Skip to content
forked from pkgxdev/pkgx

“run anything” from the creator of `brew`

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

yoroshikun/pkgx

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

tea

Twitter Discord Coverage Status Documentation & Manual

tea/cli 0.39.5

tea is npx for everything.

$ node
command not found: node

$ brew install teaxyz/pkgs/tea-cli
#

$ tea node --version
v19.7.0

$ tea node@16 --version
v16.20.1

$ node
command not found: node
# ^^ tea is not a package manager; if you need installs, keep using brew

 

tea is nvm for everything:

$ cd my-project

$ cat .node-version
16

$ tea --env node --version
v16.20.1

$ source <(tea --env)
# temporarily adds `my-project`’s deps to your current shell
# install our “shell magic” to do this automatically (read on for docs)

$ node --version
v16.20.1

$ which node
~/.tea/nodejs.org/v16.20.1/bin/node
# ^^ everything goes in ~/.tea

# use any version of anything
$ tea node@19 --version
v19.7.0

# we package as far back as we can
$ tea [email protected] --version
Python 2.7.18

This works for everything. eg. pyproject.toml, .ruby-version, etc.

PSA: Stop using Docker

Look, don’t stop using Docker—that’s not what we mean. Docker is great for deployment, but… let’s face it: it sucks for dev.

Docker stifles builders. It constricts you; you’re immalleable; tech marches onwards but your docker container remains immobile. Nobody knows how to use docker. Once that Dockerfile is set up, nobody dares touch it.

And let’s face it, getting your personal dev and debug tools working inside that image is incredibly frustrating. Why limit your potential?

Keep deploying with Docker, but use tea to develop.

Then when you do deploy you may as well install those deps with tea.

Frankly, tea is properly versioned (unlike system packagers) so with tea your deployments actually remain more stable.

 

tea knows how to interpret anything:

$ tea ./script.py
tea: installing ~/.tea/python.org/v3.11.1
# ^^ local scripts: nps

$ tea https://examples.deno.land/color-logging.ts
tea: installing ~/.tea/deno.land/v1.31.2
# ^^ remote scripts: also fine

Go further; tap the entire open source ecosystem via YAML front matter:

$ cat ./favicon-generator
#!/usr/bin/ruby
# ^^ tea reads the shebang and automatically installs ruby
#---
# dependencies:
#   imagemagick.org: 4
#   optipng.sourceforge.net: 1
#---
#

$ tea ./favicon-generator input.png
tea: installing image-magick, optipng, guetzli and 3 other packages…

$ file *.png
favicon-128.png: PNG image data, 128 x 128
favicon-32.png: …

Setting the shebang to eg. #!/usr/bin/env -S tea node is another option.

 

Try out anything open source offers in an encapsulated sandbox:

$ tea +rust-lang.org sh
tea: this is a temporary shell containing rust-lang.org and 3 other pkgs
tea: type `exit` when done

tea $ rustc --version
rustc 1.65.0

tea $ exit

$ rustc
command not found: rustc

tea’s +pkg syntax adds packages to an environment and then executes commands within it. This can make trying out seemingly complex projects trivial, eg. setting up your environment for the stable-diffusion-webui project can be quite tricky, but not so with tea:

$ git clone https://github.com/AUTOMATIC1111/stable-diffusion-webui
$ tea \
  --cd stable-diffusion-webui \
  +python.org~3.10 +pip.pypa.io +gnu.org/wget +protobuf.dev +rust-lang.org \
  ./webui.sh

 

Shell Magic

Every README for every project has 10 pages of “how to install x” commands. With tea’s magic you can just copy and paste the usage instructions and skip the install instructions.

$ which node
command not found: node

$ source <(tea --magic)

$ node --version
tea: installing nodejs.org…
v19

$ node@16 --version
v16

$ node --version
v19   # the most recent is default

Our magic also loads project deps into the environment when you step inside:

$ cd my-project

my-project $ cat .node-version
14

my-project $ node --version
tea: installing nodejs.org@14…
v14

my-project $ cd ..

$ node --version
v19

$ source <(tea --magic=unload)

$ node
command not found: node

Installing Shell Magic

If you want shell magic when your terminal loads, install it:

$ tea --magic=install
# installs a one-liner to your ~/.shellrc

$ tea --magic=uninstall
# nps if you change your mind

 

Getting Started

brew install teaxyz/pkgs/tea-cli

If you prefer, tea is a standalone, cross-platform binary that you can install anywhere you want (releases). Here’s a handy one-liner:

sudo install -m 755 \
  <(curl --compressed -LSsf --proto '=https' https://tea.xyz/$(uname)/$(uname -m)) \
  /usr/local/bin/tea

Once installed you can install our shell magic:

tea --magic=install
  • Stepping into directories ensures the packages those projects need are installed on demand and available to the tools you’re using.
  • Commands you type just work without package management nonsense.

 

Documentation & Manual

You want all the docs? We got all the docs. docs.tea.xyz

 

Whatcha Think?

We’d love to hear your thoughts on this project. Feel free to drop us a note.

 

Adding New Packages

Check out the pantry README.

Contributing to tea/cli

If you have suggestions or ideas, start a discussion. If we agree, we’ll move it to an issue. Bug fixes straight to pull request or issue please!

Hacking on tea/cli

tea is written in TypeScript using deno.

$ git clone https://github.com/teaxyz/cli tea
$ cd tea

deno task run foo
# ^^ runs the local checkout passing `foo` as an argument

$ deno task install
# ^^ deploys the local checkout into your `~/.tea`

$ deno task compile && ./tea

About

“run anything” from the creator of `brew`

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • TypeScript 97.9%
  • Shell 2.0%
  • Ruby 0.1%