The README.md is updated to include the latest changes in bee and Beego. New submission guidelines are added to organize contributions to the project.
13 KiB
bee
Bee is a command-line tool facilitating development of Beego-based application.
Requirements
- Go version >= 1.3.
Installation
To install bee
use the go get
command:
go get github.com/beego/bee
Then you can add bee
binary to PATH environment variable in your ~/.bashrc
or ~/.bash_profile
file:
export PATH=$PATH:<your_main_gopath>/bin
If you already have
bee
installed, updatingbee
is simple:
go get -u github.com/beego/bee
Basic commands
Bee provides a variety of commands which can be helpful at various stages of development. The top level commands include:
new Create a Beego application
run Run the app and start a Web server for development
pack Compress a beego project into a single file
api Create an API beego application
hprose Create an rpc application use hprose base on beego framework
bale Packs non-Go files to Go source files
version Prints the current Bee version
generate Source code generator
migrate Run database migrations
fix Fix the Beego application to make it compatible with Beego 1.6
bee version
To display the current version of bee
, beego
and go
installed on your machine:
$ bee version
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
├── Beego : 1.7.0
├── GoVersion : go1.6.2
├── GOOS : windows
├── GOARCH : amd64
├── NumCPU : 4
├── GOPATH : C:\Users\beeuser\go
├── GOROOT : C:\go
├── Compiler : gc
└── Date : Monday, 22 Aug 2016
bee new
To create a new Beego web application:
$ bee new my-web-app
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 14:53:45 [INFO] Creating application...
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\conf\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\controllers\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\models\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\routers\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\tests\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\static\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\static\js\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\static\css\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\static\img\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\views\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\conf\app.conf
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\controllers\default.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\views\index.tpl
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\routers\router.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\tests\default_test.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\main.go
2016/08/22 14:53:45 [SUCC] New application successfully created!
For more information on the usage, run bee help new
.
bee run
To run the application we just created, you can navigate to the application folder and execute:
$ cd my-web-app && bee run
Or from anywhere in your machine:
$ bee run github.com/user/my-web-app
For more information on the usage, run bee help run
.
bee pack
To compress a Beego application into a single deployable file:
$ bee pack
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 15:11:01 Packaging application: C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app
2016/08/22 15:11:01 Building application...
2016/08/22 15:11:01 Env: GOOS=windows GOARCH=amd64
2016/08/22 15:11:08 Build successful
2016/08/22 15:11:08 Excluding relpath prefix: .
2016/08/22 15:11:08 Excluding relpath suffix: .go:.DS_Store:.tmp
2016/08/22 15:11:10 Writing to output: `C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app\my-web-app.tar.gz`
For more information on the usage, run bee help pack
.
bee api
To create a Beego API application:
$ bee api my-api
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 15:14:10 [INFO] Creating API...
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\conf
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\controllers
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\tests
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\conf\app.conf
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\models
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\routers\
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\controllers\object.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\controllers\user.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\tests\default_test.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\routers\router.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\models\object.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\models\user.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-api\main.go
2016/08/22 15:14:10 [SUCC] New API successfully created!
For more information on the usage, run bee help api
.
bee hprose
To create an Hprose RPC application based on Beego:
$ bee hprose my-rpc-app
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 16:09:13 [INFO] Creating Hprose application...
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\conf
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\conf\app.conf
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\models
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\models\object.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\models\user.go
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-rpc-app\main.go
2016/08/22 16:09:13 [SUCC] New Hprose application successfully created!
For more information on the usage, run bee help hprose
.
bee bale
To pack all the static files into Go source files:
$ bee bale
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 16:37:24 [INFO] Detected bee.json
2016/08/22 16:37:24 [INFO] Packaging directory(static/js)
2016/08/22 16:37:24 [INFO] Packaging directory(static/css)
2016/08/22 16:37:24 [SUCC] Baled resources successfully!
For more information on the usage, run bee help bale
.
bee migrate
For database migrations, use bee migrate
.
For more information on the usage, run bee help migrate
.
bee generate
Bee also comes with a source code generator which speeds up the development.
For example, to generate a new controller named hello
:
$ bee generate controller hello
______
| ___ \
| |_/ / ___ ___
| ___ \ / _ \ / _ \
| |_/ /| __/| __/
\____/ \___| \___| v1.5.0
2016/08/22 16:55:30 [INFO] Using 'Hello' as controller name
2016/08/22 16:55:30 [INFO] Using 'controllers' as package name
create C:\Users\beeuser\go\src\github.com\user\my-web-app/controllers/hello.go
2016/08/22 16:55:30 [SUCC] Controller successfully generated!
For more information on the usage, run bee help generate
.
Shortcuts
Because you'll likely type these generator commands over and over, it makes sense to create aliases:
# Generator Stuff
alias g:a="bee generate appcode"
alias g:m="bee generate model"
alias g:c="bee generate controller"
alias g:v="bee generate view"
alias g:mi="bee generate migration"
These can be stored , for example, in your ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.bashrc
files.
Help
To print more information on the usage of a particular command, use bee help <command>
.
For instance, to get more information about the run
command:
$ bee help run
usage: bee run [appname] [watchall] [-main=*.go] [-downdoc=true] [-gendoc=true] [-vendor=true] [-e=folderToExclude] [-tags=goBuildTags]
Run command will supervise the file system of the beego project using inotify,
it will recompile and restart the app after any modifications.
Contributing
Bug reports, feature requests and pull requests are always welcome.
We work on two branches: master
for stable, released code and develop
, a development branch.
It might be important to distinguish them when you are reading the commit history searching for a feature or a bugfix,
or when you are unsure of where to base your work from when contributing.
Found a bug?
Please submit an issue on GitHub and we will follow up. Even better, we would appreciate a Pull Request with a fix for it!
- If the bug was found in a release, it is best to base your work on
master
and submit your PR against it. - If the bug was found on
develop
(the development branch), base your work ondevelop
and submit your PR against it.
Please follow the Pull Request Guidelines.
Want a feature?
Feel free to request a feature by submitting an issue on GitHub and open the discussion.
If you'd like to implement a new feature, please consider opening an issue first to talk about it. It may be that somebody is already working on it, or that there are particular issues that you should be aware of before implementing the change. If you are about to open a Pull Request, please make sure to follow the submissions guidelines.
Submission Guidelines
Submitting an issue
Before you submit an issue, search the archive, maybe you will find that a similar one already exists.
If you are submitting an issue for a bug, please include the following:
- An overview of the issue
- Your use case (why is this a bug for you?)
- The version of
bee
you are running (include the output ofbee version
) - Steps to reproduce the issue
- Eventually, logs from your application.
- Ideally, a suggested fix
The more information you give us, the more able to help we will be!
Submitting a Pull Request
- First of all, make sure to base your work on the
develop
branch (the development branch):
# a bugfix branch for develop would be prefixed by fix/
# a bugfix branch for master would be prefixed by hotfix/
$ git checkout -b feature/my-feature develop
-
Please create commits containing related changes. For example, two different bugfixes should produce two separate commits. A feature should be made of commits splitted by logical chunks (no half-done changes). Use your best judgement as to how many commits your changes require.
-
Write insightful and descriptive commit messages. It lets us and future contributors quickly understand your changes without having to read your changes. Please provide a summary in the first line (50-72 characters) and eventually, go to greater lengths in your message's body. A good example can be found in Angular commit message format.
-
Please include the appropriate test cases for your patch.
-
Make sure all tests pass before submitting your changes.
-
Rebase your commits. It may be that new commits have been introduced on
develop
. Rebasing will update your branch with the most recent code and make your changes easier to review:$ git fetch $ git rebase origin/develop
-
Push your changes:
$ git push origin -u feature/my-feature
-
Open a pull request against the
develop
branch. -
If we suggest changes:
-
Please make the required updates (after discussion if any)
-
Only create new commits if it makes sense. Generally, you will want to amend your latest commit or rebase your branch after the new changes:
$ git rebase -i develop # choose which commits to edit and perform the updates
-
Re-run the tests
-
Force push to your branch:
$ git push origin feature/my-feature -f
-
Licence
Copyright 2016 bee authors
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.