cmd2 is a tool for building interactive command line applications in Python. Its goal is to make it quick and easy for developers to build feature-rich and user-friendly interactive command line applications. It provides a simple API which is an extension of Python's built-in cmd module. cmd2 provides a wealth of features on top of cmd to make your life easier and eliminates much of the boilerplate code which would be necessary when using cmd.
Click on image below to watch a short video demonstrating the capabilities of cmd2:
- Searchable command history (historycommand and<Ctrl>+r) - optionally persistent
- Text file scripting of your application with run_script(@) and_relative_run_script(@@)
- Python scripting of your application with run_pyscript
- Run shell commands with !
- Pipe command output to shell commands with |
- Redirect command output to file with >,>>
- Bare >,>>with no filename send output to paste buffer (clipboard)
- pyenters interactive Python console (opt-in- ipyfor IPython console)
- Option to display long output using a pager with cmd2.Cmd.ppaged()
- Multi-line commands
- Special-character command shortcuts (beyond cmd's ?and!)
- Command aliasing similar to bash aliascommand
- Macros, which are similar to aliases, but they can contain argument placeholders
- Ability to run commands at startup from an initialization script
- Settable environment parameters
- Parsing commands with arguments using argparse, including support for subcommands
- Unicode character support
- Good tab completion of commands, subcommands, file system paths, and shell commands
- Automatic tab completion of argparseflags when using one of thecmd2argparsedecorators
- Support for Python 3.5+ on Windows, macOS, and Linux
- Trivial to provide built-in help for all commands
- Built-in regression testing framework for your applications (transcript-based testing)
- Transcripts for use with built-in regression can be automatically generated from history -torrun_script -t
- Alerts that seamlessly print while user enters text at prompt
- Colored and stylized output using ansi.style()
The last version of cmd2 to support Python 2.7 is 0.8.9, released on August 21, 2018.
Supporting Python 2 was an increasing burden on our limited resources. Switching to support only Python 3 is allowing us to clean up the codebase, remove some cruft, and focus on developing new features.
On all operating systems, the latest stable version of cmd2 can be installed using pip:
pip install -U cmd2cmd2 works with Python 3.5+ on Windows, macOS, and Linux. It is pure Python code with few 3rd-party dependencies.
For information on other installation options, see Installation Instructions in the cmd2 documentation.
The latest documentation for cmd2 can be read online here: https://cmd2.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
It is available in HTML, PDF, and ePub formats.
Instructions for implementing each feature follow.
- 
Extension of the cmdmodule. So capabilities provided bycmdstill exist- Your applicaiton inherits from cmd2.Cmd, let's say you call this classMyApp
 import cmd2 class MyApp(cmd2.Cmd): pass - Define a command named foo by creating a method named do_foo
 class MyApp(cmd2.Cmd): def do_foo(self, args): """This docstring is the built-in help for the foo command.""" self.poutput(cmd2.style('foo bar baz', fg=cmd2.fg.red)) - By default the docstring for your do_foo method is the help for the foo command
- NOTE: This doesn't apply if you use one of the argparsedecorators mentioned below
 
- NOTE: This doesn't apply if you use one of the 
- Can provide more custom help by creating a help_foo method (except when using argparsedecorators)
- Can provide custom tab completion for the foo command by creating a complete_foo method
- Easy to upgrade an existing cmdapp tocmd2
- Run your cmd2app using the built-in REPL by executing the cmdloop method
 
- Your applicaiton inherits from 
- 
Searchable command history - Readline history using <Ctrl>+r, arrow keys, and other Readline Shortcut keys
- cmd2- historycommand provides flexible and powerful search- If you wish to exclude some of your custom commands from the history, append their names to the list at Cmd.exclude_from_history.
- Do help historyin anycmd2application for more information
 
- If you wish to exclude some of your custom commands from the history, append their names to the list at 
- Both of the above types of history can be optionally persistent between application runs
- Via optional persistent_history_fileargument tocmd2.Cmdinitializer
 
- Via optional 
 
- Readline history using 
- 
Simple scripting using text files with one command + arguments per line - See the Command Scripts section of the cmd2docs for more info
- See script.txt for a trivial example script that can be
used in any cmd2application with therun_scriptcommand (or@shortcut)
 
- See the Command Scripts section of the 
- 
Powerful and flexible built-in Python scripting of your application using the run_pyscriptcommand- Run arbitrary Python scripts within your cmd2application with the ability to also call customcmd2commands
- No separate API for your end users to learn
- Syntax for calling cmd2commands in arun_pyscriptis essentially identical to what they would enter on the command line
 
- Syntax for calling 
- See the Python Scripts section of the cmd2docs for more info
- Also see the python_scripting.py example in conjunction with the conditional.py script
 
- Run arbitrary Python scripts within your 
- 
Parsing commands with argparse- Two decorators provide built-in capability for using argparse.ArgumentParserto parse command arguments- cmd2.with_argparser- all arguments are parsed by the- ArgumentParser
- cmd2.with_argparser_and_unknown_args- any arguments not parsed by the- ArgumentParserget passed as a list
 
 import argparse from cmd2 import with_argparser argparser = argparse.ArgumentParser() argparser.add_argument('-p', '--piglatin', action='store_true', help='atinLay') argparser.add_argument('-s', '--shout', action='store_true', help='N00B EMULATION MODE') argparser.add_argument('words', nargs='+', help='words to say') @with_argparser(argparser) def do_speak(self, args): """Repeats what you tell me to.""" words = [] for word in args.words: if args.piglatin: word = '%s%say' % (word[1:], word[0]) if args.shout: word = word.upper() words.append(word) self.stdout.write('{}\n'.format(' '.join(words))) See Argument Processing in the docs for more details NOTE: cmd2also provides theCmd2ArgumentParsercustomization ofargparse.ArgumentParserfor prettier formatting of help and error messages.
- Two decorators provide built-in capability for using 
- 
cmd2applications function like a full-featured shell in many ways (and are cross-platform)- Run arbitrary shell commands by preceding them with !orshell
- Redirect the output of any command to a file with >for overwrite or>>for append- If no file name provided after the >/>>, then output goes to the clipboard/pastebuffer
 
- If no file name provided after the 
- Pipe the output of any command to an arbitrary shell command with |
- Create your own custom command aliases using the aliascommand
- Create your own custom macros using the macrocommand (similar to aliases, but allow arguments)
- Settable environment parameters that users can change during execution supported via setcommand
- Option to display long output using a pager with cmd2.Cmd.ppaged()
- Optionally specify a startup script that end users can use to customize their environment
 
- Run arbitrary shell commands by preceding them with 
- 
Top-notch tab completion capabilities which are easy to use but very powerful - For a command foo implement a complete_foo method to provide custom tab completion for that command
- But the helper methods within cmd2discussed below mean you would rarely have to implement this from scratch
 
- But the helper methods within 
- Commands which use one of the argparsedecorators have automatic tab completion ofargparseflags- And also provide help hints for values associated with these flags
- Experiment with the argprint.py example using the oprint and pprint commands to get a feel for how this works
 
- path_completehelper method provides flexible tab completion of file system paths- See the paged_output.py example for a simple use case
- See the python_scripting.py example for a more full-featured use case
 
- flag_based_completehelper method for tab completion based on a particular flag preceding the token being completed- See the basic_completion.py example for a demonstration of how to use this feature
 
- index_based_completehelper method for tab completion based on a fixed position in the input string- See the basic_completion.py example for a demonstration of how to use this feature
 
- basic_completehelper method for tab completion against a list
- delimiter_completehelper method for tab completion against a list but each match is split on a delimiter- See the basic_completion.py example for a demonstration of how to use this feature
 
- cmd2in combination with- argparsealso provide several advanced capabilities for automatic tab completion- See the argparse_completion.py example for more info
 
 
- For a command foo implement a complete_foo method to provide custom tab completion for that command
- 
Multi-line commands Any command accepts multi-line input when its name is listed the multiline_commandsoptional argument tocmd2.Cmd.__init. The program will keep expecting input until a line ends with any of the characters listed in theterminatorsoptional argument tocmd2.Cmd.__init__(). The default terminators are;and\n(empty newline).
- 
Special-character shortcut commands (beyond cmd's "@" and "!") To create a single-character shortcut for a command, update Cmd.shortcuts.
- 
Asynchronous alerts based on events happening in background threads - cmd2provides the following helper methods for providing information to users asynchronously even though the- cmd2REPL is a line-oriented command interpreter:- async_alert- display an important message to the user while they are at the prompt in between commands- To the user it appears as if an alert message is printed above the prompt
 
- async_update_prompt- update the prompt while the user is still typing at it- This is good for alerting the user to system changes dynamically in between commands
 
- set_window_title- set the terminal window title- This changes the window title of the terminal that the user is running the cmd2app within
 
- This changes the window title of the terminal that the user is running the 
 
 
- PyOhio 2019 presentation:
Example cmd2 application (examples/example.py):
#!/usr/bin/env python
# coding=utf-8
"""
A sample application for cmd2.
"""
import argparse
import random
import sys
import cmd2
class CmdLineApp(cmd2.Cmd):
    """ Example cmd2 application. """
    # Setting this true makes it run a shell command if a cmd2/cmd command doesn't exist
    # default_to_shell = True
    MUMBLES = ['like', '...', 'um', 'er', 'hmmm', 'ahh']
    MUMBLE_FIRST = ['so', 'like', 'well']
    MUMBLE_LAST = ['right?']
    def __init__(self):
        self.maxrepeats = 3
        shortcuts = dict(cmd2.DEFAULT_SHORTCUTS)
        shortcuts.update({'&': 'speak'})
        # Set use_ipython to True to enable the "ipy" command which embeds and interactive IPython shell
        super().__init__(use_ipython=False, multiline_commands=['orate'], shortcuts=shortcuts)
        
        # Make maxrepeats settable at runtime
        self.add_settable(cmd2.Settable('maxrepeats', int, 'max repetitions for speak command'))
    speak_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    speak_parser.add_argument('-p', '--piglatin', action='store_true', help='atinLay')
    speak_parser.add_argument('-s', '--shout', action='store_true', help='N00B EMULATION MODE')
    speak_parser.add_argument('-r', '--repeat', type=int, help='output [n] times')
    speak_parser.add_argument('words', nargs='+', help='words to say')
    @cmd2.with_argparser(speak_parser)
    def do_speak(self, args):
        """Repeats what you tell me to."""
        words = []
        for word in args.words:
            if args.piglatin:
                word = '%s%say' % (word[1:], word[0])
            if args.shout:
                word = word.upper()
            words.append(word)
        repetitions = args.repeat or 1
        for i in range(min(repetitions, self.maxrepeats)):
            # .poutput handles newlines, and accommodates output redirection too
            self.poutput(' '.join(words))
    do_say = do_speak  # now "say" is a synonym for "speak"
    do_orate = do_speak  # another synonym, but this one takes multi-line input
    mumble_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    mumble_parser.add_argument('-r', '--repeat', type=int, help='how many times to repeat')
    mumble_parser.add_argument('words', nargs='+', help='words to say')
    @cmd2.with_argparser(mumble_parser)
    def do_mumble(self, args):
        """Mumbles what you tell me to."""
        repetitions = args.repeat or 1
        for i in range(min(repetitions, self.maxrepeats)):
            output = []
            if (random.random() < .33):
                output.append(random.choice(self.MUMBLE_FIRST))
            for word in args.words:
                if (random.random() < .40):
                    output.append(random.choice(self.MUMBLES))
                output.append(word)
            if (random.random() < .25):
                output.append(random.choice(self.MUMBLE_LAST))
            self.poutput(' '.join(output))
if __name__ == '__main__':
    app = CmdLineApp()
    sys.exit(app.cmdloop())The following is a sample session running example.py. Thanks to Cmd2's built-in transcript testing capability, it also serves as a test suite for example.py when saved as transcript_regex.txt. Running
python example.py -t transcript_regex.txtwill run all the commands in the transcript against example.py, verifying that the output produced
matches the transcript.
example/transcript_regex.txt:
# Run this transcript with "python example.py -t transcript_regex.txt"
# Anything between two forward slashes, /, is interpreted as a regular expression (regex).
# The regex for editor will match whatever program you use.
# regexes on prompts just make the trailing space obvious
(Cmd) set
allow_style: '/(Terminal|Always|Never)/'
debug: False
echo: False
editor: /.*?/
feedback_to_output: False
maxrepeats: 3
quiet: False
timing: False
Regular expressions can be used anywhere within a transcript file simply by enclosing them within forward slashes, /.
If you think you've found a bug, please first read through the open Issues. If you're confident it's a new bug, go ahead and create a new GitHub issue. Be sure to include as much information as possible so we can reproduce the bug. At a minimum, please state the following:
- cmd2version
- Python version
- OS name and version
- What you did to cause the bug to occur
- Include any traceback or error message associated with the bug
Here are a few examples of open-source projects which use cmd2:
- Jok3r
- Network & Web Pentest Automation Framework
 
- CephFS Shell
- Ceph is a distributed object, block, and file storage platform
 
- JSShell
- An interactive multi-user web JavaScript shell
 
- psiTurk
- An open platform for science on Amazon Mechanical Turk
 
- Poseidon
- Leverages software-defined networks (SDNs) to acquire and then feed network traffic to a number of machine learning techniques
 
- Unipacker
- Automatic and platform-independent unpacker for Windows binaries based on emulation
 
- FLASHMINGO
- Automatic analysis of SWF files based on some heuristics. Extensible via plugins.
 
- tomcatmanager
- A command line tool and python library for managing a tomcat server
 
- Expliot
- Internet of Things (IoT) exploitation framework
 
- mptcpanalyzer
- Tool to help analyze mptcp pcaps
 
- clanvas
- Command-line client for Canvas by Instructure