Tusk is a yaml-based task runner. By creating a tusk.yml
in the root of a
repository, Tusk becomes a custom command line tool with minimal configuration.
Details on the usage and configuration options can be found in the project documentation.
- Customizable: Specify your own tasks and options with support for command-line flags, environment variables, conditional logic, and more.
- Explorable: All the help you need to get started is available straight from the command line. Help documentation is generated dynamically, and support for Bash and Zsh tab completion is available.
- Accessible: Built for usability with a simple YAML configuration, familiar syntax for passing options, Bash-like variable interpolation, and a colorful terminal output.
- Zero Dependencies: All you need is a single binary file to get started on Linux, macOS, or Windows.
The latest version can be downloaded from the releases page.
To install automatically, or for use in CI, run the following command:
curl -sL https://git.io/tusk | bash -s -- -b /usr/local/bin latest
To pin to a specific version, replace latest
with the tag for that version.
This is recommended for automated scripts.
To install to another directory, change the path passed to -b
.
On macOS, installation is also available through homebrew:
brew install rliebz/tusk/tusk
With Homebrew, tab completion is installed automatically.
For bash:
tusk --install-completion bash
For zsh:
tusk --install-completion zsh
Completions can be uninstalled as well with the --uninstall-completion
flag.
Create a tusk.yml
file in the root of a project repository:
tasks:
greet:
usage: Say hello to someone
options:
name:
usage: A person to say "Hello" to
default: World
run: echo "Hello, ${name}!"
As long as there is a tusk.yml
file in the working or any parent directory,
tasks can be run:
$ tusk greet --name friend
Running: echo "Hello, friend!"
Hello, friend!
Help messages are dynamically generated based on the YAML configuration:
$ tusk --help
tusk - the modern task runner
Usage:
tusk [global options] <task> [task options]
Tasks:
greet Say hello to someone
Global Options:
-f, --file <file> Set file to use as the config file
-h, --help Show help and exit
...
Individual tasks have help messages as well:
$ tusk greet --help
tusk greet - Say hello to someone
Usage:
tusk greet [options]
Options:
--name <value> A person to say "Hello" to
Additional information on the configuration spec can be found in the project documentation.
For more detailed examples, check out the project's own tusk.yml
file.
Set-up instructions for a development environment and contribution guidelines can be found in CONTRIBUTING.md.