Appi 1.0.5

There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet tool install --global Appi --version 1.0.5                
This package contains a .NET tool you can call from the shell/command line.
dotnet new tool-manifest # if you are setting up this repo
dotnet tool install --local Appi --version 1.0.5                
This package contains a .NET tool you can call from the shell/command line.
#tool dotnet:?package=Appi&version=1.0.5                
nuke :add-package Appi --version 1.0.5                

Appi

What is Appi? Appi is short for App information.

The goal is to query your sources for information through one tool; all at once, in groups or individually, highly extensible. Accessible from your favorite shell with easy-to-remeber commands from your keyboard without even touching your mouse.
Because your information sources will be different from mine, go start building your first plugin.

Installation

  • Install via NuGet: dotnet tool install --global Appi
  • Build from your own

Usage

Demo

This demo shows the find command searching for god with two active sources (poetry.db and MoreOptions), selecting and displaying one result (Author, Title, Lines - properties based on ResultAttribute), and finally taking some action on it (Quit). Demo

Help information

find command (default, can be omitted)
DESCRIPTION:
Query all (default) or only the specified sources.

USAGE:
    Appi find <query> [OPTIONS]

EXAMPLES:
    Appi god
    Appi god -s poetry
    Appi god -g demo
    Appi find god
    Appi find god --source poetry
    Appi find god --group demo

ARGUMENTS:
    <query>                 Search for the given query

OPTIONS:
                            DEFAULT
    -h, --help                         Prints help information
    -g, --group             all        Search within a group
    -s, --source                       Search within a single source
    -c, --case-sensitive               The query parameter will be case-sensitive
list command

List all your installed sources with Appi list and see how they can be queried using the --source or --group option.

╔══════════════════╤═════════════════════════════════╤════════╤══════════════════════════════╤══════════════════════════════╗
║ Name             │ Description                     │ Active │ Source alias (-s / --source) │ Group aliases (-g / --group) ║
╟──────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────┼────────┼──────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────╢
║ scraped.txt File │ Contents of the file.           │        │ scrapedtxtfile               │                              ║
║ Poetry           │ by poetrydb.org                 │   X    │ poetry                       │ demo                         ║
║ More             │ Non-contextual options          │   X    │ more                         │                              ║
║ Demo Assembly    │ Returns hard-coded hello world. │   X    │ external                     │ demo                         ║
╚══════════════════╧═════════════════════════════════╧════════╧══════════════════════════════╧══════════════════════════════╝
config command

Need to install a your newly created plugin or open the configuration file? Here is how:

DESCRIPTION:
Configure Appi.

USAGE:
    Appi config [OPTIONS] <COMMAND>

EXAMPLES:
    Appi config open
    Appi config allow-libs true
    Appi config register-lib E:\my-own-appi-plugin.dll

OPTIONS:
    -h, --help    Prints help information

COMMANDS:
    open                                Opens the app's configuration directory
    allow-libs <allowed: true|false>    Allow or disallow external libraries to be loaded
    register-lib <path>                 Register a new library which is copied to application directory and registred in sources.json

See an example of the configuration file here.

Infrastructure

Some infrastructure classes are already provided. You can build up from given classes like:

  • File (see sources.json after running appi config open and change the path of your text file)
  • SQL Server / MSSQL
  • MySQL / MariaDB
  • More to come out of the box (want to collaborate?)

Plugins

This app is highly extensible by adding own plugins. You can fetch data from any source you can imagine, e. g. from your SharePoint Server, Active Directory or any database.

Just follow these simple steps:

  1. Create a .NET 7 class library
  2. Add the Appi.Core NuGet package as a dependency
    • PM> Install-Package Appi.Core for plugin development from scratch or
    • PM> Install-Package Appi.Infrastructure for plugin development with pre-built infrastructure like File access, MySQL/MariaDB or Microsoft SQL Server
  3. Create classes that implement ISource and ResultItemBase (see GitHub examples)
  4. Register the new assembly by calling appi config register-lib "pathToAssembly.dll"
  5. If applicable: change connection string(s) in sources.json (appi config open)

Example for implementing ISource

The class implementing ISource must have a parameterless constructor.
The ReadAsync() method must pass the FindItemsOptions object which contains the query and returns the found data.
The initial values of the properties are used to create the entry in the sources.json config file when installing your plugin.

using Core.Abstractions;
using Core.Models;

namespace ExternalSourceDemo
{
    public class ExternalDemoSource : ISource
    {
        public string TypeName { get; set; } = typeof(ExternalDemoSource).Name;
        public string Name { get; set; } = "Demo Assembly";
        public string Alias { get; set; } = "external";
        public string Description { get; set; } = "Returns hard-coded hello world.";
        public bool IsActive { get; set; } = true;
        public int SortOrder { get; set; } = 50;
        public string? Path { get; set; }
        public string? Arguments { get; set; }
        public bool? IsQueryCommand { get; set; } = true;
        public string[]? Groups { get; set; } = new[] { "demo" };

        public async Task<IEnumerable<ResultItemBase>> ReadAsync(FindItemsOptions options)
        {
            var output = new List<ExternalDemoResult>()
            {
                new() { Name = "Hello", Description = options?.Query ?? "World" }
            };

            return await Task.FromResult(output);
        }
    }
}

The example above will create the following entry in sources.json file using the command Appi config register-lib "C:\...\Appi.Infrastructure.ExternalDemoSource.dll":

[
  {
    "TypeName": "ExternalDemoSource",
    "Name": "Demo Assembly",
    "Alias": "external",
    "Groups": [
      "demo"
    ],
    "Description": "Returns hard-coded hello world.",
    "IsActive": true,
    "SortOrder": 50,
    "Path": null,
    "Arguments": null,
    "IsQueryCommand": true
  }
]

Your source can now be queried using the find command, e. g. Appi god -s external or along with other sources inside the demo group with Appi god -g demo Of course, the file can be edited to your needs afterwards, e. g. to change the alias or group name.

Example for implementing ResultItemBase

This class controls the output of an item by overriding the ToString() method and displays the possible actions with the result of GetActions() method if an item of this source gets selected. You can easily interact with predefined services like using the ClipboardService or ProcessService for most frequent used actions.
By using the Result attribute you can define the displayed properties in the output table.

using Core.Abstractions;
using Core.Attributes;
using Core.Models;

namespace ExternalSourceDemo
{
    public class ExternalDemoResult : ResultItemBase
    {
        [Result]
        public override string Name { get => base.Name; set => base.Name = value; }

        [Result]
        public override string Description { get => base.Description; set => base.Description = value; }

        public override IEnumerable<ActionItem> GetActions()
        {
            return Enumerable.Empty<ActionItem>();
        }

        public override string ToString()
        {
            return $"{Name} {Description}!";
        }
    }
}

Up next

Build more infrastructure classes like

  • SQlite
  • Unit tests
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net7.0 is compatible.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 was computed.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

This package has no dependencies.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.3.0 295 11/12/2023
1.2.2 170 10/28/2023
1.2.1 156 10/22/2023
1.1.0 114 10/10/2023
1.0.5 113 9/18/2023
1.0.4 123 8/28/2023
1.0.2 119 8/9/2023
1.0.1 122 8/7/2023
1.0.0 118 8/7/2023

inital release