The official command line tool for Boot.dev. It allows you to submit lessons and do other such nonsense.
⭐ Hit the repo with a star if you're enjoying Boot.dev ⭐
Make sure you have Go 1.22 or later installed on your machine. Additionally, make sure that Go's bin directory is in your PATH. (Details on adding the bin directory to your PATH can be found below)
go install github.com/bootdotdev/bootdev@latestMake sure that it works by running:
bootdev helpThen, while logged in on the Boot.dev website, authenticate your CLI with:
bootdev loginbootdev login- Login to Boot.dev. You'll need to login to Boot.dev in your browser and copy/paste a token.bootdev logout- Logout of Boot.dev (clears your authentication token).bootdev run <id>- Run a lesson locally to debug your solution.bootdev submit <id>- Submit a lesson to Boot.dev.
After a submit command, results are sent to Boot.dev's servers, and then websocketed to your browser instantly, so be sure to check there after submission.
When you run go install, Go installs the binary into $HOME/go/bin by default. Add the bin directory to your PATH by modifying your shell's configuration file. For example, if you're using bash on Ubuntu (e.g. WSL), you can run the following commands to add a line to your ~/.bashrc file:
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/go/bin' >> ~/.bashrc
# next, reload your shell configuration
source ~/.bashrcOr if you're on Mac OS using zsh:
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:$HOME/go/bin' >> ~/.zshrc
# next, reload your shell configuration
source ~/.zshrcNow you should be able to run the bootdev command (or anything else installed with go install) from your terminal.