Golang Spf13 Cobra

v1.0.0

Golang CLI command tree library using spf13/cobra — cobra.Command, RunE vs Run, PersistentPreRunE hook chain, Args validators (NoArgs, ExactArgs, MatchAll, c...

0· 27· 1 versions· 0 current· 0 all-time· Updated 4h ago· MIT-0
bySamuel Berthe@samber

Install

openclaw skills install golang-spf13-cobra

Persona: You are a Go CLI engineer building command trees that feel native to the Unix shell. You design the user-facing surface first, then wire behavior into the right hook.

Modes:

  • Build — creating a new CLI from scratch: follow command tree setup, hook wiring, and flag sections sequentially.
  • Extend — adding subcommands, flags, or completions to an existing CLI: read the current command tree first, then apply changes consistent with the existing structure.
  • Review — auditing an existing CLI: check the Common Mistakes table, verify RunE usage, OutOrStdout(), hook chain ordering, and args validation.

Using spf13/cobra for CLI command trees in Go

Cobra is the de facto standard for Go CLI applications. It provides the command/subcommand tree, flag parsing (via pflag), args validation, shell completion generation, and documentation generation. It does not handle configuration layering — that's viper's job.

Official Resources:

This skill is not exhaustive. Please refer to library documentation and code examples for more information. Context7 can help as a discoverability platform.

go get github.com/spf13/cobra@latest

Cobra vs. viper

These libraries do fundamentally different things and can be used independently.

Concerncobraviper
OwnsCommand tree, flags, arg validation, completionsConfiguration value resolution
User-facing?Yes — subcommands, flags, help textNo — purely a key-value resolver
Without the other?Yes — a CLI with flags only needs cobraYes — a daemon reading YAML + env needs only viper
Integration seamHands pflag.Flag to viper via BindPFlagTreats the cobra flag as the highest-precedence layer

Use cobra alone when your binary takes flags and args but needs no config file or env resolution. Use viper alone when you have a long-running service reading config from YAML + env with no CLI subcommands. Use both when you need both — bind at PersistentPreRunE on the root command.

→ See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-spf13-viper for the viper side of this integration.

Command tree

Every cobra CLI has a root command plus zero or more subcommands registered with AddCommand. The root command name is the binary name.

var rootCmd = &cobra.Command{
    Use:          "myapp",
    Short:        "One-line summary",
    SilenceUsage: true,  // ✓ prevents usage wall on every error
    SilenceErrors: true, // ✓ lets you control error output format
}

Use AddGroup to label subcommands in help output — register groups before the AddCommand calls that reference them; cobra does not retroactively assign groups.

The Run* family

Cobra commands have five run hooks executed in order:

PersistentPreRunE → PreRunE → RunE → PostRunE → PersistentPostRunE

Always use *E variants — the non-E forms cannot return errors. Key rules:

  • PersistentPreRunE on the root runs before every subcommand — use it for config init and auth checks.
  • A child PersistentPreRunE replaces the parent's entirely — call the parent explicitly if you need both.
  • PostRunE runs only if RunE succeeded.

For the full lifecycle and inheritance rules, see commands-and-args.md.

Args validators

Cobra validates positional arguments before RunE runs. Never write len(args) checks inside RunE — that bypasses cobra's standard error messages and arg count tracking.

Built-ins: NoArgs, ExactArgs(n), MinimumNArgs(n), MaximumNArgs(n), RangeArgs(min,max), OnlyValidArgs, ExactValidArgs(n). Compose with MatchAll(v1, v2). Custom validator: func(cmd *cobra.Command, args []string) error.

For the full validator set with examples and MatchAll patterns, see commands-and-args.md.

Flags primer

Cobra delegates flag parsing to pflag. Persistent flags (PersistentFlags()) are inherited by all subcommands; local flags (Flags()) apply only to the declaring command.

rootCmd.PersistentFlags().StringVar(&cfgFile, "config", "", "config file path") // inherited by all subcommands
serveCmd.Flags().IntVar(&port, "port", 8080, "listen port")                     // local to serveCmd only
serveCmd.MarkFlagRequired("port")
serveCmd.MarkFlagsMutuallyExclusive("json", "yaml")

For pflag types, custom flag values, flag groups, and viper binding, see flags.md.

Completions primer

Cobra generates shell completions automatically. Extend them with:

  • ValidArgs []string — static positional arg completion.
  • ValidArgsFunction — dynamic: func(cmd, args, toComplete string) ([]string, ShellCompDirective). Return ShellCompDirectiveNoFileComp to suppress file fallback.
  • RegisterFlagCompletionFunc(name, fn) — flag value completion.

For ShellCompDirective values, annotations, and testing, see completions.md.

Testing commands

Test commands by executing them programmatically. Never use os.Stdout / os.Stderr directly in command handlers — use cmd.OutOrStdout() / cmd.ErrOrStderr() so tests can redirect output.

func TestServeCmd(t *testing.T) {
    buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
    rootCmd.SetOut(buf)
    rootCmd.SetArgs([]string{"serve", "--port", "9090"})
    require.NoError(t, rootCmd.Execute())
    assert.Contains(t, buf.String(), "listening on :9090")
}

Cobra accumulates flag state across Execute() calls — build a fresh command tree per test. For isolation patterns, golden files, and testing completions, see testing.md.

Best Practices

  1. Always use RunE, never RunRun cannot return an error; the only escape is os.Exit or panic, bypassing defers.
  2. Put config initialization in PersistentPreRunE — it runs before every subcommand; the right place for viper binding and auth checks.
  3. Validate positional args with Args, not inside RunEArgs gives cobra's standard error messages; MatchAll composes validators.
  4. Use cmd.OutOrStdout() / cmd.ErrOrStderr() for all output — direct os.Stdout writes cannot be captured by tests.
  5. Re-create the command tree per test — cobra accumulates flag state across Execute() calls on the same instance.

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy it failsFix
Using Run instead of RunECannot return an error — only escape is os.Exit or panic, bypassing defersUse RunE — return the error, let cobra handle the exit
Writing len(args) checks in RunEBypasses cobra's standard error messages ("accepts 1 arg, received 2")Declare Args: cobra.ExactArgs(1) on the command
Writing to os.Stdout directlyTests cannot capture output — os-level file handles can't be redirectedUse cmd.OutOrStdout() / cmd.ErrOrStderr()
Child PersistentPreRunE silently drops parent'sCobra does not chain — the child replaces the parent's hook entirelyCall parent.PersistentPreRunE(cmd, args) from the child's hook
Reusing a root command across testsCobra accumulates flag state; second Execute() sees flags from the firstBuild a fresh command tree per test

Further Reading

  • commands-and-args.md — full PreRun*/PostRun* chain, every Args validator, PersistentPreRunE inheritance rules
  • flags.md — pflag types, required/exclusive/oneRequired groups, custom value types, viper binding
  • completions.md — ShellCompDirective set, annotation-based completions, testing completions
  • generators.md — man page, markdown, YAML, RST doc generation; cobra-cli scaffolder
  • testing.md — isolation patterns, golden files, testing completions, table-driven command tests

Cross-References

  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-cli skill for general CLI architecture — project layout, exit codes, signal handling, I/O patterns
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-spf13-viper skill for configuration layering alongside cobra (flag → env → file → default precedence)
  • → See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-testing skill for general Go testing patterns

If you encounter a bug or unexpected behavior in spf13/cobra, open an issue at https://github.com/spf13/cobra/issues.

Version tags

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Runtime requirements

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