A micro meta package manager for the masses

Kyle P Davis 1cc5b74bbe fix: remove old git setup items, add git switch alias 1 year ago
gimmes 1cc5b74bbe fix: remove old git setup items, add git switch alias 1 year ago
LICENSE 8b08c23a9c Init commit 9 years ago
README.md 5a15f08f76 doc: minor updates to readme 5 years ago
gimme e5db62e87a fix: update brew cask handling so it works properly again 2 years ago

README.md

gimme

A meta micro manager for the masses.

What. Does. That. MEAN?

The gimme command runs micro scripts that get small blocks of work done. These usually build on other tools and can be chained together. Ideally, it can do anything [that can be automated in shell].

It's like glue between tiny little tasks [like most shell scripts].

No really... what does it do?

It deals with the shell scripts so that the engineers don't have to.

yeah... right...

Installation

curl -fsSL "https://github.com/KylePDavis/gimme/raw/master/gimme" | bash -

(you do read these shell scripts before just running them, right!?)

Usage

gimme THAT_THING_THAT_YOU_WANT

Integration

You can get tab completion in bash by doing something like this (put it in your .profile to play for keeps):

source "$GIMME_DIR/gimme"

Internals

# 1. try to run :
"$GIMME_DIR/gimmes/$THAT_THING_THAT_YOU_WANT"

# 2. if not, then run the nearest _default script, which should go and get things
"$GIMME_DIR/gimmes/_default"

Customization

  1. write a shell script that does something awesome
    • you can depend on other "gimmes" by simply calling gimme that other thing at the top
    • add a check to make sure that it does nothing on subsequent runs -- idempotence is sexy
    • helpers like has and gimme_pkg get inherited from the main gimme script if you want
  2. put it into the $GIMME_DIR/gimmes/ directory
  3. make it executable with something like chmod 755 YOUR_GIMME_SCRIPT

What is in it for me?

The idea here is that the what you use this for is really up to you.

Here are some ideas for overall uses to get you started:

  • install tools to compliment your dotfiles (that's one way that I'm using it)
  • manage configurations for multiple machines (just make a new config "gimme" script that runs gimme $HOST/install and you're on your way to being able to run gimme config)
  • collaborate with a team on commands for dev, ops, support, etc. (e.g., gimme dev, gimme qa, gimme test_data, gimme auth/new_user, etc.)

If that wasn't enough here are some ideas for the "gimmes":

What makes it better than X?

Maybe nothing. I thought it was a neat idea and wanted to try it out.