gen-circleci-orb
Generate a CircleCI orb to provide the facilities offered by a CLI program.
Overview
gen-circleci-orb reads the --help output of a Rust clap CLI
binary and generates a complete CircleCI orb: one command and one job per subcommand, an
executor, a Dockerfile, and optionally the CI configuration to keep the orb in sync with the
binary automatically.
The workflow is captured once in a gen-circleci-orb.toml file (init), regenerated on
demand from the binary's --help (generate), and kept in sync as the generator evolves
(update). It can also wire in gen-orb-mcp
so an AI assistant can understand the generated orb.
Pre-production (0.1.x). The generator, the
gen-circleci-orb.tomlschema, and the generated CI shape are stable enough for real use — this project dogfoods its own orb — but the CLI and config surface may still change ahead of 1.0. Pin the orb version and let Renovate manage upgrades.
Installation
# or
Quick start
Step 1 — set up with init (run once from project root):
init is the entry point. It runs generate, patches .circleci/config.yml, and records
every value in a gen-circleci-orb.toml so later commands need no flags. It is interactive:
run it with just the binary and it prompts for the required values it doesn't have, each
pre-filled with a sensible default.
Passing a flag skips its prompt, so the same command is fully scriptable (and non-interactive
under --dry-run or without a TTY):
init patches .circleci/config.yml to add:
- A
build-binary+regenerate-orbjob pair that rebuilds and re-generates the orb on every build orb-tools/pack+orb-tools/reviewsteps to validate the generated orb- A tag-triggered
orb-release:workflow that builds the container, registers the orb, and publishes it to the CircleCI registry on each crate release tag
Commit gen-circleci-orb.toml.
Step 2 — regenerate the orb source with generate:
After init, generate needs no flags — it reads the binary, namespaces, and base image
from gen-circleci-orb.toml. This is what the regenerate-orb CI job runs on every build:
It writes orb source into an orb/ subdirectory (the default --orb-dir):
orb/src/@orb.yml— orb metadata (version, description)orb/src/commands/<subcommand>.yml— one per leaf subcommandorb/src/jobs/<subcommand>.yml— one per leaf subcommandorb/src/executors/default.yml— Docker executor with atagparameterorb/Dockerfile— image that pre-installs your binary
You can also run generate without a config for a quick one-off, supplying the values
explicitly: gen-circleci-orb generate --binary my-tool --orb-namespace my-org.
Step 3 — keep the wiring current as the generator evolves:
update reads the committed gen-circleci-orb.toml (it never overwrites it) and rewrites
only the gen-circleci-orb-managed blocks in .circleci/config.yml, preserving your own
jobs and customizations. Run --check in CI to fail when a generator upgrade has changed
the canonical wiring; run without --check to apply it. Renovate bumps the pinned orb
version, and update --check flags the drift so you re-sync deliberately.
generate reference
gen-circleci-orb generate [OPTIONS] --binary <BINARY> --orb-namespace <NAMESPACE>
Options:
--binary <BINARY> Binary to introspect (must be on PATH)
--orb-namespace <NAMESPACE> CircleCI orb namespace (repeatable)
--output <DIR> Project root directory [default: .]
--orb-dir <DIR> Orb subdirectory within --output [default: orb]
--install-method <METHOD> binstall | apt [default: binstall]
--base-image <IMAGE> Docker base image [default: debian:13-slim]
--home-url <URL> Home URL for orb registry display
--source-url <URL> Source URL for orb registry display
--dry-run Print planned files, write nothing
init reference
gen-circleci-orb init [OPTIONS]
--binary <BINARY>
--public-orb-namespace <NS> | --private-orb-namespace <NS>
--docker-namespace <NS>
--build-workflow <WF>
--release-workflow <WF>
--crate-tag-prefix <PREFIX>
--release-after-job <JOB>
Required:
--binary <BINARY> Binary to introspect (must be on PATH)
--public-orb-namespace <NS> CircleCI orb namespace, public (repeatable)
--private-orb-namespace <NS> CircleCI orb namespace, private (repeatable)
--docker-namespace <NS> Docker Hub (or registry) namespace for the container image
--build-workflow <WF> Validation workflow name to patch
--release-workflow <WF> Release workflow name to patch
--crate-tag-prefix <PREFIX> Crate release tag prefix (e.g. my-tool-v); filters the
orb-release: workflow trigger
--release-after-job <JOB> Job in the release workflow after which orb release jobs run
Options:
--requires-job <JOB> Job that regenerate-orb should require
--orb-dir <DIR> Orb output directory [default: orb]
--ci-dir <DIR> CircleCI config directory [default: .circleci]
--orb-tools-version <VER> circleci/orb-tools pin [default: 12.3.3]
--gen-circleci-orb-version <VER> jerus-org/gen-circleci-orb orb pin
[default: running binary version]
--docker-context <CTX> CircleCI context for Docker Hub credentials
[default: docker-credentials]
--orb-context <CTX> CircleCI context for orb publish credentials
[default: orb-publishing]
--mcp Wire in gen-orb-mcp MCP server generation + publish
--gen-orb-mcp-version <VER> jerus-org/gen-orb-mcp orb pin (used with --mcp)
[default: 0.1.48]
--mcp-context <CTX> CircleCI context for MCP server publish (used with --mcp)
[default: pcu-app]
--dry-run Print planned changes, write nothing
update reference
gen-circleci-orb update [OPTIONS]
Options:
--config <FILE> Path to gen-circleci-orb.toml [default: gen-circleci-orb.toml]
--ci-dir <DIR> Path to the .circleci/ directory [default: .circleci]
--check Verify mode: write nothing and exit non-zero (with a diff and
guidance) when the CI wiring is out of date. For use in CI.
update is non-interactive and relies entirely on the committed gen-circleci-orb.toml.
It fails (pointing you at init) when a required section is missing and warns on
present-but-empty required fields, rather than guessing.
config reference
config inspects and edits gen-circleci-orb.toml without hand-editing TOML:
gen-circleci-orb config [--config <FILE>] <SUBCOMMAND>
show Print the current configuration
suppress-job <SUBCOMMAND> Stop generating a job for a subcommand
unsuppress-job <SUBCOMMAND> Re-enable a previously suppressed job
add-job-group --name <NAME> --steps <a,b,c> [--description <D>] [--parameters <p,q>]
Compose several subcommand steps into one job
set-parameter-default --subcommand <S> --parameter <P> --value <V>
Override a generated parameter default
Configuration file (gen-circleci-orb.toml)
init writes this file; generate and update read it. It is the single source of truth
for the generated orb and CI, so it is safe to commit and review.
| Section | Purpose |
|---|---|
[orb] |
binary, namespaces, orb_dir, base_image, builder_image, circleci_cli_version — the orb's own source and container |
[ci] |
Workflow/job wiring: build_workflow, release_workflow, requires_job, release_after_job, crate_tag_prefix, docker_namespace, docker_context, orb_context, MCP fields, and rust_image |
[record] |
Optional auto-record: after generate, commit the regenerated orb source back (GPG-signed) so the published orb stays in sync with the CLI. Stores only env-var names — the secrets stay in CI contexts |
[orbs], [[job_group]], [[extra_job]], [subcommand.*] |
Extra orb pins, composed jobs, custom jobs, and per-subcommand overrides (including interactive / generate_job) |
Two image knobs are easy to confuse:
[orb].base_image/[orb].builder_imageconfigure the orb's own generatedDockerfile(the image your orb's consumers run).[ci].rust_imageconfigures the image the CI build jobs (build-binary,orb-release-binary) compile in. The defaultrust:latesthas no libclang; set a clang-equipped, digest-pinned image (e.g.jerusdp/ci-rust:rolling-6mo@sha256:…) when the workspace pulls a bindgen-based-syscrate.
For the full walkthrough of these settings — and of composing a single complex job from several
commands (as gen-orb-mcp's build_mcp_server does) — see the
Configuration Guide
and Advanced Configuration Guide.
Generated artifacts
| File | Description |
|---|---|
src/@orb.yml |
Orb metadata: version 2.1, description, display URLs |
src/executors/default.yml |
Docker executor with tag parameter (default: latest) |
src/commands/<name>.yml |
Reusable command with all parameters and a run: step |
src/jobs/<name>.yml |
Job wrapping the command: checkout + delegate |
Dockerfile |
FROM <base-image> + install step (binstall or apt) |
Parameter required vs optional
A parameter is required in the generated orb only if the CLI itself requires it — read
from the Usage: line: flags outside any [...] group are required; flags inside
[OPTIONS] are optional.
Optional parameters always have a default: so orb consumers can omit them:
- boolean flags default to
false - string/enum flags with a CLI default use that value
- string flags with no CLI default use
""(empty string)
The run step uses CircleCI mustache conditionals for optional parameters so blank or false values are not forwarded as empty flags to the binary.
Excluded flags
Two flags are always excluded from the generated output:
-h/--help— clap built-in-V/--versionwith no<VALUE>metavar — clap built-in (prints binary version)
An application flag named --version that accepts a value (e.g. --version <VERSION>)
is not excluded. However, reusing the -V/--version name for application purposes
is discouraged: it conflicts with the widely-understood convention and requires
special-case handling in any tool that parses --help output. Prefer an explicit name
such as --crate-version or --output-version instead.
Environment requirements
| Tool | Purpose |
|---|---|
| The target binary | Must be on PATH for --help introspection |
circleci CLI |
To pack/validate the generated orb (optional, for local testing) |
Keeping orb versions up to date
init writes current orb versions on first run and does not update them on re-runs.
The recommended approach for ongoing updates is Renovate
with the CircleCI orb datasource (config:base includes it). See
docs/user-guide.md
for alternatives including MCP-assisted updates.
License
Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Contributing
See the Contributing Guide and Code of Conduct.
Changelog
See CHANGELOG.md for release history.