Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastiaan van Stijn c4a55df7c0
cli: rename args that collided with builtins (predeclard)
cli/required.go:33:22: param min has same name as predeclared identifier (predeclared)
    func RequiresMinArgs(min int) cobra.PositionalArgs {
                         ^
    cli/required.go:50:22: param max has same name as predeclared identifier (predeclared)
    func RequiresMaxArgs(max int) cobra.PositionalArgs {
                         ^
    cli/required.go:67:24: param min has same name as predeclared identifier (predeclared)
    func RequiresRangeArgs(min int, max int) cobra.PositionalArgs {
                           ^

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-08-26 13:55:28 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn c60b360c33
cli: improve argument validation output
Improve the output for these validation errors:

- Removes the short command description from the output. This information
  does not provide much useful help, and distracts from the error message.
- Reduces punctuation, and
- Prefixes the error message with the binary / root-command name
  (usually `docker:`) to be consistent with other similar errors.
- Adds an empty line between the error-message and the "call to action"
  (`Run 'docker volume --help'...` in the example below). This helps
  separating the error message and "usage" from the call-to-action.

Before this patch:

    $ docker volume ls one two three
    "docker volume ls" accepts no arguments.
    See 'docker volume ls --help'.

    Usage:  docker volume ls [OPTIONS]

    List volumes

    $ docker volume create one two three
    "docker volume create" requires at most 1 argument.
    See 'docker volume create --help'.

    Usage:  docker volume create [OPTIONS] [VOLUME]

    Create a volume

With this patch:

    $ docker volume ls one two three
    docker: 'docker volume ls' accepts no arguments

    Usage:  docker volume ls [OPTIONS]

    Run 'docker volume ls --help' for more information

    $ docker voludocker volume create one two three
    docker: 'docker volume create' requires at most 1 argument

    Usage:  docker volume create [OPTIONS] [VOLUME]

    SRun 'docker volume create --help' for more information

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-05 03:35:14 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn a6e96c758e
cli: improve output and consistency for unknown (sub)commands
Before this patch, output for invalid top-level and sub-commands differed.
For top-level commands, the CLI would print an error-message and a suggestion
to use `--help`. For missing *subcommands*, we would hit a different code-path,
and different output, which includes full "usage" / "help" output.

While it is a common convention to show usage output, and may have been
a nice gesture when docker was still young and only had a few commands
and options ("you did something wrong; here's an overview of what you
can use"), that's no longer the case, and many commands have a _very_
long output.

The result of this is that the error message, which is the relevant
information in this case - "You mis-typed something" - is lost in the
output, and hard to find (sometimes even requiring scrolling back).

The output is also confusing, because it _looks_ like something ran
successfully (most of the output is not about the error!).

Even further; the suggested resolution (try `--help` to see the correct
options) is rather redundant, because running teh command with `--help`
produces _exactly_ the same output as was just showh, baring the error
message. As a fun fact, due to the usage output being printed, the
output even contains not one, but _two_ "call to actions";

- `See 'docker volume --help'.` (under the erro message)
- `Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.`
  (under the usage output)

In short; the output is too verbose, confusing, and doesn't provide
a good UX. Let's reduce the output produced so that the focus is on the
important information.

This patch:

- Changes the usage to the short-usage.
- Changes the error-message to mention the _full_ command instead of only
  the command after `docker` (so `docker no-such-command` instead of
  `no-such-command`).
- Prefixes the error message with the binary / root-command name
  (usually `docker:`); this is something we can still decide on, but
  it's a pattern we already use in some places. The motivation for this
  is that `docker` commands can often produce output that's a combination
  of output from the CLI itself, output from the daemon, and even output
  from the container. The `docker:` prefix helps to distinguish where
  the message originated from (the `docker` CLI in this case).
- Adds an empty line between the error-message and the "call to action"
  (`Run 'docker volume --help'...` in the example below). This helps
  separating the error message ("unkown flag") from the call-to-action.

Before this patch:

Unknown top-level command:

    docker nosuchcommand foo
    docker: 'nosuchcommand' is not a docker command.
    See 'docker --help'

Unknown sub-command:

    docker volume nosuchcommand foo

    Usage:  docker volume COMMAND

    Manage volumes

    Commands:
      create      Create a volume
      inspect     Display detailed information on one or more volumes
      ls          List volumes
      prune       Remove unused local volumes
      rm          Remove one or more volumes
      update      Update a volume (cluster volumes only)

    Run 'docker volume COMMAND --help' for more information on a command.

After this patch:

Unknown top-level command:

    docker nosuchcommand foo
    docker: unknown command: docker nosuchcommand

    Run 'docker --help' for more information

Unknown sub-command:

    docker volume nosuchcommand foo
    docker: unknown command: 'docker volume nosuchcommand'

    Usage:  docker volume COMMAND

    Run 'docker volume --help' for more information

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2024-07-05 02:28:11 +02:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn 82427d1a07
format (GoDoc) comments with Go 1.19 to prepare for go updates
Older versions of Go do not format these comments, so we can already
reformat them ahead of time to prevent gofmt linting failing once
we update to Go 1.19 or up.

Result of:

    gofmt -s -w $(find . -type f -name '*.go' | grep -v "/vendor/")

With some manual adjusting.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2022-07-19 19:10:16 +02:00
Silvin Lubecki 7d823438bb
Disable unparam linter: cli/required.go:102:16: `pluralize` - `word` always receives `"argument"` (unparam)
Signed-off-by: Silvin Lubecki <silvin.lubecki@docker.com>
2019-10-31 19:22:22 +01:00
Sebastiaan van Stijn b9a7f35e02
Singularize / pluralize "argument(s)" in error message
The validation functions to test for the number of passed arguments did not
pluralize `argument(s)`, and used `argument(s)` in all cases.

This patch adds a simple `pluralize()` helper to improve this.

Before this change, `argument(s)` was used in all cases:

    $ docker container ls foobar
    "docker container ls" accepts no argument(s).

    $ docker network create one two
    "docker network create" requires exactly 1 argument(s).

    $ docker network connect
    "docker network connect" requires exactly 2 argument(s).

    $ docker volume create one two
    "docker volume create" requires at most 1 argument(s).

After this change, `argument(s)` is properly singularized or plurarized:

    $ docker container ls foobar
    "docker container ls" accepts no arguments.

    $ docker network create one two
    "docker network create" requires exactly 1 argument.

    $ docker network connect
    "docker network connect" requires exactly 2 arguments.

    $ docker volume create one two
    "docker volume create" requires at most 1 argument.

Test cases were updated accordingly.

Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
2017-08-12 18:25:38 +02:00
Daniel Nephin 1630fc40f8 Import docker/docker/cli
Signed-off-by: Daniel Nephin <dnephin@gmail.com>
2017-04-17 17:40:59 -04:00