Avoid documenting your Python script arguments on two places! This is typically
done in an argparse.ArgumentParser help configuration (help=
,
description=
, etc.), and also in a manually crafted manual page.
The good thing about an ArgumentParser
objects is that it actually provides
a traversable "tree-like" structure, with all the necessary info needed to
automatically generate documentation, for example in a groff typesetting
system (manual pages). And this is where this project can help.
There are two supported ways to generate the manual, either script it using the
installed command argparse-manpage
, or via setup.py build
automation (with a
slight bonus of automatic manual page installation with setup.py install
).
Most of the (meta)data is stored in the ArgumentParser
object, therefore
argparse-manpage
needs to know its location—it can be either the object
itself, or a method to call to get the object 1.
On top of this, several manual page fields (like author or project name)
need to be specified, either on command-line or via setup.py
metadata.
See the following example:
$ argparse-manpage --pyfile ./pythonfile.py --function get_parser \
--author "John --author-email doe@example.com" \
--project-name myproject --url https://pagure.io/myproject \
> cool-manpage.1
This (a) processes the ./pythonfile.py
, (b) calls the get_parser
inside to
obtain the ArgumentParser
instance, (c) transforms it into a manual page and
(d) stores it into the cool-manpage.1
file.
Alternatively those options above can be combined with
- option
--module mymodule.main
, to load a Python modulemymodule.main
fromPYTHONPATH
, or --object parser_object_name
if theparser_object_name
is a global variable.
First, you need to declare that setup.py
uses an external package in your
pyproject.toml
file:
[build-system]
requires = ["argparse-manpage[setuptools]"]
Alternatively you can place the build_manpages
(sub)directory from this
project somewhere onto PYTHONPATH
so you can use it in setup.py
. For
example:
git submodule add --name build_manpages https://github.com/praiskup/build_manpages
git submodule update --init
In your setup.py
use pattern like:
[...]
from build_manpages import build_manpages, get_build_py_cmd, get_install_cmd
setup(
[...]
cmdclass={
'build_manpages': build_manpages,
# Re-define build_py and install commands so the manual pages
# are automatically re-generated and installed
'build_py': get_build_py_cmd(),
'install': get_install_cmd(),
}
)
And in setup.cfg
configure the manual pages you want to automatically
generate and install:
[build_manpages]
manpages =
man/foo.1:object=parser:pyfile=bin/foo.py
man/bar.1:function=get_parser:pyfile=bin/bar
man/baz.1:function=get_parser:pyfile=bin/bar:prog=baz
Or in pyproject.toml
(requires setuptools >= 62.2.0):
[build_manpages]
manpages = [
"man/foo.1:object=parser:pyfile=bin/foo.py",
"man/bar.1:function=get_parser:pyfile=bin/bar",
"man/baz.1:function=get_parser:pyfile=bin/bar:prog=baz",
]
The format of those lines is a colon separated list of arguments/options. The
first argument determines the filename of the generated manual page. Then
follows a list of options of format option=value
. Supported values are:
- pyfile - what python file the argparse object resides in
- object - the name of arparse object in "pyfile" to import
- function - the name of function in pyfile to call to get the argparse object
- format - format of the generated man page:
pretty
(default),single-commands-section
- author - author of the program; can be specified multiple times
- description - description of the program, used in the NAME section, after the leading 'name - ' part, see man (7) man-pages for more info
- project_name - name of the project the program is part of
- version - version of the project, visible in manual page footer
- prog - value that substitutes %prog in ArgumentParser's usage
- url - link to project download page
- manual_section - section of the manual, by default 1, see man (7) man-pages for more info about existing sections
- manual_title - the title of the manual, by default "Generated Python Manual", see man (7) man-pages for more instructions
- include - a file of extra material to include; see below for the format
- manfile - a file containing a complete man page that just needs to be installed
(such files must also be listed in
MANIFEST.in
)
The values from setup.cfg override values from setup.py's setup(). Note that
when manfile
is set for a particular page, no other option is allowed.
Then run setup.py build_manpages
to build a manpages for your project. Also,
if you used get_build_py
helper, setup.py build
then transitively builds the
manual pages.
The include file format is based on GNU help2man
's --include
format.
The format is simple:
[section]
text
/pattern/
text
Blocks of verbatim *roff text are inserted into the output either at
the start of the given section
(case insensitive), or after a
paragraph matching pattern
, a Python regular expression.
Lines before the first section are silently ignored and may be used for comments and the like.
Other sections are prepended to the automatically produced output for the
standard sections given above, or included near the bottom of the man page,
before the AUTHOR
section, in the order they occur in the include file.
Placement of the text within the section may be explicitly requested by
using the syntax [<section]
, [=section]
or [>section]
to place the
additional text before, in place of, or after the default output
respectively.
This package is distributed in PyPI, can be installed by:
$ pip install argparse-manpage
It can simply downloaded, or distributed as a git submodule (see above).
The Git snapshot RPMs–pre-release version automatically built from the main
branch–are available in Fedora Copr build system
The argparse-manpage
project is provided natively on many distributions:
Try your package manager directly (e.g. on Fedora dnf install -y argparse-manpage
).
The initial code was developed for CrunchyFrog, a database query tool for Gnome.
The frog is now retired and RunSQLRun is it's successor. Then, the
build_manpage
command was developed in andialbrecht and edited slightly
in gabrielegiammatteo. There's even an old blog post about this command.
Since some useful work has been done in python pull request, the code from the PR has been used here too.
Later more options and flexibility has been implemented in this fork, with the help of many contributors. Thank you!
Historically, build_manpage
setup.py command was provided (mostly for
OptionParser
). Later we migrated to more versatile build_manpages
command.
But the old variant is still supported.
This work is released under the terms of the Apache License v2.0. See LICENSE for details.
Footnotes
-
argparse-manpage
needs to process the location (file/module) via Python interpreter, and thus please avoid side-effects (typically, themain.py
files need to use theif __name__ == "__main__"
condition, and similar). ↩