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cruft allows you to maintain all the necessary boilerplate for packaging and building projects separate from the code you intentionally write. Fully compatible with existing Cookiecutter templates.
Creating new projects from templates using cruft is easy:
And, so is updating them as the template changes overtime:
Many project template utilities exist that automate the copying and pasting of code to create new projects. This seems great! However, once created, most leave you with that copy-and-pasted code to manage through the life of your project.
cruft is different. It automates the creation of new projects like the others, but then it also helps you to manage the boilerplate through the life of the project. cruft makes sure your code stays in-sync with the template it came from for you.
- Cookiecutter Compatible: cruft utilizes Cookiecutter as its template expansion engine. Meaning it retains full compatibility with all existing Cookiecutter templates.
- Template Validation: cruft can quickly validate whether or not a project is using the latest version of a template using
cruft check
. This check can easily be added to CI pipelines to ensure your projects stay in-sync. - Automatic Template Updates: cruft automates the process of updating code to match the latest version of a template, making it easy to utilize template improvements across many projects.
To get started - install cruft
using a Python package manager:
pip3 install cruft
OR
poetry add cruft
OR
pipenv install cruft
To create a new project using cruft run cruft create PROJECT_URL
from the command line.
For example:
cruft create https://github.com/timothycrosley/cookiecutter-python/
cruft will then ask you any necessary questions to create your new project. It will use your answers to expand the provided template, and then return the directory it placed the expanded project.
Behind the scenes, cruft uses Cookiecutter to do the project expansion. The only difference in the resulting output is a .cruft.json
file that
contains the git hash of the template used as well as the parameters specified.
To update an existing project, that was created using cruft, run cruft update
in the root of the project.
If there are any updates, cruft will have you review them before applying. If you accept the changes cruft will apply them to your project
and update the .cruft.json
file for you.
!!! tip
Sometimes certain files just aren't good fits for updating. Such as test cases or __init__
files. You can tell cruft to always skip updating these files on a project by generating project with --skip cruft/__init__.py --skip tests
arguments or manually adding them to a skip section within your .cruft.json
file:
{
"template": "https://github.com/timothycrosley/cookiecutter-python",
"commit": "8a65a360d51250221193ed0ec5ed292e72b32b0b",
"skip": [
"cruft/__init__.py",
"tests"
],
...
}
Or, if you have toml installed, you can add skip files directly to a `tool.cruft` section of your `pyproject.toml` file:
[tool.cruft]
skip = ["cruft/__init__.py", "tests"]
Note that it is possible to use glob patterns for selecting the files to skip:
{
"skip": [
"**/__init__.py",
"tests/*"
],
...
}
Checking to see if a project is missing a template update is as easy as running cruft check
. If the project is out-of-date an error and exit code 1 will be returned.
cruft check
can be added to CI pipelines to ensure projects don't unintentionally drift.
Have an existing project that you created from a template in the past using Cookiecutter directly? You can link it to the template that was used to create it using: cruft link TEMPLATE_REPOSITORY
.
For example:
cruft link https://github.com/timothycrosley/cookiecutter-python/
You can then specify the last commit of the template the project has been updated to be consistent with, or accept the default of using the latest commit from the template.
With time, your boilerplate may end up being very different from the actual cookiecutter template. Cruft allows you to quickly see what changed in your local project compared to the template. It is as easy as running cruft diff
. If any local file differs from the template, the diff will appear in your terminal in a similar fashion to git diff
.
The cruft diff
command optionally accepts an --exit-code
flag that will make cruft exit with a non-0 code should any diff is found. You can combine this flag with the skip
section of your .cruft.json
to make stricter CI checks that ensures any improvement to the template is always submitted upstream.
Since I first saw videos of quickly being used to automate Ubuntu application creation, I've had a love/hate relationship with these kinds of tools. I've used them for many projects and certainly seen them lead to productivity improvements. However, I've always felt like they were a double-edged sword. Sure, they would automate away the copying and pasting many would do to create projects. However, by doing so, they encouraged more code to be copied and pasted! Then, over time, you could easily be left with hundreds of projects that contained copy-and-pasted code with no way to easy way to update them. I created cruft to be a tool that recognized that balance between project creation and maintenance and provided mechanisms to keep built projects up-to-date.
I hope you too find cruft
useful!
~Timothy Crosley