Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
407 lines (195 loc) · 11.8 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

407 lines (195 loc) · 11.8 KB

Go Report Card license Release

SysBox

This repository is the spiritual successor to my previous sysadmin-utils repository

The idea here is to collect simple utilities and package them as a single binary, written in go, in a similar fashion to the busybox utility.

Installation

Installation upon a system which already contains a go-compiler should be as simple as:

$ go install github.com/skx/sysbox@latest

If you've cloned this repository then the following will suffice:

$ go build .
$ go install .

Finally may find binary releases for various systems upon our download page.

Bash Completion

The subcommand library this application uses has integrated support for the generation of a completion script for the bash shell.

To enable this add the following to your bash configuration-file:

source <(sysbox bash-completion)

Overview

This application is built, and distributed, as a single-binary named sysbox, which implements a number of sub-commands.

You can either run the tools individually, taking advantage of the bash completion support to complete the subcommands and their arguments:

$ sysbox foo ..
$ sysbox bar ..

Or you can create symlinks to allow specific tool to be executed without the need to specify a subcommand:

$ ln -s $(which sysbox) /usr/local/bin/calc
$ /usr/local/bin/calc '3 * 3'
9

Tools

The tools in this repository started out as being simple ports of the tools in my previous repository, however I've now started to expand them and fold in things I've used/created in the past.

You can view a summary of the available subcommands via:

$ sysbox help

More complete help for each command should be available like so:

$ sysbox help sub-command

Examples are included where useful.

calc

A simple calculator, which understands floating point-operations, unlike expr, and has some simple line-editing facilities built into its REPL-mode.

The calculator supports either execution of sums via via the command-line, or as an interactive REPL environment:

$ sysbox calc 3.1 + 2.7
5.8

$ sysbox calc
calc> let a = 1/3
0.333333
calc> result * 9
3
calc> result * 9
27
calc> exit
$

Here you see the magic variable result is always updated to store the value of the previous calculation.

choose-file

This subcommand presents a console-based UI to select a file. The file selected will be displayed upon STDOUT. The list may be filtered via an input-field.

Useful for launching videos, emulators, etc:

  • sysbox choose-file -execute="xine -g --no-logo --no-splash -V=40 {}" ~/Videos
    • Choose a file, and execute xine with that filename as one of the arguments.
  • xine $(sysbox choose-file ~/Videos)
    • Use the STDOUT result to launch instead.

The first form is preferred, because if the selection is canceled nothing happens. In the second-case xine would be launched with no argument.

choose-stdin

Almost identical to choose-file, but instead of allowing the user to choose from a filename it allows choosing from the contents read on STDIN. For example you might allow choosing a directory:

$ find ~/Repos -type d | sysbox choose-stdin -execute="firefox {}"

chronic

The chronic command is ideally suited to wrap cronjobs, it runs the command you specify as a child process and hides the output produced unless that process exits with a non-zero exit-code.

comments

This is a simple utility which outputs the comments found in the files named upon the command-line. Supported comments include C-style single-line comments (prefixed with //), C++-style multi-line comments (between /* and */), and shell-style comments prefixed with #.

Used for submitting pull-requests to projects about typos - as discussed here upon my blog.

collapse

This is a simple tool which will read STDIN, and output the content without any extra white-space:

  • Leading/Trailing white-space will be removed from every line.
  • Empty lines will be skipped entirely.

cpp

Something like the C preprocessor, but supporting only the ability to include files, and run commands via #include and #execute respectively:

#include "file/goes/here"
#execute ls -l | wc -l

See also env-template which allows more flexibility in running commands, and including files (or parts of files) via templates.

env-template

Perform expansion of golang text/template files, with support for getting environmental variables, running commands, and reading other files.

You can freely use any of the available golang template facilities, for example please see the sample template here cmd_env_template.tmpl, and the the examples included in the text/template documentation.

As an alternative you can consider the envsubst binary contained in your system's gettext{-base} package.

NOTE: This sub-command also allows file-inclusion, in three different ways:

  • Including files literally.
  • Including lines from a file which match a particular regular expression.
  • Including the region from a file which is bounded by two regular expressions.

See sysbox help env-template for further details, and examples. You'll also see it is possible to execute arbitrary commands and read their output. This facility was inspired by the embedmd utility, and added in #17.

See also cpp for a less flexible alternative which is useful for mere file inclusion and command-execution.

exec-stdin

Read STDIN, and allow running a command for each line. You can refer to the line read either completely, or by fields.

For example:

$ ps -ef | sysbox exec-stdin echo field1:{1} field2:{2} line:{}

See the usage-information for more details (sysbox help exec-stdin), but consider this a simple union of awk, xargs, and GNU parallel (since we can run multiple commands in parallel).

expect

expect allows you to spawn a process, and send input in response to given output read from that process. It can be used to perform simple scripting operations against remote routers, etc.

For examples please consult the output of sysbox help expect, but a simple example would be the following, which uses telnet to connect to a remote host and run a couple of commands. Note that we use \r\n explicitly, due to telnet being in use, and that there is no password-authentication required in this example:

    $ cat script.in
    SPAWN telnet telehack.com
    EXPECT \n\.
    SEND   date\r\n
    EXPECT \n\.
    SEND   quit\r\n

    $ sysbox expect script.in

find

The find sub-command allows finding files/directories that match a given number of regular expressions. Basic usage is:

$ sysbox find foo bar$

By default the names of files are shown, but you can view either files, directories, or both. The starting point will be the current working directory, but -path can be used to change that:

$ sysbox find -path /etc -files=true -directories=true '(i?)magic'
/etc/ImageMagick-6/magic.xml
/etc/magic
/etc/magic.mime
/etc/sane.d/magicolor.conf

fingerd

A trivial finger-server.

html2text

A simple tool for converting from HTML to Text, added when I realized I'd connected to a system over ssh and there were no console viewers installed, (such as lynx, links, or w3m).

httpd

A simple HTTP-server. Allows serving to localhost, or to the local LAN.

http-get

Very much "curl-lite", allows you to fetch the contents of a remote URL. SSL errors, etc, are handled, but only minimal options are supported.

ips

This tool lets you easily retrieve a list of local, or global, IPv4 and IPv6 addresses present upon your local host. This is a little simpler than trying to parse ip -4 addr list, although that is also the common approach.

markdown-toc

This tool creates a simple Markdown table-of-contents, which is useful for the README.md files as used on github.

make-password

This tool generates a single random password each time it is executed, it is designed to be quick and simple to use, rather than endlessly configurable.

rss

Show a summary of the contents of the given RSS feed. By default the links to the individual entries are shown, but it is possible to use a format-string to show more.

run-directory

Run every executable in the given directory, optionally terminate if any command returns a non-zero exit-code.

The exit-code handling is what inspired this addition; the Debian version of run-parts supports this, but the CentOS version does not.

splay

This tool allows sleeping for a random amount of time. This solves the problem when you have a hundred servers all running a task at the same time, triggered by cron, and you don't want to overwhelm a central resource that they each consume.

ssl-expiry

A simple utility to report upon the number of hours, and days, until a given TLS certificate (or any intermediary in the chain) expires.

Ideal for https-servers, but also TLS-protected SMTP hosts, etc.

timeout

Run a command, but kill it after the given number of seconds. The command is executed with a PTY so you can run interactive things such as top, mutt, etc.

todo

A command to look for TODO items which contain dates in the past, the idea being that you can record notes for yourself, along with deadlines, in your code. Later you can see which deadlines have been exceeded.

tree

Trivial command to display the contents of a filesystem, as a nested tree. This is similar to the standard tree command, without the nesting and ASCII graphics.

urls

Extract URLs from the named files, or STDIN. URLs are parsed naively with a simple regular expression and only http and https schemes are recognized.

validate-json

Validate JSON files for correctness and syntax-errors.

validate-xml

Validate XML files for correctness and syntax-errors.

version

Report the version of the binary, when downloaded from our release page.

validate-yaml

Validate YAML files for correctness and syntax-errors.

watch

Execute the same command constantly, with a small delay. Useful to observe a command-completing.

with-lock

Allow running a command with a lock-file to prevent parallel executions.

This is perfect if you fear your cron-jobs will start slowing down and overlapping executions will cause problems.

Future Additions?

Unlike the previous repository I'm much happier to allow submissions of new utilities, or sub-commands, in this repository.

Github Setup

This repository is configured to run tests upon every commit, and when pull-requests are created/updated. The testing is carried out via .github/run-tests.sh which is used by the github-action-tester action.

Releases are automated in a similar fashion via .github/build, and the github-action-publish-binaries action.

Steve