| Crates.io | sen |
| lib.rs | sen |
| version | 0.7.0 |
| created_at | 2025-11-24 10:25:49.302531+00 |
| updated_at | 2025-12-11 15:46:05.141774+00 |
| description | Script to System CLI Engine - A type-safe, macro-powered CLI framework |
| homepage | |
| repository | https://github.com/ynishi/sen-rs |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 1947620 |
| size | 198,996 |
A type-safe, macro-powered CLI framework.
SEN transforms CLI development from ad-hoc scripts into systematic applications with:
Add to your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
sen = { version = "0.1", features = ["clap"] }
clap = { version = "4", features = ["derive"] }
tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }
Or use cargo add:
cargo add sen --features clap
cargo add clap --features derive
cargo add tokio --features full
use sen::{Args, CliResult, Router, State};
use clap::Parser;
// 1. Define application state
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct AppState {
pub config: String,
}
// 2. Define arguments with Clap derive macro
// These types are automatically parsed by SEN when clap feature is enabled
#[derive(Parser, Debug)]
struct BuildArgs {
/// Build in release mode
#[arg(long)]
release: bool,
/// Number of parallel jobs
#[arg(short, long, default_value = "4")]
jobs: usize,
}
// Add descriptions to handlers with #[sen::handler] macro (Router API)
// Or use #[sen(desc = "...")] for Enum API (see below)
#[derive(Parser, Debug)]
struct DeployArgs {
/// Target environment (positional argument)
environment: String,
/// Docker image tag
#[arg(long, default_value = "latest")]
tag: String,
}
// 3. Implement handlers as async functions
// Handlers can accept State, Args, or both in any order
// Use #[sen::handler(desc = "...")] to add descriptions for help
mod handlers {
use super::*;
// Handler with State only (no arguments)
// You can also use: #[sen::handler(desc = "Show application status")]
pub async fn status(state: State<AppState>) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
Ok(format!("Status: OK (config: {})", app.config))
}
// Handler with State + Args
// Args(args): Args<BuildArgs> - Clap automatically parses CLI arguments here!
#[sen::handler(desc = "Build the project")]
pub async fn build(
state: State<AppState>,
Args(args): Args<BuildArgs>, // ๐ Automatic parsing via Clap!
) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
let mode = if args.release { "release" } else { "debug" };
Ok(format!("Building in {} mode with {} jobs (config: {})",
mode, args.jobs, app.config))
}
// Order doesn't matter! Args can come before State
#[sen::handler(desc = "Deploy to environment")]
pub async fn deploy(
Args(args): Args<DeployArgs>, // ๐ Clap parses from CLI automatically!
state: State<AppState>,
) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
Ok(format!("Deploying to {} with tag {} (config: {})",
args.environment, args.tag, app.config))
}
}
// 4. Wire it up with Router (< 30 lines of main.rs)
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
// Create application state (shared across all handlers)
let state = AppState {
config: "production".to_string(),
};
// Build the router with command โ handler mappings
// Use #[sen::sen()] macro to set CLI metadata
let router = build_router(state);
// Execute the command from CLI arguments
let response = router.execute().await;
// Print output and exit with proper code
if !response.output.is_empty() {
println!("{}", response.output);
}
std::process::exit(response.exit_code);
}
// Set CLI metadata with #[sen::sen()] macro
#[sen::sen(
name = "myapp",
version = "1.0.0",
about = "My awesome CLI application"
)]
fn build_router(state: AppState) -> Router<()> {
Router::new()
.route("status", handlers::status) // myapp status
.route("build", handlers::build) // myapp build [--release] [--jobs N]
.route("deploy", handlers::deploy) // myapp deploy <env> [--tag TAG]
.with_state(state) // Inject state into all handlers
}
Usage:
myapp status # No arguments
myapp build --release --jobs 8 # With arguments
myapp deploy production --tag v1.2.3 # Positional + flags
myapp --help # Hierarchical help
myapp build --help # Clap auto-generates detailed help
Hierarchical --help output (automatically generated):
myapp 1.0.0
My awesome CLI application
Usage: myapp [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>
Other Commands:
build Build the project
deploy Deploy to environment
status
Options:
-h, --help Print help
--help --json Show CLI schema (JSON format)
-V, --version Print version
Per-command --help (via Clap):
$ myapp build --help
Usage: cmd [OPTIONS]
Options:
--release Build in release mode
-j, --jobs <JOBS> Number of parallel jobs [default: 4]
-h, --help Print help
use sen::{Args, CliResult, State, SenRouter};
use clap::Parser;
// 1. Define application state
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct AppState {
pub config: String,
}
// 2. Define arguments with Clap derive macro
// Same as Router API - just derive Parser on your argument types
#[derive(Parser, Debug)]
struct BuildArgs {
/// Build in release mode
#[arg(long)]
release: bool,
/// Number of parallel jobs
#[arg(short, long, default_value = "4")]
jobs: usize,
}
#[derive(Parser, Debug)]
struct DeployArgs {
/// Target environment (positional argument)
environment: String,
/// Docker image tag
#[arg(long, default_value = "latest")]
tag: String,
}
// 3. Define commands with SenRouter derive macro
// This generates the execute() method and routing logic at compile-time
#[derive(SenRouter)]
#[sen(state = AppState)] // Tell macro what State type to use
enum Commands {
#[sen(handler = handlers::status, desc = "Show application status")]
Status, // No arguments
#[sen(handler = handlers::build, desc = "Build the project")]
Build(BuildArgs), // With Clap-parsed arguments
#[sen(handler = handlers::deploy, desc = "Deploy to environment")]
Deploy(DeployArgs), // Compiler checks ALL variants have handlers!
}
// The macro also generates Commands::help() for displaying all commands
// Example: println!("{}", Commands::help());
// 4. Implement handlers as async functions
// Same signature style as Router API
mod handlers {
use super::*;
// Handler with State only
pub async fn status(state: State<AppState>) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
Ok(format!("Status: OK (config: {})", app.config))
}
// Handler with State + Args
pub async fn build(
state: State<AppState>,
Args(args): Args<BuildArgs>, // ๐ Clap automatically parses here!
) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
let mode = if args.release { "release" } else { "debug" };
Ok(format!("Building in {} mode with {} jobs (config: {})",
mode, args.jobs, app.config))
}
// Order doesn't matter! Args can come before State
pub async fn deploy(
Args(args): Args<DeployArgs>, // ๐ Automatic parsing via Clap!
state: State<AppState>,
) -> CliResult<String> {
let app = state.read().await;
Ok(format!("Deploying to {} with tag {} (config: {})",
args.environment, args.tag, app.config))
}
}
// 5. Wire it up (< 30 lines of main.rs)
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
// Create application state (shared across all handlers)
let state = State::new(AppState {
config: "production".to_string(),
});
// Parse command from CLI arguments (your parsing logic)
let cmd = Commands::parse();
// Execute! The macro-generated execute() method handles routing
let response = cmd.execute(state).await;
// Print output and exit with proper code
if !response.output.is_empty() {
println!("{}", response.output);
}
std::process::exit(response.exit_code);
}
Key Features of Enum API:
#[derive(SenRouter)] macro generates the execute() method#[derive(Parser)] to argument typesState<T> and Args<T> based on handler signaturesSEN enforces clean file separation from day one:
my-cli/
โโโ src/
โ โโโ main.rs # Entry point only (< 50 lines)
โ โโโ handlers/ # One file per command
โ โ โโโ mod.rs
โ โ โโโ status.rs
โ โ โโโ build.rs
โ โ โโโ test.rs
โ โโโ workflows/ # Multi-task operations
โ โ โโโ preflight.rs # fmt โ lint โ test
โ โโโ tasks/ # Atomic operations
โ โ โโโ fmt.rs
โ โ โโโ lint.rs
โ โโโ lib.rs # Re-exports
Why?
println! debugging (handlers return structured data)Router API (Axum-style) - Dynamic and flexible:
// Register handlers dynamically
let router = Router::new()
.route("status", handlers::status)
.route("build", handlers::build)
.with_state(app_state);
// Easy to integrate with existing CLIs
let response = router.execute(&args).await;
Enum API - Compile-time safety:
#[derive(SenRouter)]
#[sen(state = AppState)]
enum Commands {
#[sen(handler = handlers::status)] // Typo? Compile error!
Status,
}
Both approaches are supported - choose based on your needs:
// Order doesn't matter!
pub async fn handler1(state: State<App>, args: Args) -> CliResult<String>
pub async fn handler2(args: Args, state: State<App>) -> CliResult<String>
// State optional
pub async fn handler3(args: Args) -> CliResult<()>
pub enum CliError {
User(UserError), // Exit code 1: user can fix
System(SystemError), // Exit code 101: bug/system failure
}
Errors automatically format with helpful hints:
Error: Invalid argument '--foo'
The value 'bar' is not supported.
Hint: Use one of: baz, qux
Automatic hierarchical grouping - Commands are organized by prefix:
$ myctl --help
Configuration Commands:
edit Edit configuration in editor
init Initialize configuration file
show Show current configuration
Database Commands:
create Create a new database
delete Delete a database
list List all databases
Server Commands:
start Start server instances
stop Stop server instances
Clap integration - Per-command help with full argument details:
$ myctl db create --help
Usage: cmd [OPTIONS] <NAME>
Arguments:
<NAME> Database name
Options:
--size <SIZE> Storage size [default: 10GB]
--engine <ENGINE> Database engine [default: postgres]
-h, --help Print help
JSON schema export for AI agents and IDEs:
$ myctl --help --json
{
"commands": {
"db:create": {
"description": "Create a new database",
"arguments": [...],
"options": [...]
}
}
}
How grouping works:
: prefix are automatically grouped (e.g., db:create โ "Database Commands")create instead of db:create)#[sen::handler(desc = "...")] to add descriptionsHandlers return structured data, framework handles output:
// โ Bad: Can't test, can't redirect
pub async fn status() -> CliResult<()> {
println!("Status: OK");
Ok(())
}
// โ
Good: Testable, flexible
pub async fn status() -> CliResult<StatusReport> {
Ok(StatusReport { status: "OK" })
}
SEN provides automatic AI agent integration through built-in --agent-mode flag support.
Simply call .with_agent_mode() and the framework handles everything:
use sen::Router;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
let router = Router::new()
.route("build", handlers::build)
.with_agent_mode() // Enable automatic --agent-mode support
.with_state(state);
let response = router.execute().await;
// Automatically outputs JSON if --agent-mode was passed
if response.agent_mode {
println!("{}", response.to_agent_json());
} else {
if !response.output.is_empty() {
println!("{}", response.output);
}
}
std::process::exit(response.exit_code);
}
User runs:
myapp build # Normal text output
myapp --agent-mode build # JSON output
--agent-mode flag automaticallyresponse.agent_mode = true for your output logic{
"result": "success",
"exit_code": 0,
"output": "Build completed successfully",
"tier": "safe",
"tags": ["build", "production"],
"sensors": {
"timestamp": "2024-01-15T10:30:00Z",
"os": "macos",
"cwd": "/Users/user/project"
}
}
For complex scenarios with global options, you can still manually implement agent mode (see examples/practical-cli).
--agent-mode detection: Framework handles flag parsingto_agent_json(): Converts Response to structured JSONsensors feature)SEN has built-in Clap integration - the de-facto standard for Rust CLI argument parsing.
Simply derive clap::Parser on your argument types:
Step 1: Enable the clap feature:
[dependencies]
sen = { version = "0.1", features = ["clap"] }
clap = { version = "4", features = ["derive"] }
Step 2: Define arguments with #[derive(Parser)]:
use sen::{Args, CliResult};
use clap::Parser;
#[derive(Parser, Debug)]
struct BuildArgs {
/// Build in release mode
#[arg(long)]
release: bool,
/// Number of parallel jobs
#[arg(short, long, default_value = "4")]
jobs: usize,
}
async fn build(Args(args): Args<BuildArgs>) -> CliResult<String> {
let mode = if args.release { "release" } else { "debug" };
Ok(format!("Building in {} mode with {} jobs", mode, args.jobs))
}
Step 3: Register the handler - that's it!
let router = Router::new()
.route("build", build)
.with_state(state);
How it works: When the clap feature is enabled, SEN automatically implements FromArgs for any type implementing clap::Parser. Zero boilerplate required.
Benefits:
--help)Example --help output (auto-generated from your #[arg] attributes):
$ myapp build --help
Usage: myapp build [OPTIONS]
Options:
--release Build in release mode
-j, --jobs <JOBS> Number of parallel jobs [default: 4]
-h, --help Print help
All the documentation comments (///) in your struct become help text automatically!
For applications with global flags that apply to all commands:
use sen::FromGlobalArgs;
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct GlobalOpts {
pub verbose: bool,
pub config_path: String,
}
impl FromGlobalArgs for GlobalOpts {
fn from_global_args(args: &[String]) -> Result<(Self, Vec<String>), CliError> {
let mut verbose = false;
let mut config_path = "~/.config/myapp".to_string();
let mut remaining_args = Vec::new();
for arg in args {
match arg.as_str() {
"--verbose" | "-v" => verbose = true,
"--config" => { /* handle next arg */ }
_ => remaining_args.push(arg.clone()),
}
}
Ok((GlobalOpts { verbose, config_path }, remaining_args))
}
}
Use Global Options when:
--verbose, --config)clap or other parserspractical-cli example)The practical-cli example intentionally uses FromGlobalArgs instead of FromArgs:
--verbose and --config apply to all commandsclap integration: Uses clap::Command for help generationkubectl, docker, etc.Key Insight: For complex CLIs with global flags, use FromGlobalArgs to parse them once, then use Clap's #[derive(Parser)] for per-command arguments.
See examples/practical-cli for a complete production-ready example showing:
FromGlobalArgs#[derive(Parser)]FromArgs Implementation (Rarely Needed)If you need custom parsing logic and cannot use Clap, you can manually implement FromArgs:
use sen::{Args, FromArgs, CliError, CliResult};
#[derive(Debug)]
struct CustomArgs {
flag: bool,
}
impl FromArgs for CustomArgs {
fn from_args(args: &[String]) -> Result<Self, CliError> {
// Your custom parsing logic
Ok(CustomArgs {
flag: args.contains(&"--flag".to_string()),
})
}
}
async fn handler(Args(args): Args<CustomArgs>) -> CliResult<String> {
Ok(format!("Flag: {}", args.flag))
}
Only use manual FromArgs when:
For 99% of use cases, use Clap's #[derive(Parser)] instead.
SEN follows a three-layer design:
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โ Router Layer (Compile-time) โ
โ - Enum-based command tree โ
โ - Handler binding via proc macros โ
โ - Type-safe routing โ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โ
โผ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โ Handler Layer (Runtime) โ
โ - Dependency injection (State, Args) โ
โ - Business logic execution โ
โ - Result<T, E> return type โ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โ
โผ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
โ Response Layer (Exit) โ
โ - Exit code mapping (0, 1, 101) โ
โ - Structured output (JSON/Human) โ
โ - Logging & telemetry โ
โโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโโ
See DESIGN.md for full architecture details.
Check out the examples/simple-cli directory for a working CLI with:
--release flag)Run it:
cd examples/simple-cli
cargo build
./target/debug/admin status
./target/debug/admin build --release
./target/debug/admin test my_test
# Run all tests
cargo test
# Test specific crate
cargo test -p sen
cargo test -p sen-rs-macros
Contributions welcome! Please read DESIGN.md to understand the architecture first.
Licensed under either of:
at your option.
SEN is inspired by:
SEN (็ท/ๅ ): The Line to Success, Leading the Future of CLI Development