demo-magic
Demo Magic
demo-magic.sh is a handy shell script that enables you to script repeatable demos in a bash environment so you don’t have to type as you present. Rather than trying to type commands when presenting you simply script them and let demo-magic.sh run them for you.
Features
- Simulates typing. It looks like you are actually typing out commands
- Allows you to actually run commands or pretend to do so.
- Can hide commands from presentation. Useful for behind the scenes stuff that doesn’t need to be shown.
Functions
pe
Print and Execute.
- Waits for you to press ENTER (unless -n is passed).
- Then simulates typing the command you gave it.
- Then pauses until you press ENTER.
- Then runs the command.
#!/bin/bash pe "ls -l"
pei
Print and Execute immediately.
- Simulates typing the command you gave it.
- Then pauses until you press ENTER.
- Then runs the command.
#!/bin/bash pei "ls -l"
p
Print only.
- Waits for you to press ENTER (unless -n is passed).
- Then simulates typing the command you gave it.
- Then pauses until you press ENTER.
#!/bin/bash p "ls -l"
wait
Waits for the user to press ENTER.
If PROMPT_TIMEOUT
is defined and > 0 the demo will automatically proceed after the amount of seconds has passed.
#!/bin/bash # Will wait until user presses enter PROMPT_TIMEOUT=0 wait # Will wait max 5 seconds until user presses PROMPT_TIMEOUT=5 wait
cmd
Enters script into interactive mode and allows newly typed commands to be executed within the script
#!/bin/bash
cmd
Getting Started
Create a shell script and include demo-magic.sh
#!/bin/bash ######################## # include the magic ######################## . demo-magic.sh # hide the evidence clear # Put your stuff here
Then use the handy functions to run through your demo.
Handy Starting Points
There are a few samples in the samples/
folder to show you how easy it is to get up and running.
The demo-template.sh
is a bit of a showcase of some of the features.
The remote-exec
folder is there to show you how to run demo-magic locally and on a remote server via ssh. This was created in response to Issue #24
Command line usage
demo-magic.sh exposes some options to your script.
-
-d
– disable simulated typing. Useful for debugging -
-h
– prints the usage text -
-n
– set no default waiting afterp
andpe
functions -
-w
– set no wait timeout afterp
andpe
functions
$ ./my-demo.sh -h Usage: ./my-demo.sh [options] Where options is one or more of: -h Prints Help text -d Debug mode. Disables simulated typing -n No wait -w Waits max the given amount of seconds before proceeding with demo (e.g. `-w5`)
Useful Tricks
Faking network connections
Network connections during demos are often unreliable. Try and fake whatever commands would rely on a network connection. For example: Instead of trying to install node modules in a node.js application you can fake it. You can install the node_modules at home on your decent network. Then rename the directory and pretend to install it later by symlinking. If you want to be thorough you can capture the output of npm install into a log file then cat it out later to simulate the install.
#!/bin/bash ######################## # include the magic ######################## . demo-magic.sh # hide the evidence clear # this command is typed and executed pe "cd my-app" # this command is merely typed. Not executed p "npm install" # this command runs behind the scenes ln -s cached_node_modules node_modules # cat out a log file that captures a previous successful node modules install cat node-modules-install.log # now type and run the command to start your app pe "node index.js"
No waiting
The -n no wait option can be useful if you want to print and execute multiple commands.
# include demo-magic . demo-magic.sh -n # add multiple commands pe 'git status' pe 'git log --oneline --decorate -n 20'
However this will oblige you to define your waiting points manually e.g.
... # define waiting points pe 'git status' pe 'git log --oneline --decorate -n 20' wait pe 'git pull' pe 'git log --oneline --decorate -n 20' wait
Pesky key cursor
Some terminals (Mac terminal, iterm2) display a key cursor when input is masked.
You can turn this off in iterm2 like so: