Ever wondered how to create your own custom Ember CLI command? Recently I created a custom Ember CLI command as an addon called ember-share that allows you to share your local running Ember app with the world via a publicly accessible URL. This endeavor took some research and required looking at other addons like ember-cli-deploy, so I thought I’d share what I learned in case you want to create your own custom command too.

To start, create an addon. I’ll call this addon “hello”:

ember addon hello

Next, we’ll do the necessary npm linking so that we can develop and test our addon without having to publish it. If you haven’t created an addon before, read more npm linking on the Ember CLI website.

Run npm link from the addon’s root. Now go to your Ember app, and run npm link hello . We’re all set.

The index.js File

When you create an addon, it will come with an index.js file in the addon’s root that looks like this:

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; module . exports = { name : ' hello ' };

Change the contents of this file to the following to create the custom hello command:

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { hello : { name : ' hello ' , description : ' A test command that says hello ' , run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { console . log ( ' hello! ' ); } } } } };

We’ve added a function includedCommands() that returns an object for one or more commands. Here we have a single command hello with a description and a run function. If we run ember hello , the run() function will execute and we’ll see “hello!” logged in our terminal. We can also run ember help hello and we’ll see the description logged to the terminal. If our addon needs a few commands, we can simply add another key to the returned object. For example, the code below will give us ember hello and ember world :

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { hello : { name : ' hello ' , description : ' A test command that says hello ' , run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { console . log ( ' hello! ' ); } }, world : { name : ' world ' , description : ' A test command that says world ' , run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { console . log ( ' world! ' ); } } } } };

Note that the value under name corresponds to the command, not the root keys in the object returned from includedCommands() . We could have named those keys anything we wanted. For example, in the code below, the keys have been renamed to helloCommand and worldCommand :

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { helloCommand : { name : ' hello ' , description : ' A test command that says hello ' , run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { console . log ( ' hello! ' ); } }, worldCommand : { name : ' world ' , description : ' A test command that says world ' , run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { console . log ( ' world! ' ); } } } } };

Command Options and Arguments

You probably noticed the two arguments passed to the run() function: commandOptions and rawArgs . Let’s start with rawArgs . rawArgs is an array of the arguments when the command is invoked. For example, if I ran:

ember hello 1 2 3

rawArgs would equal ['1', '2', '3'] .

commandOptions allows you to pass options with names to your command, like port if you were to run ember serve --port 8000 . Let’s add a format option so that “hello” can be formatted when it is logged to the terminal. The command will get executed like this:

ember hello --format uppercase

If we run that, we’ll see the following warning:

The option ‘–format’ is not registered with the hello command. Run ember hello --help for a list of supported options.

To register the --format option, we need to add the property availableOptions :

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { helloCommand : { name : ' hello ' , description : ' A test command that says hello ' , availableOptions : [ { name : ' format ' , type : String , default : ' lowercase ' , aliases : [ ' f ' ] } ], run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { if ( commandOptions . format === ' uppercase ' ) { console . log ( ' HELLO! ' ); } else { console . log ( ' hello! ' ); } } } } } };

availableOptions is an array that specifies the available options. Each option has a name, type, default value, and any number of aliases. We have given the format option a default value of ‘lowercase’ and the alias f so that it can be run like this:

ember hello -f uppercase

If you run ember help hello , you will see the command’s description along with all the available options.

Extending Built-In Commands

Custom commands can also extend from built-in commands like the commonly used serve and test commands. To have our hello command log the hello text and run ember serve , modify index.js to the following:

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; var ServeCommand = require ( ' ember-cli/lib/commands/serve ' ); module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { helloCommand : ServeCommand . extend ({ name : ' hello ' , description : ' A test command that says hello ' , availableOptions : ServeCommand . prototype . availableOptions . concat ([ { name : ' format ' , type : String , default : ' lowercase ' , aliases : [ ' f ' ] } ]), run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { if ( commandOptions . format === ' uppercase ' ) { console . log ( ' HELLO! ' ); } else { console . log ( ' hello! ' ); } return this . _super . run . apply ( this , arguments ); } }) } } };

There are a few things to notice here. First, we’re importing the serve command as ServeCommand from Ember CLI. Next, helloCommand is assigned an object that extends from the serve command by calling ServeCommand.extend() . For availableOptions , we are concatenating our custom options with the default options that the serve command provides. If we didn’t do this, our availableOptions would overwrite the options in the serve command and we’d get errors. Lastly, inside the run() function, we are calling this._super.run.apply(this, arguments) after our custom code to trigger the original serve command behavior.

If you wanted to extend other commands like ember test , import the test command like this:

var TestCommand = require ( ' ember-cli/lib/commands/test ' );

Check out all the other commands you can extend from here.

Handling Asynchronous Operations

If you need your command to perform asynchronous operations, the run() function can return a promise. For example, you could do something like this in your run() function:

/* jshint node: true */ ' use strict ' ; var ServeCommand = require ( ' ember-cli/lib/commands/serve ' ); module . exports = { name : ' hello ' , includedCommands : function () { return { helloCommand : ServeCommand . extend ({ // ... run : function ( commandOptions , rawArgs ) { // ... var myPromise = somethingAsync (); var servePromise = this . _super . run . apply ( this , arguments ); return Promise . all ([ myPromise , servePromise ]); } }) } } };

What Ember CLI custom command are you thinking of making? Let me know in the comments below!

Disclaimer: Any viewpoints and opinions expressed in this article are those of David Tang and do not reflect those of my employer or any of my colleagues.