Context-aware single-letter project commands to speed up your command-line workflow.
- โ ๐ โ b to build/compile any project.
- โ ๐ โ r to run/start any project.
- โ ๐งช โ t to test any project.
screencap.mov
- Supports over 20 build and project tools โ Bun, Cabal, Cargo, CMake, .NET, Dune, Go, Gradle, Lake, Leiningen, Mage, Maven, Meson, Poetry, Stack, Tectonic, just, make, nix, npm, pnpm, and yarn. More details.
- Portable โ Dependency-free portable POSIX shell script. Supports Linux, macOS, WSL, etc.
- Shell Integration โ Works with aliases in any shell and for the Fish shell through a Fish plugin.
- Simple โ Easy to extend with support for new tools.
Why & What
If you're a developer and command line user, you're probably constantly using
commands like make, cargo run, npm test, etc. The common approach of
using shell aliases to provide shorthand forms for frequently used commands does
not work well in these cases. For example, creating an alias like b for cargo build one day is completely useless the next day when working in a project
that uses a different build tool.
projectdo solves that problem. It executes project actions (such as build,
run, test, etc.) with the appropriate tool for the project in the current
working directory. The appropriate tool is intelligently detected based on the
context where projectdo is executed. For instance, projectdo test runs
cargo test if a Cargo.toml is found and npm test if a package.json file
is found.
By combining projectdo with shell aliases, project commands can be run in any
project with minimal typing. As an example, with the alias alias b='projectdo build', you can build any project simply by typing
b+enter.
Install
projectdo can be installed through a number of package managers or by
manually downloading the shell script.
Homebrew
projectdo can be installed with Homebrew on macOS and Linux.
brew install paldepind/tap/projectdo
AUR (Arch Linux)
The AUR package can be installed manually or using an AUR helper.
npm
projectdo is not related to Node.js or JavaScript, but npm works perfectly
fine for distributing shell scripts and can be a handy installation method if
you're already using npm:
From source
Download the script and place it somewhere in your path. For instance if
~/bin is in your path:
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/paldepind/projectdo/main/projectdo -o ~/bin/projectdo
chmod +x ~/bin/projectdo
From repository
Clone the project repository:
git clone https://github.com/paldepind/projectdo; cd projectdo
Install it with this command:
make install
# Or to uninstall
make uninstallShell integration
For the Fish shell use the Fish plugin. For Bash and Zsh setup shell aliases.
Fish Plugin
projectdo ships with a plugin for the Fish shell. The plugin includes
auto-completion and functions for use with Fish's abbreviation feature.
The Fish plugin can be installed manually or with Fisher:
fisher install paldepind/projectdo
The plugin exposes four shell functions that should be configured with abbreviations as desired. For instance:
abbr -a b --function projectdo_build
abbr -a r --function projectdo_run
abbr -a t --function projectdo_test
abbr -a p --function projectdo_tool
With the above configuration, t will expand to cargo test, p will expand to cargo,
etc. depending on the project.
Note that you need to have the script in your path in order for the Fish plugin to work!
Aliases
projectdo can be configured with shell aliases in any shell. For instance:
alias t='projectdo test' alias r='projectdo run' alias b='projectdo build' alias p='projectdo tool'
Usage
Note: When executed with the -d flag, projectdo performs a dry run and
only prints information about what it would do without actually doing anything.
It is a good idea to do a dry run when using projectdo in a project for the
first time to verify that it does the right thing.
Usage: projectdo [options] [action] [tool-arguments]
Options:
-h, --help Display this help.
-n, -d, --dry-run Do not execute any commands with side-effects.
-q, --quiet Do not print commands as they are about to be executed.
-v, --version Display the version of the program.
Actions:
build, run, test Build, run, or test the current project.
tool Invoke the guessed tool for the current project.
Tool arguments:
Any arguments following [action] are passed along to the invoked tool.
Supported tools and languages
Note: If a tool you're interested in is not supported, please open an issue or a pull request.
| Tool | Language | Detected by | Commands |
|---|---|---|---|
| bun | JavaScript, etc | package.json and bun.lock/bun.lockb |
bun build bun start bun test |
| Cabal | Haskell | *.cabal |
cabal build cabal run cabal test |
| Cargo | Rust | Cargo.toml |
cargo build cargo run cargo test |
| CMake | C, C++ and Obj-C | CMakeLists.txt |
cmake --build . --target test |
| Dune | OCaml | dune-project |
dune build dune exec dune runtest |
| Go | Go | go.mod |
go test |
| Gradle | Java, etc. | build.gradle or build.gradle.kts |
gradle compile gradle run gradle test |
| just | Any | justfile |
just build just run just test |
| Lake | Lean | lakefile.lean or lake-manifest.json |
lake build lake run lake test |
| Leiningen | Clojure | project.clj |
lein test |
| Mage | Go | magefile.go with a test/check target |
mage test/check |
| make | Any | Makefile |
make make test/check |
| Maven | Java, etc. | pom.xml |
mvn compile run n/a mvn test |
| Meson | C, C++, etc. | meson.build |
meson compile run n/a meson test |
| .NET | C# and F# | *.csproj, *.fsproj or *.sln |
dotnet build dotnet run dotnet test |
| nix (flake) | nix | flake.nix |
nix build nix run nix flake check |
| nix (non-flake) | nix | default.nix |
nix-build |
| npm | JavaScript, etc. | package.json |
npm build npm start npm test |
| pnpm | JavaScript, etc | package.json and pnpm-lock.yaml |
pnpm build pnpm start pnpm test |
| Poetry | Python | pyproject.toml with [tool.poetry] |
poetry build run n/a poetry run pytest |
| Shell script | Any | build.sh |
sh -c build.sh |
| Stack | Haskell | stack.yaml |
stack build stack run stack test |
| Tectonic | LaTeX | Tectonic.toml |
tectonic -X build |
| yarn | JavaScript, etc. | package.json and yarn.lock |
yarn build yarn start yarn test |