Configuration
LucidLines can be configured through configuration files.
Configuration File
LucidLines looks for a .lucidlines.json5 file in the current directory. You can also specify a custom config file with the -C flag.
Basic Configuration
json5
{
// Port to run the server on
port: 8080,
// Commands to run when the server starts
commands: [
{
// Display name for this command (shown in UI)
name: "ECHO",
// Shell command to execute
command: "echo 'Hello, World!'",
},
{
name: "YOU",
command: "npm run dev",
},
],
// Enable development mode
// true: will output logs to console
dev: false,
}Command Format
Commands are specified with a name and command:
json5
commands: [
{
name: "web",
command: "npm run dev"
}
]Command Names
- Must be non-empty
- Cannot contain newlines
- Should be descriptive and unique
Command Examples
json5
commands: [
// Node.js applications
{ name: "frontend", command: "npm run dev" },
{ name: "backend", command: "npm run server" },
// Python applications
{ name: "api", command: "python -m flask run" },
{ name: "worker", command: "python worker.py" },
// Databases
{ name: "postgres", command: "docker run -p 5432:5432 postgres" },
{ name: "redis", command: "redis-server" },
// Log monitoring
{ name: "logs", command: "tail -f /var/log/app.log" },
{ name: "errors", command: "tail -f /var/log/error.log" }
]Environment Variables
LucidLines automatically sets these environment variables for better output:
FORCE_COLOR=1- Force colored outputCLICOLOR_FORCE=1- Force CLI colorsCOLORTERM=truecolor- Enable true color support
Development Mode
When dev: true is set:
- Console logging is enabled
- More verbose output
Configuration Precedence
Configuration values are merged in this order (later overrides earlier):
- Default values
- Configuration file
- Command-line arguments