From cc-skills-golang
Guides building and extending CLI command trees in Go using spf13/cobra — covering command setup, hooks, flags, args validation, shell completions, and testing.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/cc-skills-golang:golang-spf13-cobraThis skill is limited to the following tools:
The summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
**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.
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:
RunE usage, OutOrStdout(), hook chain ordering, and args validation.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
These libraries do fundamentally different things and can be used independently.
| Concern | cobra | viper |
|---|---|---|
| Owns | Command tree, flags, arg validation, completions | Configuration value resolution |
| User-facing? | Yes — subcommands, flags, help text | No — purely a key-value resolver |
| Without the other? | Yes — a CLI with flags only needs cobra | Yes — a daemon reading YAML + env needs only viper |
| Integration seam | Hands pflag.Flag to viper via BindPFlag | Treats 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.
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.
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.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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
RunE, never Run — Run cannot return an error; the only escape is os.Exit or panic, bypassing defers.PersistentPreRunE — it runs before every subcommand; the right place for viper binding and auth checks.Args, not inside RunE — Args gives cobra's standard error messages; MatchAll composes validators.cmd.OutOrStdout() / cmd.ErrOrStderr() for all output — direct os.Stdout writes cannot be captured by tests.Execute() calls on the same instance.| Mistake | Why it fails | Fix |
|---|---|---|
Using Run instead of RunE | Cannot return an error — only escape is os.Exit or panic, bypassing defers | Use RunE — return the error, let cobra handle the exit |
Writing len(args) checks in RunE | Bypasses cobra's standard error messages ("accepts 1 arg, received 2") | Declare Args: cobra.ExactArgs(1) on the command |
Writing to os.Stdout directly | Tests cannot capture output — os-level file handles can't be redirected | Use cmd.OutOrStdout() / cmd.ErrOrStderr() |
Child PersistentPreRunE silently drops parent's | Cobra does not chain — the child replaces the parent's hook entirely | Call parent.PersistentPreRunE(cmd, args) from the child's hook |
| Reusing a root command across tests | Cobra accumulates flag state; second Execute() sees flags from the first | Build a fresh command tree per test |
cobra-cli scaffoldersamber/cc-skills-golang@golang-cli skill for general CLI architecture — project layout, exit codes, signal handling, I/O patternssamber/cc-skills-golang@golang-spf13-viper skill for configuration layering alongside cobra (flag → env → file → default precedence)samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-testing skill for general Go testing patternsIf you encounter a bug or unexpected behavior in spf13/cobra, open an issue at https://github.com/spf13/cobra/issues.
npx claudepluginhub fyrsmithlabs/marketplace --plugin cc-skills-golangBuilds, extends, and reviews Go CLI applications using Cobra, Viper, or urfave/cli. Covers command structure, flags, config layering, version embedding, exit codes, I/O, signals, shell completion, and testing.
Builds multi-command CLIs in Go using boost's cobra factory, wiring config/version/logging defaults via NewCommand. Triggers on cobra imports or subcommand wiring questions.
Build CLI tools with argument parsing, interactive prompts, progress bars, and shell completions across Node.js, Python, and Go using frameworks like commander, click, typer, or cobra.