Install
You can use voiceflow-cli
by installing a pre-compiled binary (in several ways), using Docker, or compiling it from source. In the below sections, you can find the steps for each approach.
Install a pre-compiled binary
homebrew tap
Install the Voiceflow CLI:
brew install xavidop/tap/voiceflow
snapcraft
sudo snap install voiceflow
aur
yay -S cxcli-bin
scoop
scoop bucket add voiceflow https://github.com/xavidop/scoop-bucket.git
scoop install voiceflow
chocolatey
choco install voiceflow
apt
echo 'deb [trusted=yes] https://apt.fury.io/xavidop/ /' | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/voiceflow.list
sudo apt update
sudo apt install voiceflow
yum
echo '[voiceflow]
name=Vocieflow CLI Repo
baseurl=https://yum.fury.io/xavidop/
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0' | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/voiceflow.repo
sudo yum install voiceflow
nix
nixpkgs
nix-env -iA voiceflow
!!! info
The package in nixpkgs
might be slightly outdated, as it is not updated automatically.
Use our NUR to always get the latest updates.
nur
First, you'll need to add our NUR to your nix configuration.
You can follow the guides
here.
Once you do that, you can install the packages.
{ pkgs, lib, ... }: {
home.packages = with pkgs; [
nur.repos.xavidop.voiceflow
];
}
deb, rpm and apk packages
Download the .deb
, .rpm
or .apk
packages from the [OSS releases page][releases] and install them with the appropriate tools.
go install
go install github.com/xavidop/voiceflow-cli@latest
bash script
curl -sfL https://voiceflow.xavidop.me/static/run | bash
Additional Options
You can also set the VERSION
variable to specify
a version instead of using latest.
You can also pass flags and args to voiceflow-cli:
curl -sfL https://voiceflow.xavidop.me/static/run |
VERSION=__VERSION__ bash -s -- version
!!! tip
This script does not install anything, it just downloads, verifies and
runs voiceflow-cli.
Its purpose is to be used within scripts and CIs.
manually
Download the pre-compiled binaries from the [releases page][releases] and copy them to the desired location.
Verifying the artifacts
binaries
All artifacts are checksummed, and the checksum file is signed with [cosign][].
- Download the files you want along with the
checksums.txt
,checksum.txt.pem
, andchecksums.txt.sig
files from the [releases][releases] page:wget https://github.com/xavidop/voiceflow-cli/releases/download/__VERSION__/checksums.txt wget https://github.com/xavidop/voiceflow-cli/releases/download/__VERSION__/checksums.txt.sig wget https://github.com/xavidop/voiceflow-cli/releases/download/__VERSION__/checksums.txt.pem
- Verify the signature:
COSIGN_EXPERIMENTAL=1 cosign verify-blob \ --cert checksums.txt.pem \ --signature checksums.txt.sig \ checksums.txt
- If the signature is valid, you can then verify the SHA256 sums match with the downloaded binary:
sha256sum --ignore-missing -c checksums.txt
docker images
Our Docker images are signed with [cosign][].
Verify the signatures:
COSIGN_EXPERIMENTAL=1 cosign verify xavidop/voiceflow
!!! info
The .pem
and .sig
files are the image name:tag
, replacing /
and :
with -
.
Running with Docker
You can also use voiceflow-cli
within a Docker container.
To do that, you'll need to execute something more-or-less like the examples below.
Registries:
Example usage:
docker run --rm \
xavidop/voiceflow voiceflow version
Note that the image will almost always have the last stable Go version.
If you need other packages and dependencies, you are encouraged to keep your own image. You can
always use voiceflow-cli's [own Dockerfile][dockerfile] as a starting point and iterate on that.
Compiling from source
Here you have two options:
If you want to contribute to the project, please follow the
steps on our contributing guide.
If you just want to build from source for whatever reason, follow these steps:
clone:
git clone https://github.com/xavidop/voiceflow-cli
cd voiceflow-cli
get the dependencies:
go mod tidy
build:
go build -o voiceflow .
verify that it works:
./voiceflow version
Updated 2 days ago