options: %o', actionCommand.opts());
    }
  });

The callback hook can be async, in which case you call .parseAsync rather than .parse. You can add multiple hooks per event.

The supported events are:

event name when hook called callback parameters
preAction, postAction before/after action handler for this command and its nested subcommands (thisCommand, actionCommand)
preSubcommand before parsing direct subcommand (thisCommand, subcommand)

For an overview of the life cycle events see parsing life cycle and hooks.

Automated help

The help information is auto-generated based on the information commander already knows about your program. The default help option is -h,--help.

Example file: pizza

$ node ./examples/pizza --help
Usage: pizza [options]

An application for pizza ordering

Options:
  -p, --peppers        Add peppers
  -c, --cheese <type>  Add the specified type of cheese (default: "marble")
  -C, --no-cheese      You do not want any cheese
  -h, --help           display help for command

A help command is added by default if your command has subcommands. It can be used alone, or with a subcommand name to show further help for the subcommand. These are effectively the same if the shell program has implicit help:

shell help
shell --help

shell help spawn
shell spawn --help

Long descriptions are wrapped to fit the available width. (However, a description that includes a line-break followed by whitespace is assumed to be pre-formatted and not wrapped.)

Custom help

You can add extra text to be displayed along with the built-in help.

Example file: custom-help

program
  .option('-f, --foo', 'enable some foo');

program.addHelpText('after', `

Example call:
  $ custom-help --help`);

Yields the following help output:

Usage: custom-help [options]

Options:
  -f, --foo   enable some foo
  -h, --help  display help for command

Example call:
  $ custom-help --help

The positions in order displayed are:

  • beforeAll: add to the program for a global banner or header
  • before: display extra information before built-in help
  • after: display extra information after built-in help
  • afterAll: add to the program for a global footer (epilog)

The positions "beforeAll" and "afterAll" apply to the command and all its subcommands.

The second parameter can be a string, or a function returning a string. The function is passed a context object for your convenience. The properties are:

  • error: a boolean for whether the help is being displayed due to a usage error
  • command: the Command which is displaying the help

Display help after errors

The default behaviour for usage errors is to just display a short error message. You can change the behaviour to show the full help or a custom help message after an error.

program.showHelpAfterError();
// or
program.showHelpAfterError('(add --help for additional information)');
$ pizza --unknown
error: unknown option '--unknown'
(add --help for additional information)

The default behaviour is to suggest correct spelling after an error for an unknown command or option. You can disable this.

program.showSuggestionAfterError(false);
$ pizza --hepl
error: unknown option '--hepl'
(Did you mean --help?)

Display help from code

.help(): display help information and exit immediately. You can optionally pass { error: true } to display on stderr and exit with an error status.

.outputHelp(): output help information without exiting. You can optionally pass { error: true } to display on stderr.

.helpInformation(): get the built-in command help information as a string for processing or displaying yourself.

.name

The command name appears in the help, and is also used for locating stand-alone executable subcommands.

You may specify the program name using .name() or in the Command constructor. For the program, Commander will fall back to using the script name from the full arguments passed into .parse(). However, the script name varies depending on how your program is launched, so you may wish to specify it explicitly.

program.name('pizza');
const pm = new Command('pm');

Subcommands get a name when specified using .command(). If you create the subcommand yourself to use with .addCommand(), then set the name using .name() or in the Command constructor.

.usage

This allows you to customise the usage description in the first line of the help. Given:

program
  .name("my-command")
  .usage("[global options] command")

The help will start with:

Usage: my-command [global options] command

.description and .summary

The description appears in the help for the command. You can optionally supply a shorter summary to use when listed as a subcommand of the program.

program
  .command("duplicate")
  .summary("make a copy")
  .description(`Make a copy of the current project.
This may require additional disk space.
  `);

.helpOption(flags, description)

By default, every command has a help option. You may change the default help flags and description. Pass false to disable the built-in help option.

program
  .helpOption('-e, --HELP', 'read more information');

(Or use .addHelpOption() to add an option you construct yourself.)

.helpCommand()

A help command is added by default if your command has subcommands. You can explicitly turn on or off the implicit help command with .helpCommand(true) and .helpCommand(false).

You can both turn on and customise the help command by supplying the name and description:

program.helpCommand('assist [command]', 'show assistance');

(Or use .addHelpCommand() to add a command you construct yourself.)

More configuration

The built-in help is formatted using the Help class. You can configure the help by modifying data properties and methods using .configureHelp(), or by subclassing Help using .createHelp() .

Simple properties include sortSubcommands, sortOptions, and showGlobalOptions. You can add color using the style methods like styleTitle().

For more detail and examples of changing the displayed text, color, and layout see (./docs/help-in-depth.md)

Custom event listeners

You can execute custom actions by listening to command and option events.

program.on('option:verbose', function () {
  process.env.VERBOSE = this.opts().verbose;
});

Bits and pieces

.parse() and .parseAsync()

Call with no parameters to parse process.argv. Detects Electron and special node options like node --eval. Easy mode!

Or call with an array of strings to parse, and optionally where the user arguments start by specifying where the arguments are from:

  • 'node': default, argv[0] is the application and argv[1] is the script being run, with user arguments after that
  • 'electron': argv[0] is the application and argv[1] varies depending on whether the electron application is packaged
  • 'user': just user arguments

For example:

program.parse(); // parse process.argv and auto-detect electron and special node flags
program.parse(process.argv); // assume argv[0] is app and argv[1] is script
program.parse(['--port', '80'], { from: 'user' }); // just user supplied arguments, nothing special about argv[0]

Use parseAsync instead of parse if any of your action handlers are async.

Parsing Configuration

If the default parsing does not suit your needs, there are some behaviours to support other usage patterns.

By default, program options are recognised before and after subcommands. To only look for program options before subcommands, use .enablePositionalOptions(). This lets you use an option for a different purpose in subcommands.

Example file: positional-options.js

With positional options, the -b is a program option in the first line and a subcommand option in the second line:

program -b subcommand
program subcommand -b

By default, options are recognised before and after command-arguments. To only process options that come before the command-arguments, use .passThroughOptions(). This lets you pass the arguments and following options through to another program without needing to use -- to end the option processing. To use pass through options in a subcommand, the program needs to enable positional options.

Example file: pass-through-options.js

With pass through options, the --port=80 is a program option in the first line and passed through as a command-argument in the second line:

program --port=80 arg
program arg --port=80

By default, the option processing shows an error for an unknown option. To have an unknown option treated as an ordinary command-argument and continue looking for options, use .allowUnknownOption(). This lets you mix known and unknown options.

By default, the argument processing does not display an error for more command-arguments than expected. To display an error for excess arguments, use.allowExcessArguments(false).

Legacy options as properties

Before Commander 7, the option values were stored as properties on the command. This was convenient to code, but the downside was possible clashes with existing properties of Command. You can revert to the old behaviour to run unmodified legacy code by using .storeOptionsAsProperties().

program
  .storeOptionsAsProperties()
  .option('-d, --debug')
  .action((commandAndOptions) => {
    if (commandAndOptions.debug) {
      console.error(`Called ${commandAndOptions.name()}`);
    }
  });

TypeScript

extra-typings: There is an optional project to infer extra type information from the option and argument definitions. This adds strong typing to the options returned by .opts() and the parameters to .action(). See commander-js/extra-typings for more.

import { Command } from '@commander-js/extra-typings';

ts-node: If you use ts-node and stand-alone executable subcommands written as .ts files, you need to call your program through node to get the subcommands called correctly. e.g.

node -r ts-node/register pm.ts

createCommand()

This factory function creates a new command. It is exported and may be used instead of using new, like:

const { createCommand } = require('commander');
const program = createCommand();

createCommand is also a method of the Command object, and creates a new command rather than a subcommand. This gets used internally when creating subcommands using .command(), and you may override it to customise the new subcommand (example file custom-command-class.js).

Node options such as --harmony

You can enable --harmony option in two ways:

  • Use #! /usr/bin/env node --harmony in the subcommands scripts. (Note Windows does not support this pattern.)
  • Use the --harmony option when call the command, like node --harmony examples/pm publish. The --harmony option will be preserved when spawning subcommand process.

Debugging stand-alone executable subcommands

An executable subcommand is launched as a separate child process.

If you are using the node inspector for debugging executable subcommands using node --inspect et al., the inspector port is incremented by 1 for the spawned subcommand.

If you are using VSCode to debug executable subcommands you need to set the "autoAttachChildProcesses": true flag in your launch.json configuration.

npm run-script

By default, when you call your program using run-script, npm will parse any options on the command-line and they will not reach your program. Use -- to stop the npm option parsing and pass through all the arguments.

The synopsis for npm run-script explicitly shows the -- for this reason:

npm run-script <command> [-- <args>]

Display error

This routine is available to invoke the Commander error handling for your own error conditions. (See also the next section about exit handling.)

As well as the error message, you can optionally specify the exitCode (used with process.exit) and code (used with CommanderError).

program.error('Password must be longer than four characters');
program.error('Custom processing has failed', { exitCode: 2, code: 'my.custom.error' });

Override exit and output handling

By default, Commander calls process.exit when it detects errors, or after displaying the help or version. You can override this behaviour and optionally supply a callback. The default override throws a CommanderError.

The override callback is passed a CommanderError with properties exitCode number, code string, and message. Commander expects the callback to terminate the normal program flow, and will call process.exit if the callback returns. The normal display of error messages or version or help is not affected by the override which is called after the display.

program.exitOverride();

try {
  program.parse(process.argv);
} catch (err) {
  // custom processing...
}

By default, Commander is configured for a command-line application and writes to stdout and stderr. You can modify this behaviour for custom applications. In addition, you can modify the display of error messages.

Example file: configure-output.js

function errorColor(str) {
  // Add ANSI escape codes to display text in red.
  return `\x1b[31m${str}\x1b[0m`;
}

program
  .configureOutput({
    // Visibly override write routines as example!
    writeOut: (str) => process.stdout.write(`[OUT] ${str}`),
    writeErr: (str) => process.stdout.write(`[ERR] ${str}`),
    // Highlight errors in color.
    outputError: (str, write) => write(errorColor(str))
  });

Additional documentation

There is more information available about:

Support

The current version of Commander is fully supported on Long Term Support versions of Node.js, and requires at least v18. (For older versions of Node.js, use an older version of Commander.)

The main forum for free and community support is the project Issues on GitHub.

Commander for enterprise

Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription

The maintainers of Commander and thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver commercial support and maintenance for the open source dependencies you use to build your applications. Save time, reduce risk, and improve code health, while paying the maintainers of the exact dependencies you use. Learn more.

更新日志

Changelog

All notable changes to this project will be documented in this file.

The format is based on Keep a Changelog, and this project adheres to Semantic Versioning.

13.1.0 (2025-01-21)

Added

  • support a pair of long option flags to allow a memorable shortened flag, like .option('--ws, --workspace') (#2312)

13.0.0 (2024-12-30)

Added

  • support multiple calls to .parse() with default settings (#2299)
  • add .saveStateBeforeParse() and .restoreStateBeforeParse() for use by subclasses (#2299)
  • style routines like styleTitle() to add color to help using .configureHelp() or Help subclass (#2251)
  • color related support in .configureOutput() for getOutHasColors(), getErrHasColors(), and stripColor() (#2251)
  • Help property for minWidthToWrap (#2251)
  • Help methods for displayWidth(), boxWrap(), preformatted() et al (#2251)

Changed

  • Breaking: excess command-arguments cause an error by default, see migration tips (#2223)
  • Breaking: throw during Option construction for unsupported option flags, like multiple characters after single - (#2270)
    • note: support for dual long option flags added in Commander 13.1
  • Breaking: throw on multiple calls to .parse() if storeOptionsAsProperties: true (#2299)
  • TypeScript: include implicit this in parameters for action handler callback (#2197)

Deleted

  • Breaking: Help.wrap() refactored into formatItem() and boxWrap() (#2251)

Migration Tips

Excess command-arguments

It is now an error for the user to specify more command-arguments than are expected. (allowExcessArguments is now false by default.)

Old code:

program.option('-p, --port <number>', 'port number');
program.action((options) => {
  console.log(program.args);
});

Now shows an error:

$ node example.js a b c
error: too many arguments. Expected 0 arguments but got 3.

You can declare the expected arguments. The help will then be more accurate too. Note that declaring new arguments will change what is passed to the action handler.

program.option('-p, --port <number>', 'port number');
program.argument('[args...]', 'remote command and arguments'); // expecting zero or more arguments
program.action((args, options) => {
  console.log(args);
});

Or you could suppress the error, useful for minimising changes in legacy code.

program.option('-p, --port', 'port number');
program.allowExcessArguments();
program.action((options) => {
  console.log(program.args);
});

Stricter option flag parsing

Commander now throws an error for option flag combinations that are not supported. In particular, a short flag with multiple characters is now an error.

program.option('-ws, --workspace'); // throws error

A short option has a single character:

program.option('-w, --workspace');

Or from Commander 13.1 you can have an extra long flag instead of a short flag to allow a more memorable shortcut for the full name:

program.option('--ws, --workspace');

13.0.0-0 (2024-12-07)

(Released in 13.0.0)

12.1.0 (2024-05-18)

Added

  • auto-detect special node flags node --eval and node --print when call .parse() with no arguments (#2164)

Changed

  • prefix require of Node.js core modules with node: (#2170)
  • format source files with Prettier (#2180)
  • switch from StandardJS to directly calling ESLint for linting (#2153)
  • extend security support for previous major version of Commander (#2150)

Removed

  • removed unimplemented Option.fullDescription from TypeScript definition (#2191)

12.0.0 (2024-02-03)

Added

  • .addHelpOption() as another way of configuring built-in help option (#2006)
  • .helpCommand() for configuring built-in help command (#2087)

Fixed

  • Breaking: use non-zero exit code when spawned executable subcommand terminates due to a signal (#2023)
  • Breaking: check passThroughOptions constraints when using .addCommand and throw if parent command does not have .enablePositionalOptions() enabled (#1937)

Changed

  • Breaking: Commander 12 requires Node.js v18 or higher (#2027)
  • Breaking: throw an error if add an option with a flag which is already in use (#2055)
  • Breaking: throw an error if add a command with name or alias which is already in use (#2059)
  • Breaking: throw error when calling .storeOptionsAsProperties() after setting an option value (#1928)
  • replace non-standard JSDoc of @api private with documented @private (#1949)
  • .addHelpCommand() now takes a Command (passing string or boolean still works as before but deprecated) (#2087)
  • refactor internal implementation of built-in help option (#2006)
  • refactor internal implementation of built-in help command (#2087)

Deprecated

  • .addHelpCommand() passing string or boolean (use .helpCommand() or pass a Command) (#2087)

Removed

  • Breaking: removed default export of a global Command instance from CommonJS (use the named program export instead) (#2017)

Migration Tips

global program

If you are using the deprecated default import of the global Command object, you need to switch to using a named import (or create a new Command).

// const program = require('commander');
const { program } = require('commander');

option and command clashes

A couple of configuration problems now throw an error, which will pick up issues in existing programs:

  • adding an option which uses the same flag as a previous option
  • adding a command which uses the same name or alias as a previous command

12.0.0-1 (2024-01-20)

(Released in 12.0.0)

12.0.0-0 (2023-11-11)

(Released in 12.0.0)

11.1.0 (2023-10-13)

Fixed

  • TypeScript: update OptionValueSource to allow any string, to match supported use of custom sources (#1983)
  • TypeScript: add that Command.version() can also be used as getter (#1982)
  • TypeScript: add null return type to Commands.executableDir(), for when not configured (#1965)
  • subcommands with an executable handler and only a short help flag are now handled correctly by the parent's help command (#1930)

Added

  • registeredArguments property on Command with the array of defined Argument (like Command.options for Option) (#2010)
  • TypeScript declarations for Option properties: envVar, presetArg (#2019)
  • TypeScript declarations for Argument properties: argChoices, defaultValue, defaultValueDescription (#2019)
  • example file which shows how to configure help to display any custom usage in the list of subcommands (#1896)

Changed

  • (developer) refactor TypeScript configs for multiple use-cases, and enable checks in JavaScript files in supporting editors (#1969)

Deprecated

  • Command._args was private anyway, but now available as registeredArguments (#2010)

11.0.0 (2023-06-16)

Fixed

  • help command works when help option is disabled (#1864)

Changed

  • leading and trailing spaces are now ignored by the .arguments() method (#1874)
  • refine "types" exports for ESM to follow TypeScript guidelines (#1886)
  • Breaking: Commander 11 requires Node.js v16 or higher

10.0.1 (2023-04-15)

Added

Fixed

  • remove unused Option.optionFlags property from TypeScript definition (#1844)

Changed

  • assume boolean option intended if caller passes string instead of hash to .implies() (#1854)

10.0.0 (2023-01-13)

Added

  • wrap command description in help (#1804)

Changed

  • Breaking: Commander 10 requires Node.js v14 or higher

9.5.0 (2023-01-07)

Added

  • .getOptionValueSourceWithGlobals() (#1832)
  • showGlobalOptions for .configureHelp{} and Help (#1828)

9.4.1 (2022-09-30)

Fixed

  • .setOptionValue() now also clears option source (#1795)
  • TypeScript: add implied to OptionValueSource for option values set by using .implies() (#1794)
  • TypeScript : add undefined to return type of .getOptionValueSource() (#1794)

Changed

  • additions to README

9.4.0 (2022-07-15)

Added

  • preSubcommand hook called before direct subcommands (#1763)

Fixed

  • export InvalidOptionArgumentError in esm (#1756)

Changed

  • update dependencies (#1767)

9.3.0 (2022-05-28)

Added

  • .summary() for a short summary to use instead of description when listing subcommands in help (#1726)
  • Option.implies() to set other option values when the option is specified (#1724)
  • updated Chinese README with 9.x changes (#1727)

Fixed

  • TypeScript: add string[] to .options() default value parameter type for use with variadic options (#1721)

Deprecated

  • multi-character short option flag (e.g. -ws) (#1718)

9.2.0 (2022-04-15)

Added

  • conditional export of 'types' for upcoming TypeScript module resolution (#1703)
  • example file showing two ways to add global options to subcommands (#1708)

Fixed

  • detect option conflicts in parent commands of called subcommand (#1710)

Changed

  • replace deprecated String.prototype.substr (#1706)

9.1.0 (2022-03-19)

Added

  • Option .conflicts() to set conflicting options which can not be specified together (#1678)
  • (developer) CodeQL configuration for GitHub Actions (#1698)

9.0.0 (2022-01-28)

Added

  • simpler ECMAScript import (#1589)
  • Option.preset() allows specifying value/arg for option when used without option-argument (especially optional, but also boolean option) (#1652)
  • .executableDir() for custom search for subcommands (#1571)
  • throw with helpful message if pass Option to .option() or .requiredOption() (#1655)
  • .error() for generating errors from client code just like Commander generated errors, with support for .configureOutput(), .exitOverride(), and .showHelpAfterError() (#1675)
  • .optsWithGlobals() to return merged local and global options (#1671)

Changed

  • Breaking: Commander 9 requires Node.js v12.20.0 or higher
  • update package-lock.json to lockfile@2 format (#1659)
  • showSuggestionAfterError is now on by default (#1657)
  • Breaking: default value specified for boolean option now always used as default value (see .preset() to match some previous behaviours) (#1652)
  • default value for boolean option only shown in help if true/false (#1652)
  • use command name as prefix for subcommand stand-alone executable name (with fallback to script name for backwards compatibility) (#1571)
  • allow absolute path with executableFile (#1571)
  • removed restriction that nested subcommands must specify executableFile (#1571)
  • TypeScript: allow passing readonly string array to .choices() (#1667)
  • TypeScript: allow passing readonly string array to .parse(), .parseAsync(), .aliases() (#1669)

Fixed

  • option with optional argument not supplied on command line now works when option already has a value, whether from default value or from previous arguments (#1652)

Removed

  • Breaking: removed internal fallback to require.main.filename when script not known from arguments passed to .parse() (can supply details using .name(), and .executableDir() or executableFile) (#1571)

9.0.0-1 (2022-01-15)

(Released in 9.0.0)

9.0.0-0 (2021-12-22)

(Released in 9.0.0)

8.3.0 (2021-10-22)

Added

  • .getOptionValueSource() and .setOptionValueWithSource(), where expected values for source are one of 'default', 'env', 'config', 'cli' (#1613)

Deprecated

  • .command('*'), use default command instead (#1612)
  • on('command:*'), use .showSuggestionAfterError() instead (#1612)

8.2.0 (2021-09-10)

Added

  • .showSuggestionAfterError() to show suggestions after unknown command or unknown option (#1590)
  • add Option support for values from environment variables using .env() (#1587)

Changed

  • show error for unknown global option before subcommand (rather than just help) (#1590)

Removed

  • TypeScript declaration of unimplemented Option method argumentRejected

8.1.0 (2021-07-27)

Added

  • .copyInheritedSettings() (#1557)
  • update Chinese translations of documentation for Commander v8 (#1570)
  • Argument methods for .argRequired() and .argOptional() (#1567)

8.0.0 (2021-06-25)

Added

  • .argument(name, description) for adding command-arguments (#1490)
    • supports default value for optional command-arguments (#1508)
    • supports custom processing function (#1508)
  • .createArgument() factory method (#1497)
  • .addArgument() (#1490)
  • Argument supports .choices() (#1525)
  • .showHelpAfterError() to display full help or a custom message after an error (#1534)
  • .hook() with support for 'preAction' and 'postAction' callbacks (#1514)
  • client typing of .opts() return type using TypeScript generics (#1539)
  • the number of command-arguments is checked for programs without an action handler (#1502)
  • .getOptionValue() and .setOptionValue() (#1521)

Changed

  • refactor and simplify TypeScript declarations (with no default export) (#1520)
  • .parseAsync() is now declared as async (#1513)
  • Breaking: Help method .visibleArguments() returns array of Argument (#1490)
  • Breaking: Commander 8 requires Node.js 12 or higher (#1500)
  • Breaking: CommanderError code commander.invalidOptionArgument renamed commander.invalidArgument (#1508)
  • Breaking: TypeScript declaration for .addTextHelp() callback no longer allows result of undefined, now just string (#1516)
  • refactor index.tab into a file per class (#1522)
  • remove help suggestion from "unknown command" error message (see .showHelpAfterError()) (#1534)
  • Command property .arg initialised to empty array (was previously undefined) (#1529)
  • update dependencies

Deprecated

  • second parameter of cmd.description(desc, argDescriptions) for adding argument descriptions (#1490)
    • (use new .argument(name, description) instead)
  • InvalidOptionArgumentError (replaced by InvalidArgumentError) (#1508)

Removed

  • Breaking: TypeScript declaration for default export of global Command object (#1520)
    • (still available as named program export)

Migration Tips

If you have a simple program without an action handler, you will now get an error if there are missing command-arguments.

program
  .option('-d, --debug')
  .arguments('<file>');
program.parse();
$ node trivial.js 
error: missing required argument 'file'

If you want to show the help in this situation, you could check the arguments before parsing:

if (process.argv.length === 2)
  program.help();
program.parse();

Or, you might choose to show the help after any user error:

program.showHelpAfterError();

8.0.0-2 (2021-06-06)

(Released in 8.0.0)

8.0.0-1 (2021-05-30)

(Released in 8.0.0)

8.0.0-0 (2021-05-23)

(Released in 8.0.0)

7.2.0 (2021-03-22)

Added

  • TypeScript typing for parent property on Command (#1475)
  • TypeScript typing for .attributeName() on Option (#1483)
  • support information in package (#1477)

Changed

  • improvements to error messages, README, and tests
  • update dependencies

7.1.0 (2021-02-15)

Added

  • support for named imports from ECMAScript modules (#1440)
  • add .cjs to list of expected script file extensions (#1449)
  • allow using option choices and variadic together (#1454)

Fixed

  • replace use of deprecated process.mainModule (#1448)
  • regression for legacy command('*') and call when command line includes options (#1464)
  • regression for on('command:*', ...) and call when command line includes unknown options (#1464)
  • display best error for combination of unknown command and unknown option (i.e. unknown command) (#1464)

Changed

  • make TypeScript typings tests stricter (#1453)
  • improvements to README and tests

7.0.0 (2021-01-15)

Added

  • .enablePositionalOptions() to let program and subcommand reuse same option (#1427)
  • .passThroughOptions() to pass options through to other programs without needing -- (#1427)
  • .allowExcessArguments(false) to show an error message if there are too many command-arguments on command line for the action handler (#1409)
  • .configureOutput() to modify use of stdout and stderr or customise display of errors (#1387)
  • use .addHelpText() to add text before or after the built-in help, for just current command or also for all subcommands (#1296)
  • enhance Option class (#1331)
    • allow hiding options from help
    • allow restricting option arguments to a list of choices
    • allow setting how default value is shown in help
  • .createOption() to support subclassing of automatically created options (like .createCommand()) (#1380)
  • refactor the code generating the help into a separate public Help class (#1365)
    • support sorting subcommands and options in help
    • support specifying wrap width (columns)
    • allow subclassing Help class
    • allow configuring Help class without subclassing

Changed

  • Breaking: options are stored safely by default, not as properties on the command (#1409)
    • this especially affects accessing options on program, use program.opts()
    • revert behaviour with .storeOptionsAsProperties()
  • Breaking: action handlers are passed options and command separately (#1409)
  • deprecated callback parameter to .help() and .outputHelp() (removed from README) (#1296)
  • Breaking: errors now displayed using process.stderr.write() instead of console.error()
  • deprecate .on('--help') (removed from README) (#1296)
  • initialise the command description to empty string (previously undefined) (#1365)
  • document and annotate deprecated routines (#1349)

Fixed

  • wrapping bugs in help (#1365)
    • first line of command description was wrapping two characters early
    • pad width calculation was not including help option and help command
    • pad width calculation was including hidden options and commands
  • improve backwards compatibility for custom command event listeners (#1403)

Deleted

  • Breaking: .passCommandToAction() (#1409)
    • no longer needed as action handler is passed options and command
  • Breaking: "extra arguments" parameter to action handler (#1409)
    • if being used to detect excess arguments, there is now an error available by setting .allowExcessArguments(false)

Migration Tips

The biggest change is the parsed option values. Previously the options were stored by default as properties on the command object, and now the options are stored separately.

If you wish to restore the old behaviour and get running quickly you can call .storeOptionsAsProperties(). To allow you to move to the new code patterns incrementally, the action handler will be passed the command twice, to match the new "options" and "command" parameters (see below).

program options

Use the .opts() method to access the options. This is available on any command but is used most with the program.

program.option('-d, --debug');
program.parse();
// Old code before Commander 7
if (program.debug) console.log(`Program name is ${program.name()}`);
// New code
const options = program.opts();
if (options.debug) console.log(`Program name is ${program.name()}`);

action handler

The action handler gets passed a parameter for each command-argument you declared. Previously by default the next parameter was the command object with the options as properties. Now the next two parameters are instead the options and the command. If you only accessed the options there may be no code changes required.

program
  .command('compress <filename>')
  .option('-t, --trace')
  // Old code before Commander 7
  .action((filename, cmd) => {
    if (cmd.trace) console.log(`Command name is ${cmd.name()}`);
  });
  // New code
  .action((filename, options, command) => {
    if (options.trace) console.log(`Command name is ${command.name()}`);
  });

If you already set .storeOptionsAsProperties(false) you may still need to adjust your code.

program
  .command('compress <filename>')
  .storeOptionsAsProperties(false)
  .option('-t, --trace')
  // Old code before Commander 7
  .action((filename, command) => {
    if (command.opts().trace) console.log(`Command name is ${command.name()}`);
  });
   // New code
   .action((filename, options, command) => {
      if (command.opts().trace) console.log(`Command name is ${command.name()}`);
   });

7.0.0-2 (2020-12-14)

(Released in 7.0.0)

7.0.0-1 (2020-11-21)

(Released in 7.0.0)

7.0.0-0 (2020-10-25)

(Released in 7.0.0)

6.2.1 (2020-12-13)

Fixed

  • some tests failed if directory path included a space (#1390)

6.2.0 (2020-10-25)

Added

  • added 'tsx' file extension for stand-alone executable subcommands (#1368)
  • documented second parameter to .description() to describe command arguments (#1353)
  • documentation of special cases with options taking varying numbers of option-arguments (#1332)
  • documentation for terminology (#1361)

Fixed

  • add missing TypeScript definition for `.addHelpCommand()' (#1375)
  • removed blank line after "Arguments:" in help, to match "Options:" and "Commands:" (#1360)

Changed

  • update dependencies

6.1.0 (2020-08-28)

Added

  • include URL to relevant section of README for error for potential conflict between Command properties and option values (#1306)
  • .combineFlagAndOptionalValue(false) to ease upgrade path from older versions of Commander (#1326)
  • allow disabling the built-in help option using .helpOption(false) (#1325)
  • allow just some arguments in argumentDescription to .description() (#1323)

Changed

  • tidy async test and remove lint override (#1312)

Fixed

  • executable subcommand launching when script path not known (#1322)

6.0.0 (2020-07-21)

Added

  • add support for variadic options (#1250)
  • allow options to be added with just a short flag (#1256)
    • Breaking the option property has same case as flag. e.g. flag -n accessed as opts().n (previously uppercase)
  • Breaking throw an error if there might be a clash between option name and a Command property, with advice on how to resolve (#1275)

Fixed

  • Options which contain -no- in the middle of the option flag should not be treated as negatable. (#1301)

6.0.0-0 (2020-06-20)

(Released in 6.0.0)

5.1.0 (2020-04-25)

Added

  • support for multiple command aliases, the first of which is shown in the auto-generated help (#531, #1236)
  • configuration support in addCommand() for hidden and isDefault (#1232)

Fixed

  • omit masked help flags from the displayed help (#645, #1247)
  • remove old short help flag when change help flags using helpOption (#1248)

Changed

  • remove use of arguments to improve auto-generated help in editors (#1235)
  • rename .command() configuration noHelp to hidden (but not remove old support) (#1232)
  • improvements to documentation
  • update dependencies
  • update tested versions of node
  • eliminate lint errors in TypeScript (#1208)

5.0.0 (2020-03-14)

Added

  • support for nested commands with action-handlers (#1 #1149)
  • .addCommand() for adding a separately configured command (#764)
  • allow a non-executable to be set as the default command (#742)
  • implicit help command when there are subcommands (previously only if executables) (#1149)
  • customise implicit help command with .addHelpCommand() (#1149)
  • display error message for unknown subcommand, by default (#432 #1149)
  • display help for missing subcommand, by default (#1088)
  • combined short options as single argument may include boolean flags and value flag and value (e.g. -a -b -p 80 can be written as -abp80) (#1145)
  • .parseOption() includes short flag and long flag expansions (#1145)
  • .helpInformation() returns help text as a string, previously a private routine (#1169)
  • .parse() implicitly uses process.argv if arguments not specified (#1172)
  • optionally specify where .parse() arguments "from", if not following node conventions (#512)
  • suggest help option along with unknown command error (#1179)
  • TypeScript definition for commands property of Command (#1184)
  • export program property (#1195)
  • createCommand factory method to simplify subclassing (#1191)

Fixed

  • preserve argument order in subcommands (#508 #1138)
  • do not emit command:* for executable subcommands (#809)
  • action handler called whether or not there are non-option arguments (#1062)
  • combining option short flag and value in single argument now works for subcommands (#1145)
  • only add implicit help command when it will not conflict with other uses of argument (#1153)
  • implicit help command works with command aliases (#948)
  • options are validated whether or not there is an action handler (#1149)

Changed

  • Breaking .args contains command arguments with just recognised options removed (#1032)
  • Breaking display error if required argument for command is missing (#995)
  • tighten TypeScript definition of custom option processing function passed to .option() (#1119)
  • Breaking .allowUnknownOption() (#802)
    • unknown options included in arguments passed to command action handler
    • unknown options included in .args
  • only recognised option short flags and long flags are expanded (e.g. -ab or --foo=bar) (#1145)
  • Breaking .parseOptions() (#1138)
    • args in returned result renamed operands and does not include anything after first unknown option
    • unknown in returned result has arguments after first unknown option including operands, not just options and values
  • Breaking .on('command:*', callback) and other command events passed (changed) results from .parseOptions, i.e. operands and unknown (#1138)
  • refactor Option from prototype to class (#1133)
  • refactor Command from prototype to class (#1159)
  • changes to error handling (#1165)
    • throw for author error, not just display message
    • preflight for variadic error
    • add tips to missing subcommand executable
  • TypeScript fluent return types changed to be more subclass friendly, return this rather than Command (#1180)
  • .parseAsync returns Promise<this> to be consistent with .parse() (#1180)
  • update dependencies

Removed

  • removed EventEmitter from TypeScript definition for Command, eliminating implicit peer dependency on @types/node (#1146)
  • removed private function normalize (the functionality has been integrated into parseOptions) (#1145)
  • parseExpectedArgs is now private (#1149)

Migration Tips

If you use .on('command:*') or more complicated tests to detect an unrecognised subcommand, you may be able to delete the code and rely on the default behaviour.

If you use program.args or more complicated tests to detect a missing subcommand, you may be able to delete the code and rely on the default behaviour.

If you use .command('*') to add a default command, you may be be able to switch to isDefault:true with a named command.

If you want to continue combining short options with optional values as though they were boolean flags, set combineFlagAndOptionalValue(false) to expand -fb to -f -b rather than -f b.

5.0.0-4 (2020-03-03)

(Released in 5.0.0)

5.0.0-3 (2020-02-20)

(Released in 5.0.0)

5.0.0-2 (2020-02-10)

(Released in 5.0.0)

5.0.0-1 (2020-02-08)

(Released in 5.0.0)

5.0.0-0 (2020-02-02)

(Released in 5.0.0)

4.1.1 (2020-02-02)

Fixed

  • TypeScript definition for .action() should include Promise for async (#1157)

4.1.0 (2020-01-06)

Added

  • two routines to change how option values are handled, and eliminate name clashes with command properties (#933)
    • see storeOptionsAsProperties and passCommandToAction in README
  • .parseAsync to use instead of .parse if supply async action handlers (#806)

Fixed

  • Remove trailing blanks from wrapped help text (#1096)

Changed

  • update dependencies
  • extend security coverage for Commander 2.x to 2020-02-03
  • improvements to README
  • improvements to TypeScript definition documentation
  • move old versions out of main CHANGELOG
  • removed explicit use of ts-node in tests

4.0.1 (2019-11-12)

Fixed

  • display help when requested, even if there are missing required options (#1091)

4.0.0 (2019-11-02)

Added

  • automatically wrap and indent help descriptions for options and commands (#1051)
  • .exitOverride() allows override of calls to process.exit for additional error handling and to keep program running (#1040)
  • support for declaring required options with .requiredOptions() (#1071)
  • GitHub Actions support (#1027)
  • translation links in README

Changed

  • dev: switch tests from Sinon+Should to Jest with major rewrite of tests (#1035)
  • call default subcommand even when there are unknown options (#1047)
  • Breaking Commander is only officially supported on Node 8 and above, and requires Node 6 (#1053)

Fixed

  • Breaking keep command object out of program.args when action handler called (#1048)
    • also, action handler now passed array of unknown arguments
  • complain about unknown options when program argument supplied and action handler (#1049)
    • this changes parameters to command:* event to include unknown arguments
  • removed deprecated customFds option from call to child_process.spawn (#1052)
  • rework TypeScript declarations to bring all types into imported namespace (#1081)

Migration Tips

Testing for no arguments

If you were previously using code like:

if (!program.args.length) ...

a partial replacement is:

if (program.rawArgs.length < 3) ...

4.0.0-1 Prerelease (2019-10-08)

(Released in 4.0.0)

4.0.0-0 Prerelease (2019-10-01)

(Released in 4.0.0)

3.0.2 (2019-09-27)

Fixed

  • Improve tracking of executable subcommands.

Changed

  • update development dependencies

3.0.1 (2019-08-30)

Added

  • .name and .usage to README (#1010)
  • Table of Contents to README (#1010)
  • TypeScript definition for executableFile in CommandOptions (#1028)

Changed

  • consistently use const rather than var in README (#1026)

Fixed

  • help for sub commands with custom executableFile (#1018)

3.0.0 / 2019-08-08

  • Add option to specify executable file name (#999)
    • e.g. .command('clone', 'clone description', { executableFile: 'myClone' })
  • Change docs for .command to contrast action handler vs git-style executable. (#938)
  • Breaking Change TypeScript to use overloaded function for .command. (#938)
  • Change to use straight quotes around strings in error messages (like 'this' instead of `this') (#915)
  • Add TypeScript "reference types" for node (#974)
  • Add support for hyphen as an option argument in subcommands (#697)
  • Add support for a short option flag and its value to be concatenated for action handler subcommands (#599)
    • e.g. -p 80 can also be supplied as -p80
  • Add executable arguments to spawn in win32, for git-style executables (#611)
    • e.g. node --harmony myCommand.js clone
  • Add parent command as prefix of subcommand in help (#980)
  • Add optional custom description to .version (#963)
    • e.g. program.version('0.0.1', '-v, --vers', 'output the current version')
  • Add .helpOption(flags, description) routine to customise help flags and description (#963)
    • e.g. .helpOption('-e, --HELP', 'read more information')
  • Fix behavior of --no-* options (#795)
    • can now define both --foo and --no-foo
    • Breaking custom event listeners: --no-foo on cli now emits option:no-foo (previously option:foo)
    • Breaking default value: defining --no-foo after defining --foo leaves the default value unchanged (previously set it to false)
    • allow boolean default value, such as from environment (#987)
  • Increment inspector port for spawned subcommands (#991)
    • e.g. node --inspect myCommand.js clone

Migration Tips

The custom event for a negated option like --no-foo is option:no-foo (previously option:foo).

program
  .option('--no-foo')
  .on('option:no-foo', () => {
    console.log('removing foo');
  });

When using TypeScript, adding a command does not allow an explicit undefined for an unwanted executable description (e.g for a command with an action handler).

program
  .command('action1', undefined, { noHelp: true }) // No longer valid
  .command('action2', { noHelp: true }) // Correct

3.0.0-0 Prerelease / 2019-07-28

(Released as 3.0.0)

2.20.1 (2019-09-29)

Fixed

  • Improve tracking of executable subcommands.

Changed

  • update development dependencies

2.20.0 / 2019-04-02

  • fix: resolve symbolic links completely when hunting for subcommands (#935)
  • Update index.d.ts (#930)
  • Update Readme.md (#924)
  • Remove --save option as it isn't required anymore (#918)
  • Add link to the license file (#900)
  • Added example of receiving args from options (#858)
  • Added missing semicolon (#882)
  • Add extension to .eslintrc (#876)

2.19.0 / 2018-10-02

  • Removed newline after Options and Commands headers (#864)
  • Bugfix - Error output (#862)
  • Fix to change default value to string (#856)

2.18.0 / 2018-09-07

  • Standardize help output (#853)
  • chmod 644 travis.yml (#851)
  • add support for execute typescript subcommand via ts-node (#849)

2.17.1 / 2018-08-07

  • Fix bug in command emit (#844)

2.17.0 / 2018-08-03

  • fixed newline output after help information (#833)
  • Fix to emit the action even without command (#778)
  • npm update (#823)

2.16.0 / 2018-06-29

  • Remove Makefile and test/run (#821)
  • Make 'npm test' run on Windows (#820)
  • Add badge to display install size (#807)
  • chore: cache node_modules (#814)
  • chore: remove Node.js 4 (EOL), add Node.js 10 (#813)
  • fixed typo in readme (#812)
  • Fix types (#804)
  • Update eslint to resolve vulnerabilities in lodash (#799)
  • updated readme with custom event listeners. (#791)
  • fix tests (#794)

2.15.0 / 2018-03-07

  • Update downloads badge to point to graph of downloads over time instead of duplicating link to npm
  • Arguments description

2.14.1 / 2018-02-07

  • Fix typing of help function

2.14.0 / 2018-02-05

  • only register the option:version event once
  • Fixes issue #727: Passing empty string for option on command is set to undefined
  • enable eqeqeq rule
  • resolves #754 add linter configuration to project
  • resolves #560 respect custom name for version option
  • document how to override the version flag
  • document using options per command

2.13.0 / 2018-01-09

  • Do not print default for --no-
  • remove trailing spaces in command help
  • Update CI's Node.js to LTS and latest version
  • typedefs: Command and Option types added to commander namespace

2.12.2 / 2017-11-28

  • fix: typings are not shipped

2.12.1 / 2017-11-23

  • Move @types/node to dev dependency

2.12.0 / 2017-11-22

  • add attributeName() method to Option objects
  • Documentation updated for options with --no prefix
  • typings: outputHelp takes a string as the first parameter
  • typings: use overloads
  • feat(typings): update to match js api
  • Print default value in option help
  • Fix translation error
  • Fail when using same command and alias (#491)
  • feat(typings): add help callback
  • fix bug when description is add after command with options (#662)
  • Format js code
  • Rename History.md to CHANGELOG.md (#668)
  • feat(typings): add typings to support TypeScript (#646)
  • use current node

2.11.0 / 2017-07-03

  • Fix help section order and padding (#652)
  • feature: support for signals to subcommands (#632)
  • Fixed #37, --help should not display first (#447)
  • Fix translation errors. (#570)
  • Add package-lock.json
  • Remove engines
  • Upgrade package version
  • Prefix events to prevent conflicts between commands and options (#494)
  • Removing dependency on graceful-readlink
  • Support setting name in #name function and make it chainable
  • Add .vscode directory to .gitignore (Visual Studio Code metadata)
  • Updated link to ruby commander in readme files

2.10.0 / 2017-06-19

  • Update .travis.yml. drop support for older node.js versions.
  • Fix require arguments in README.md
  • On SemVer you do not start from 0.0.1
  • Add missing semi colon in readme
  • Add save param to npm install
  • node v6 travis test
  • Update Readme_zh-CN.md
  • Allow literal '--' to be passed-through as an argument
  • Test subcommand alias help
  • link build badge to master branch
  • Support the alias of Git style sub-command
  • added keyword commander for better search result on npm
  • Fix Sub-Subcommands
  • test node.js stable
  • Fixes TypeError when a command has an option called --description
  • Update README.md to make it beginner friendly and elaborate on the difference between angled and square brackets.
  • Add chinese Readme file

2.9.0 / 2015-10-13

  • Add option isDefault to set default subcommand #415 @Qix-
  • Add callback to allow filtering or post-processing of help text #434 @djulien
  • Fix undefined text in help information close #414 #416 @zhiyelee

2.8.1 / 2015-04-22

  • Back out support multiline description Close #396 #397

2.8.0 / 2015-04-07

  • Add process.execArg support, execution args like --harmony will be passed to sub-commands #387 @DigitalIO @zhiyelee
  • Fix bug in Git-style sub-commands #372 @zhiyelee
  • Allow commands to be hidden from help #383 @tonylukasavage
  • When git-style sub-commands are in use, yet none are called, display help #382 @claylo
  • Add ability to specify arguments syntax for top-level command #258 @rrthomas
  • Support multiline descriptions #208 @zxqfox

2.7.1 / 2015-03-11

  • Revert #347 (fix collisions when option and first arg have same name) which causes a bug in #367.

2.7.0 / 2015-03-09

  • Fix git-style bug when installed globally. Close #335 #349 @zhiyelee
  • Fix collisions when option and first arg have same name. Close #346 #347 @tonylukasavage
  • Add support for camelCase on opts(). Close #353 @nkzawa
  • Add node.js 0.12 and io.js to travis.yml
  • Allow RegEx options. #337 @palanik
  • Fixes exit code when sub-command failing. Close #260 #332 @pirelenito
  • git-style bin files in $PATH make sense. Close #196 #327 @zhiyelee

2.6.0 / 2014-12-30

  • added Command#allowUnknownOption method. Close #138 #318 @doozr @zhiyelee
  • Add application description to the help msg. Close #112 @dalssoft

2.5.1 / 2014-12-15

  • fixed two bugs incurred by variadic arguments. Close #291 @Quentin01 #302 @zhiyelee

2.5.0 / 2014-10-24

  • add support for variadic arguments. Closes #277 @whitlockjc

2.4.0 / 2014-10-17

  • fixed a bug on executing the coercion function of subcommands option. Closes #270
  • added Command.prototype.name to retrieve command name. Closes #264 #266 @tonylukasavage
  • added Command.prototype.opts to retrieve all the options as a simple object of key-value pairs. Closes #262 @tonylukasavage
  • fixed a bug on subcommand name. Closes #248 @jonathandelgado
  • fixed function normalize doesn’t honor option terminator. Closes #216 @abbr

2.3.0 / 2014-07-16

  • add command alias'. Closes PR #210
  • fix: Typos. Closes #99
  • fix: Unused fs module. Closes #217

2.2.0 / 2014-03-29

  • add passing of previous option value
  • fix: support subcommands on windows. Closes #142
  • Now the defaultValue passed as the second argument of the coercion function.

2.1.0 / 2013-11-21

  • add: allow cflag style option params, unit test, fixes #174

2.0.0 / 2013-07-18

  • remove input methods (.prompt, .confirm, etc)

0.6.1 / 2012-06-01

  • Added: append (yes or no) on confirmation
  • Added: allow node.js v0.7.x

0.6.0 / 2012-04-10

  • Added .prompt(obj, callback) support. Closes #49
  • Added default support to .choose(). Closes #41
  • Fixed the choice example

0.5.1 / 2011-12-20

  • Fixed password() for recent nodes. Closes #36

0.5.0 / 2011-12-04

  • Added sub-command option support [itay]

0.4.3 / 2011-12-04

  • Fixed custom help ordering. Closes #32

0.4.2 / 2011-11-24

  • Added travis support
  • Fixed: line-buffered input automatically trimmed. Closes #31

0.4.1 / 2011-11-18

  • Removed listening for "close" on --help

0.4.0 / 2011-11-15

  • Added support for --. Closes #24

0.3.3 / 2011-11-14

  • Fixed: wait for close event when writing help info [Jerry Hamlet]

0.3.2 / 2011-11-01

  • Fixed long flag definitions with values [felixge]

0.3.1 / 2011-10-31

  • Changed --version short flag to -V from -v
  • Changed .version() so it's configurable [felixge]

0.3.0 / 2011-10-31

  • Added support for long flags only. Closes #18

0.2.1 / 2011-10-24

  • "node": ">= 0.4.x < 0.7.0". Closes #20

0.2.0 / 2011-09-26

  • Allow for defaults that are not just boolean. Default reassignment only occurs for --no-*, optional, and required arguments. [Jim Isaacs]

0.1.0 / 2011-08-24

  • Added support for custom --help output

0.0.5 / 2011-08-18

  • Changed: when the user enters nothing prompt for password again
  • Fixed issue with passwords beginning with numbers [NuckChorris]

0.0.4 / 2011-08-15

  • Fixed Commander#args

0.0.3 / 2011-08-15

  • Added default option value support

0.0.2 / 2011-08-15

  • Added mask support to Command#password(str[, mask], fn)
  • Added Command#password(str, fn)

0.0.1 / 2010-01-03

  • Initial release