tauri/docs/usage/guides/cli.md

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---
title: Make your own CLI
---
import Alert from '@theme/Alert'
Tauri enables your app to have a CLI through <a href="https://github.com/clap-rs/clap" target="_blank">clap</a>, a robust command line argument parser. With a simple CLI definition in your `tauri.conf.json` file, you can define your interface and read its argument matches map on JavaScript and/or Rust.
## Base Configuration
Under `tauri.conf.json`, you have the following structure to configure the interface:
```js title=src-tauri/tauri.conf.json
{
"tauri": {
"cli": {
"description": "", // command description that's shown on help
"longDescription": "", // command long description that's shown on help
"beforeHelp": "", // content to show before the help text
"afterHelp": "", // content to show after the help text
"args": [], // list of arguments of the command, we'll explain it later
"subcommands": {
"subcommand-name": {
// configures a subcommand that is accessible
// with `$ ./app subcommand-name --arg1 --arg2 --etc`
// configuration as above, with "description", "args", etc.
}
}
}
}
}
```
<Alert title="Note">
All JSON configurations here are just samples, many other fields have been omitted for the sake of clarity.
</Alert>
## Adding Arguments
The `args` array represents the list of arguments accepted by its command or subcommand. You can find more details about the way to configure them <a href="/docs/api/config#tauri">here</a>.
### Positional Arguments
A positional argument is identified by its position in the list of arguments. With the following configuration:
```json title=src-tauri/tauri.conf.json:tauri.cli
{
"args": [
{
"name": "source",
"index": 1
},
{
"name": "destination",
"index": 2
}
]
}
```
Users can run your app as `$ ./app tauri.txt dest.txt` and the arg matches map will define `source` as `"tauri.txt"` and `destination` as `"dest.txt"`.
### Named Arguments
A named argument is a (key, value) pair where the key identifies the value. With the following configuration:
```json title=src-tauri/tauri.conf.json:tauri.cli
{
"args": [
{
"name": "type",
"short": "t",
"takesValue": true,
"multiple": true,
"possibleValues": ["foo", "bar"]
}
]
}
```
Users can run your app as `$ ./app --type foo bar`, `$ ./app -t foo -t bar` or `$ ./app --type=foo,bar` and the arg matches map will define `type` as `["foo", "bar"]`.
### Flag Arguments
A flag argument is a standalone key whose presence or absence provides information to your application. With the following configuration:
```js title=src-tauri/tauri.conf.json:tauri.cli
{
"args": [
"name": "verbose",
"short": "v",
"multipleOccurrences": true
]
}
```
Users can run your app as `$ ./app -v -v -v`, `$ ./app --verbose --verbose --verbose` or `$ ./app -vvv` and the arg matches map will define `verbose` as `true`, with `occurrences = 3`.
## Subcommands
Some CLI applications has additional interfaces as subcommands. For instance, the `git` CLI has `git branch`, `git commit` and `git push`. You can define additional nested interfaces with the `subcommands` array:
```js title=src-tauri/tauri.conf.json:tauri
{
"cli": {
...
"subcommands": {
"branch": {
"args": []
},
"push": {
"args": []
}
}
}
}
```
Its configuration is the same as the root application configuration, with the `description`, `longDescription`, `args`, etc.
## Reading the matches
### Rust
```rust
use tauri::cli::get_matches;
fn main() {
match get_matches() {
Some(matches) => {
// `matches` here is a Struct with { args, subcommand }
// where args is the HashMap mapping each arg's name to it's { value, occurrences }
// and subcommand is an Option of { name, matches }
}
}
}
```
### JavaScript
```js
import { getMatches } from '@tauri-apps/api/cli'
getMatches().then((matches) => {
// do something with the { args, subcommand } matches
})
```
## Complete documentation
You can find more about the CLI configuration <a href="/docs/api/config#tauri">here</a>.