Life's too short to remember how to write Bash code. I feel liberated.
— @laheadle on Clojurians Slack
Babashka is a native Clojure interpreter for scripting with fast startup. Its main goal is to leverage Clojure in places where you would be using bash otherwise.
As one user described it:
I’m quite at home in Bash most of the time, but there’s a substantial grey area of things that are too complicated to be simple in bash, but too simple to be worth writing a clj/s script for. Babashka really seems to hit the sweet spot for those cases.
- Fast starting Clojure scripting alternative for JVM Clojure
- Easy installation: grab the self-contained binary and run. No JVM needed.
- Familiar: targeted at JVM Clojure users
- Cross-platform: supports linux, macOS and Windows
- Interop with commonly used classes (
System
,File
,java.time.*
,java.nio.*
) - Multi-threading support (
pmap
,future
) - Batteries included (tools.cli, cheshire, ...)
- Provide a mixed Clojure/Bash DSL (see portability).
- Replace existing shells. Babashka is a tool you can use inside existing shells like bash and it is designed to play well with them. It does not aim to replace them.
For installation options check Installation. For quick installation use:
$ bash < <(curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install)
or grab a binary from Github releases yourself and place it anywhere on the path.
Then you're ready to go:
$ ls | bb -i '(filter fs/directory? *input*)'
("doc" "resources" "sci" "script" "src" "target" "test")
bb took 4ms.
You can support this project via Github Sponsors, OpenCollective, Ko-fi or indirectly via Clojurists Together.
Top sponsors
See companies for a list of companies using babashka.
Are you using babashka in your company or personal projects? Let us know here.
Babashka uses SCI for interpreting Clojure. SCI implements a substantial subset of Clojure. Interpreting code is in general not as performant as executing compiled code. If your script takes more than a few seconds to run or has lots of loops, Clojure on the JVM may be a better fit as the performance on JVM is going to outweigh its startup time penalty. Read more about the differences with Clojure here.
Functionality regarding clojure.core
and java.lang
can be considered stable
and is unlikely to change. Changes may happen in other parts of babashka,
although we will try our best to prevent them. Always check the release notes or
CHANGELOG.md before upgrading.
To get an overview of babashka, you can watch this talk (slides):
The babashka book contains detailed information about how to get the most out of babashka scripting.
There is also the book Babashka Babooka, by Daniel Higginbotham, who has also helped a lot of people learn Clojure with Clojure for the Brave and True.
Read the output from a shell command as a lazy seq of strings:
$ ls | bb -i '(take 2 *input*)'
("CHANGES.md" "Dockerfile")
Read EDN from stdin and write the result to stdout:
$ bb '(vec (dedupe *input*))' <<< '[1 1 1 1 2]'
[1 2]
Read more about *input*
and in- and output flags
here.
Execute a script. E.g. print the current time in California using the
java.time
API:
File pst.clj
:
#!/usr/bin/env bb
(def now (java.time.ZonedDateTime/now))
(def LA-timezone (java.time.ZoneId/of "America/Los_Angeles"))
(def LA-time (.withZoneSameInstant now LA-timezone))
(def pattern (java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter/ofPattern "HH:mm"))
(println (.format LA-time pattern))
$ bb pst.clj
05:17
More examples can be found here.
You can try babashka online with Nextjournal's babashka notebook environment.
Linux and macOS binaries are provided via brew.
Install:
brew install borkdude/brew/babashka
Upgrade:
brew upgrade babashka
Linux and macOS (including ARM Macs) binaries are provided via nix (see the installation instructions for nix here).
Install:
# Adding `nixpkgs-unstable` channel for more up-to-date binaries, skip this if you already have `nixpkgs-unstable` in your channel list
nix-channel --add https://nixos.org/channels/nixpkgs-unstable nixpkgs-unstable
nix-channel --update
nix-env -iA nixpkgs-unstable.babashka
Upgrade:
nix-channel --update
nix-env -iA nixpkgs-unstable.babashka
You can find more documentation on how to use babashka with nix here.
On Alpine it's recommended to download the binary manually from Github Releases and use the static linux binary.
babashka
is available in the Arch User Repository. It can be installed using your favorite AUR helper such as
yay, yaourt, apacman and pacaur. Here is an example using yay
:
yay -S babashka-bin
asdf is an extendable version manager for linux and macOS.
Babashka can be installed using a plugin as follows:
asdf plugin add babashka https://github.com/pitch-io/asdf-babashka
asdf install babashka latest
On Windows you can install using scoop and the scoop-clojure bucket.
Or just follow these concrete steps:
# Note: if you get an error you might need to change the execution policy (i.e. enable Powershell) with
# Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned -scope CurrentUser
Invoke-Expression (New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://get.scoop.sh')
scoop bucket add scoop-clojure https://github.com/littleli/scoop-clojure
scoop bucket add extras
scoop install babashka
If scoop does not work for you, then you can also just download the bb.exe
binary from Github releases and
place it on your path manually.
Note: WSL1 users might experience a BSOD, please use the --static install option when installing
$ curl -sLO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install
$ chmod +x install
$ ./install --static
Install via the installer script for linux and macOS:
$ curl -sLO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/install
$ chmod +x install
$ ./install
By default this will install into /usr/local/bin
(you may need sudo
for
this). To change this, provide the directory name:
$ ./install --dir .
To install a specific version, the script also supports --version
:
$ ./install --dir . --version 0.4.1
To force the download of the zip archive to a different directory than /tmp
use the --download-dir
argument:
$ ./install --dir . --version 0.4.1 --download-dir .
On Linux, if you want to install the static binary version:
$ ./install --dir . --version 0.4.1 --download-dir . --static
In case you want to check the download, you can use the --checksum
option.
This maybe useful for unattended installations:
$ sha256sum babashka-0.4.1-linux-amd64-static.tar.gz
ab70fb39fdbb5206c0a2faab178ffb54dd9597991a4bc13c65df2564e8f174f6 babashka-0.4.1-linux-amd64-static.tar.g
$ ./install --dir /tmp --checksum ab70fb39fdbb5206c0a2faab178ffb54dd9597991a4bc13c65df2564e8f174f6 --static --version 0.4.1
Note that the --checksum
option only works when --version
option is also
provided. This is to avoid breakage when a new version of Babashka is released.
You may also download a binary from Github. For linux there is a static binary available which can be used on Alpine.
- On Github Actions it's recommended to use setup-clojure with
bb: latest
. - You can use the installer script on any non-Windows CI system. CircleCI requires
sudo
. - On Appveyor + Windows you can use a bit of Powershell.
Check out the image on Docker hub.
Check out the news page to keep track of babashka-related news items.
Go here to see the full list of built-in namespaces.
A list of projects (scripts, libraries, pods and tools) known to work with babashka.
The babashka compatible badge indicates that a library can be used as babashka dependency.
If this is the case for your library, we encourage you to proudly display this badge.
Markdown
[![bb compatible](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/logo/badge.svg)](https://babashka.org)
AsciiDoc
https://babashka.org[image:https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/logo/badge.svg[bb compatible]]
HTML
<a href="https://babashka.org" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://github.com/babashka/babashka/raw/master/logo/badge.svg" alt="bb compatible" style="max-width: 100%;"></a>
The babashka built-in badge means that a library has been built directly into babashka and requires no extra dependencies to use it.
If this rare honor belongs to your library, you should display this badge.
Markdown
[![bb built-in](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/logo/built-in-badge.svg)](https://babashka.org)
AsciiDoc
https://babashka.org[image:https://raw.githubusercontent.com/babashka/babashka/master/logo/built-in-badge.svg[bb built-in]]
HTML
<a href="https://babashka.org" rel="nofollow"><img src="https://github.com/babashka/babashka/raw/master/logo/built-in-badge.svg" alt="bb built-in" style="max-width: 100%;"></a>
Pods are programs that can be used as a Clojure library by babashka. Documentation is available in the pod library repo.
A list of available pods can be found in the pod registry.
Babashka is implemented using the Small Clojure
Interpreter. This means that a snippet or
script is not compiled to JVM bytecode, but executed form by form by a runtime
which implements a substantial subset of Clojure. Babashka is compiled to
a native binary using GraalVM. It comes with
a selection of built-in namespaces and functions from Clojure and other useful
libraries. The data types (numbers, strings, persistent collections) are the
same. Multi-threading is supported (pmap
, future
).
Differences with Clojure:
-
A pre-selected set of Java classes are supported. You cannot add Java classes at runtime.
-
Interpretation comes with overhead. Therefore loops are slower than in Clojure on the JVM. In general interpretation yields slower programs than compiled programs.
-
No
deftype
,definterface
and unboxed math. -
defprotocol
anddefrecord
are implemented using multimethods and regular maps. Ostensibly they work the same, but under the hood there are no Java classes that correspond to them. -
Currently
reify
works only for one class at a time -
The
clojure.core.async/go
macro is not (yet) supported. For compatibility it currently maps toclojure.core.async/thread
. More info here.
AWS Lambda runtime doesn't support signals, therefore babashka has to disable
handling of SIGINT and SIGPIPE. This can be done by setting
BABASHKA_DISABLE_SIGNAL_HANDLERS
to true
.
- Blambda analyses sites by Josh Glover
- The wizard of HOP - How we built the web based HOP CLI Settings Editor using Babashka and Scittle by Bingen Galartza
- Simple TUIs with Babashka and Gum by Rattlin.blog
- Babashka And Dialog Part Ii: Announcing The Bb-Dialog Library by A.C. Danvers
- Babashka Babooka: Write Command-Line Clojure by Daniel Higginbotham
- Re-Writing a GlobalProtect OpenConnect VPN Connect script in Babashka by Tory Anderson
- Babashka: How GraalVM Helped Create a Fast-Starting Scripting Environment for Clojure by Michiel Borkent (Japanese version here)
- Adding Prompts To Your Babashka Scripts With Dialog by A.C. Danvers
- Scraping an HTML dictionary with Babashka and Bootleg by exupero
- Using Babashka to Get Electricity Prices by Kari Marttila
- How to Do Things With Babashka by Paulus Esterhazy (2022-12)
- Using nREPL as a system interface by Dmitri Sotnikov
- Manage git hooks with babashka tasks by Mykhaylo Bilyanskyy
- Messing around with babashka by Ian Muge
- Introducing bbin by Radford Smith (2022-09)
- Deleting AWS Glacier vaults with babashka by Tim Zöller
- Recursive document transformations with Pandoc and Clojure by Teodor Heggelund
- Blambda! by Josh Glover
- Babashka CLI: turn Clojure functions into CLIs!
- Breakneck Babashka on K8s by Heow Goodman
- Recursive document transformations with Pandoc and Clojure
- Detecting inconsistent aliases in a clojure codebase by Oxalorg
- I, too, Wrote Myself a Static Site Generator by Daw-Ran Liou
- Babashka and Clojure by Rahul Dé at North Virginia Linux Users Group
- Create a password manager with Clojure using Babashka, sqlite, honeysql and stash by Daniel Amber
- Writing Clojure-living-cookbooks by Cyprien Pannier
- Using babashka with PHP by Michiel Borkent
- Moldable Emacs: a Clojure Playground with Babashka by Andrea
- Finding my inner Wes Anderson with #Babashka by Tim Zöller
- Awesome Babashka: Parse & produce HTML and SQLite by Jakub Holý
- Babashka tasks, talk by Michiel Borkent
- Rewriting a clojure file with rewrite-clj and babashka, video by Oxalorg
- Integrating Babashka into Bazel by Tim Jäger
- Talk: Babashka: a native Clojure interpreter for scripting — The 2021 Graal Workshop at CGO
- Blog: Playing New Music On Old Car Stereo With Clojure And Babashka
- Homoiconicity and feature flags by Martin Klepsch
- Clojure like its PHP by Jay Zawrotny (eccentric-j)
- Deploy babashka script to AWS Lambda by Dainius Jocas.
- Automating Video Edits with Clojure and ffmpeg by Adam James.
- Exporter for passwordstore.org by Eugen Stan
- Babashka and sci internals, a talk by Michiel Borkent at the London Clojurians Meetup.
- Writing Clojure on the Command Line with Babashka, a talk by Nate Jones.
- Using Clojure in Command Line with Babashka, a blog article by Kari Marttila.
- Babashka and GraalVM; taking Clojure to new places, a talk by Michiel Borkent at Clojure/NYC.
- Import a CSV into Kafka, using Babashka by Dave Martin
- Learning about babashka, a blog article by Andrew Montalenti
- Babashka Pods presentation by Michiel Borkent at the Dutch Clojure Meetup.
- AWS Logs using Babashka, a blog published by Toyokumo.
- The REPL podcast Michiel Borkent talks about clj-kondo, Jet, Babashka, and GraalVM with Daniel Compton.
- Implementing an nREPL server for babashka: impromptu presentation by Michiel Borkent at the online Dutch Clojure Meetup
- ClojureScript podcast with Jacek Schae interviewing Michiel Borkent
- Babashka talk at ClojureD (slides) by Michiel Borkent
- Babashka: a quick example by Malcolm Sparks
- Clojure Start Time in 2019 by Stuart Sierra
- Advent of Random Hacks by Arne Brasseur
- Clojure in the Shell by Arne Brasseur
- Clojure Tool by Eric Normand
Before new libraries or classes go into the standardly distributed babashka binary, these evaluation criteria are considered:
- The library or class is useful for general purpose scripting.
- Adding the library or class would make babashka more compatible with Clojure libraries relevant to scripting.
- The library cannot be interpreted by with babashka using
--classpath
. - The functionality can't be met by shelling out to another CLI or can't be
written as a small layer over an existing CLI (like
babashka.curl
) instead. - The library cannot be implemented as a pod.
If not all of the criteria are met, but adding a feature is still useful to a
particular company or niche, adding it behind a feature flag is still a
possibility. This is currently the case for next.jdbc
and the PostgresQL
and
HSQLDB
database drivers. Companies interested in these features can compile an
instance of babashka for their internal use. Companies are also free to make
forks of babashka and include their own internal libraries. If their customized
babashka is interesting to share with the world, they are free to distribute it
using a different binary name (like bb-sql
, bb-docker
, bb-yourcompany
,
etc.). See the feature flag documentation and the
implementation of the existing feature flags (example
commit).
Thanks to all the people that contributed to babashka:
- CircleCI for CI and additional support
- Nikita Prokopov for the logo
- Contributors and other users posting issues with bug reports and ideas
Copyright © 2019-2020 Michiel Borkent
Distributed under the EPL License. See LICENSE.
This project contains code from:
- Clojure, which is licensed under the same EPL License.