CLI Reference
Here you'll get the list of FusionExport CLI references.
config (--config, -e)
A JSON file that contains any or all of the CLI options.
All the CLI options can be written in a JSON file by providing the JSON file as CLI argument using --config
, or -e
, option. The remaining elements are figured out automatically.
Default: fusioncharts_export.json
config.json file looks like as shown below:
{
"chart-config": "fusioncharts_chart.js",
"output-file": "fc-<%= number(2, 100, 3)",
"type": "png",
"width": 1000,
"height": 500
}
Run the following command in the terminal:
$ fe -e fusioncharts_export.json
chart-config (--chart-config, -c)
A JSON or JS file which contains an array of json objects or an object. The object is passed to the chart constructor to render the chart.
Default: fusioncharts_chart.json
In case of JS file, the object is exported. It also accepts multiple files, directory path or glob pattern in a space separated format. For files containing single chart config, it will create a single exported file. For files containing multiple chart config, it will create a directory named after the respective filename, that will contain the individual exported file.
FusionExport CLI accepts the chart configuration using the --chart-config
or -c
option.
Save the chart configuration in a JSON file. The structure of this JSON file will be as shown below:
[
{
"type": "column2d",
"renderAt": "chart-container",
"width": "550",
"height": "350",
"dataFormat": "json",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"caption": "Number of visitors last week",
"subCaption": "Bakersfield Central vs Los Angeles Topanga"
},
"data": [
{
"label": "Mon",
"value": "15123"
},
{
"label": "Tue",
"value": "14233"
},
{
"label": "Wed",
"value": "25507"
}
]
}
}
]
Run the following command in the terminal:
$ fe -c <chart-config-file.json>
JS structure to export a single chart from the CLI is as shown below: Save the chart configuration in a JavaScript file. In this case, the whole chart configuration object must be exported. The JS structure to export a single chart from the CLI is as shown below:
module.exports = {
// fusioncharts config
};
To use this newly created JavaScript file for export, run the following command:
$ fe - c <chart-config-file.js>
For exporting a single chart from the CLI using multiple files: If chart configurations are stored in multiple directories and multiple files, all the files can be included using a glob pattern. In that case, the glob pattern should be provided using this option in a string format.
module.exports = {
// fusioncharts config
};
To use multiple files for the export, execute the following command:
$ fe -c 'resources/charts/file_1.json resources/charts/file_2.json resources/charts/sub_1/* resources/charts/sub_2/*'
The output maintains the minimal uncommon folder structure. If any file consists of more than one chart config, a folder gets created based on it’s name and the exported files get exported in that particular folder.
chart-config-options (--chart-config-options, -O)
JSON object that provides an option to override the chart configuration passed through --chart-config
option.
The JSON object structure should reflect the object structure of another chart config. It can also take a dot-separated key name of a chart config. It is generally used to manipulate all the chart configs temporarily for export.
To manipulate all chart configs through chart-config options:
Let’s say we have a chart config file with multiple chart configs as multiple-chart-config.json. The contents of this file are as given below:
[
{
"type": "pie2d",
"renderAt": "pie_chart",
"width": "500",
"height": "400",
"dataFormat": "json",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"caption": "Number of visitors last week",
"subCaption": "Bakersfield Central vs Los Angeles Topanga"
},
"categories": [
{
"category": [
{
"label": "Mon"
},
{
"label": "Tue"
},
{
"label": "Wed"
}
]
}
],
"dataset": [
{
"seriesname": "Los Angeles Topanga",
"data": [
{
"value": "13400"
},
{
"value": "12800"
},
{
"value": "22800"
}
]
}
]
}
},
{
"type": "mscolumn2d",
"renderAt": "column_chart",
"width": "450",
"height": "420",
"dataFormat": "json",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"caption": "Split of Sales by Product Category",
"subCaption": "In top 5 stores last month",
"yAxisname": "Sales (In USD)"
},
"categories": [
{
"category": [
{
"label": "Bakersfield Central"
},
{
"label": "Garden Groove harbour"
}
]
}
],
"dataset": [
{
"seriesname": "Food Products",
"data": [
{
"value": "17000"
},
{
"value": "19500"
}
]
},
{
"seriesname": "Non-Food Products",
"data": [
{
"value": "25400"
},
{
"value": "29800"
}
]
}
]
}
}
]
export-config.json
{
"chart-config": "multiple-chart-config.json",
"chart-config-options": {
"dataSource.chart.subCaption": "For last year - Edited",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"xAxisname": "Month - Edited"
}
}
}
}
Execute the following command:
$ fe -e export-config.json
All charts will now have the sub-caption set to For last year-Edited and the x-axis name set to Month-Edited.
input-file (--input-file, -i)
The SVG file that needs to be exported.
Default: fusioncharts_chart.json
- Used to export SVG files
- Export an SVG file
To the SVG file, named as vector.svg
for our example, execute the following command::
$ fe -i vector.svg
output-file (--output-file, -o)
Output files that need to be generated.
Default: export--<%= number(1) %>.png
Output file provides a template to name the exported files. If you want to place all the files in a directory with the default naming, you can just specify a directory. To specify a directory, the template should end with a path separator respective to the OS and all the exported files will be placed inside that directory. Output file names are resolved from an EJS template. There are two built in functions that you can use right away.
The two built in method structures are:
number(start, end, step)
: Increments a number from start to end with thestep (interval)
as mentioned. The end and step are optional parameters.timestamp()
: Provides the current time in milliseconds.
Shift this and the examples after the methods are described.
export--<%= number(1) %>
exp--<%= timestamp() %>.png
exp--<%= number(5, 100, 2) %>_<%= timestamp() %>
If an extension is provided with the filename, the output type gets inferred from that. Any zipped output will always be named fusioncharts_export.zip.
To export using output file template, run the following command:
$ fe -c multiple-chart-config.json -o export--<%= number(1) %>.jpg
To export to S3 or FTP, just prepend s3:
and ftp:
to the output file string respectively.
$ fe -c multiple-chart-config.json -o s3:export--<%= number(1) %>.jpg
output-file-definition (--output-file-definition, -F)
JS or JSON file that contains methods and arrays to be used for naming the output files. Custom functions and arrays can also be provided on top of the two built in functions to construct the output file names.
An example of an output definition file named as def.js is as shown below:
module.exports = {
captionIndexStr: (chartConfig, index, chartConfigList) => {
const caption = chartConfig.dataSource.chart.caption;
return `${caption}__${index}`;
},
dates: [
'17-11-2017_fc_1',
'17-11-2017_fc_2',
'17-11-2017_fc_3',
'17-11-2017_fc_4'
]
};
The captionIndexStr
function receives three parameters from the FusionExport CLI system. These can be used to generate filenames dynamically. The return value of the function will be used as the name of the output file.
This option also accepts array inputs that are iterated through to create file names dynamically.
To export a file using the above file, run the following command:
$ fe -c multiple-chart-config.json -o ‘exp--<%= captionIndexStr() %>_<%= dates %>’ -F def.js
output-as-zip (--output-as-zip, -z)
Exports the output files either as individual files or in a zip format.
Default: false
The output gets exported in zip format. This option takes boolean value.
$ fe -c multiple-chart-config.json -z 1
type (--type, -t)
Specifies the type of the output file. This will override any extension provided in the --output-file
option.
Default: png
Output type can be any of the following:
- png, jpg, jpeg, pdf, svg, csv, xls, xlsx, html for chart export
- png, jpg, jpeg, pdf, html, svg for svg export
- png, jpg, jpeg, pdf, html for dashboard export
Example:
$ fe -c single.json -t xlsx
quality (--quality, -q) v1.0.0
Specifies the quality of the output file.
Default: better
Quality can be any of the following:
- good: Exported image dimension to chart ratio - 1
- better: Exported image dimension to chart ratio - 2
- best: Exported image dimension to chart ratio - 3
Example:
$ fe -c single.json -q best
width (--width, -W)
Specifies the width of the chart. If this option is specified, all the charts will be rendered with the specified width.
height (--height, -H)
Specifies the height of the chart. If this option is specified, all the charts will be rendered with the specified height.
callbacks (--callbacks, -b)
JS file that provides an option to bind custom methods to the events fired by the FusionCharts library.
Default: fusioncharts_export_callbacks.js
Using this option, you can add a custom javascript file while exporting. Here’s an example of a custom javascript that can be included while the export is taking place.
The content present in the custom.js file is shown below:
document.body.style.transform = "rotate(-10deg)";
Once done, run the following command:
$ fe -c chart.json -b custom.js
template (--template, -T) v1.0.0
HTML file to be used for dashboard export.
Default: template.html
To export an image of a dashboard, create a template as an HTML file, containing the layout and supporting static resources (JS, CSS, images, and fonts).
The template must contain placeholder elements for the charts, preferably <divs>
. The chart config array must contain the charts with the renderAt
attribute that match the IDs of the elements stated above.
The following code goes into the HTML file:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Chart</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="pie_chart"></div>
<div id="column_chart"></div>
</body>
</html>
The multiple_charts_config.json contains the configurations of the charts to be exported. The following code goes into the multiple_charts_config.json file:
[
{
"type": "pie2d",
"renderAt": "pie_chart",
"width": "500",
"height": "400",
"dataFormat": "json",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"caption": "Number of visitors last week",
"subCaption": "Bakersfield Central vs Los Angeles Topanga"
},
"categories": [
{
"category": [
{
"label": "Mon"
},
{
"label": "Tue"
},
{
"label": "Wed"
}
]
}
],
"dataset": [
{
"seriesname": "Los Angeles Topanga",
"data": [
{
"value": "13400"
},
{
"value": "12800"
},
{
"value": "22800"
}
]
}
]
}
},
{
"type": "mscolumn2d",
"renderAt": "column_chart",
"width": "450",
"height": "420",
"dataFormat": "json",
"dataSource": {
"chart": {
"caption": "Split of Sales by Product Category",
"subCaption": "In top 5 stores last month",
"yAxisname": "Sales (In USD)"
},
"categories": [
{
"category": [
{
"label": "Bakersfield Central"
},
{
"label": "Garden Groove harbour"
}
]
}
],
"dataset": [
{
"seriesname": "Food Products",
"data": [
{
"value": "17000"
},
{
"value": "19500"
}
]
},
{
"seriesname": "Non-Food Products",
"data": [
{
"value": "25400"
},
{
"value": "29800"
}
]
}
]
}
}
]
renderAt
is one of the more important attribute out here. As you can see, the template contains two <div>
elements with the IDs #pie_chart
and #column_chart
.
In the configuration file, you need to include the same renderAt
attribute so that when you finally export the charts, FusionExport will replace those divs with the actual charts.
To create the template, run the following command:
$ fe -c multiple_charts_config.json -T template.html
resources (--resources, -r) v1.0.0
JSON file that contains all the resources that will be injected into the template while rendering charts.
Default: resources.json
This option is not mandatory; it is required only when --remote-export-enabled
option is set to true
. Most resources that are mentioned in the template using the <link>
, <script>
or <img>
tags, are found intelligently. If any additional fonts and links are present in CSS or if any dynamic links are included in the JavaScript file, you can specify them using the --resources
option.
The format of the --resources
option is as shown below:
{
"basePath": "src/build",
"include": [
"*.jpg",
"*.png"
],
"exclude": [
"filename.jpg"
]
}
dashboard-logo (--dashboard-logo, -G)
Logo path
To place a banner on top of the exported dashboard, specify the logo which you want to use in that banner. Note that this is only available for dashboard export. Example:
$ fe -c multiple_charts_config.json -T template.html -G logo.png
dashboard-heading (--dashboard-heading, -D)
Heading of the exported dashboard
To place a banner on top of the exported dashboard, you can also specify the heading that you want to use in that banner. Note that this is only used for dashboard export. Example:
$ fe -c multiple_charts_config.json -T template.html -D ‘Financial Analysis’
dashboard-subheading (--dashboard-subheading, -B)
Subheading of the exported dashboard
When placing a banner on top of the exported dashboard, you can specify the subheading that you want to use in that banner. Note that this is only valid for dashboard export. Example:
$ fe -c multiple_charts_config.json -T template.html -G logo.png -D ‘Financial Analysis’ -B ‘A descriptive analysis’
async-capture (--async-capture, -a)
Enables asynchronous capture
Default: false
Exporting can be invoked from the injected JavaScript --callbacks option
.
If the --async-capture
option is enabled, the injected script must emit CAPTURE_EXIT
event.
Example: scrollcombidy2d
chart config.
{
module.exports = {
type: 'scrollcombidy2d',
renderAt: 'chart-container',
width: '550',
height: '400',
dataFormat: 'json',
id: 'myChartId', // for referring the chart instance
dataSource: {
// rest of the config
}
};
The intention here is to take a snap of the whole chart. By default, the chart’s width is 550px
. We will increase the width and then ask FusionExport to start processing. Following is the content of the callback.js file:
FusionCharts.items.myChartId.addEventListener('renderComplete', (evt) => {
evt.sender.resizeTo('3000', '400');
FusionExport.emit('CAPTURE_EXIT');
});
Run the following command:
$ fe -c scrollchart.js -b callback.js -async-capture true
async-capture-timeout (--async-capture-timeout, -m)
Maximum time (in milliseconds) the system will wait for async-capture event to trigger.
Default: 6000
By default, maximum time FusionExport waits for the CAPTURE_EXIT
event is 6
seconds. It can be increased up to 60
seconds using --async-capture-timeout
option.
Here is an example of the export config file.
{
"chart-config": "scrollchart.js",
"callbacks": "callback.js",
"async-capture": "true",
"async-capture-timeout": "4000",
"output-file": "fc-<%= number(1, 10) %>",
"type": "jpeg"
}
--async-capture-timeout
option takes input as milliseconds.
log-dest (--log-dest, -d)
Enables logging and sets the log destination.
By default, export logging is disabled. It can be enabled by setting a log destination.
You can provide the log file path using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -d logs/
log-file (--log-file, -f)
Default: fusioncharts_export.log
You can provide the log file name using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -d logs/ -f custom.log
log-level (--log-file, -f)
Default: fusioncharts_export.log
You can provide the log file name using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -d logs/ -f custom.log
log-level (--log-level, -l)
Default: info
You can provide the log level using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -d logs/ -f custom.log -l 5
The supported log levels are:
0: error
1: warn
2: info
3: verbose
4: debug
5: silly
Both the number format and string format can be provided in this option.
host (--host, -S) v1.0.0
Host of FusionExport service.
Default: 127.0.0.1
Provides the host on which the fusionexport-service
is running.
You can provide the host using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -S 192.156.56.65
port (--port, -P) v1.0.0
Port of FusionExport service.
Default: 1337
Provides the port on which the fusionexport-service
is running.
You can provide the port using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -S 192.156.56.65 -P 3443
ftp-config (--ftp-config, -p) v1.0.0
Config file for FTP connection during FTP export.
During FTP export, FTP configuration can be passed through this as a JSON file. The JSON structure looks like as follows:
ftpConfig.json
{
"host": "189.156.78.98",
"port": "1332",
"user": "someone",
"password": "faultysome"
}
You can provide the FTP config using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -o "ftp:fc-<%= number(1) %>" -p ftpConfig.json
S3-config (--s3-config, -s) v1.0.0
Config file for S3 connection during S3 export.
While exporting, S3 configuration can be passed as a JSON file. The JSON structure looks like as follows:
s3Config.json
{
"bucket": "somebigbucket",
"accessKey": "ASDFSDF$#%FDSAF",
"secretAccessKey": "ASDFDSF#$RF%#WE$#^f35f2354frADFDSF"
}
You can provide the S3 config using the following command:
$ fe -c single.json -o "s3:fc-<%= number(1) %>" -s s3Config.json