8.7 KiB
SmartTools - Simple Design
A lightweight personal tool builder for AI-powered CLI commands
Overview
SmartTools lets you create custom AI-powered terminal commands. You define a tool once (name, prompt, provider), then use it like any Linux command.
Example:
# Create a summarizer tool, then use it:
sum -i text.txt -o summary.txt --max 512
Core Concepts
Tool = Directory + Config
~/.smarttools/
sum/
config.yaml
post.py # optional post-processing script
reviewer/
config.yaml
translator/
config.yaml
Minimal config.yaml
name: sum
description: "Summarize documents"
prompt: |
Summarize the following text in {max} words or less:
{input}
provider: codex
provider_args: "-p"
# Optional
inputs:
- name: max
flag: --max
default: 500
# Optional post-processing script
post_process: post.py
That's it. No trust tiers, no signing, no containers.
CLI Interface
Running Tools
# Basic usage
sum -i document.txt -o summary.txt
# With custom args
sum -i document.txt --max 200
# Preview prompt without calling AI
sum -i document.txt --dry-run
# See what prompt gets sent
sum -i document.txt --show-prompt
# Test with mock (no API call)
sum -i document.txt --provider mock
# Read from stdin, write to stdout
cat doc.txt | sum | less
Universal Flags (all tools)
| Flag | Short | Description |
|---|---|---|
--input |
-i |
Input file (or stdin if omitted) |
--output |
-o |
Output file (or stdout if omitted) |
--dry-run |
Show prompt, don't call AI | |
--show-prompt |
Call AI but also print prompt to stderr | |
--provider |
-p |
Override provider (e.g., --provider mock) |
--verbose |
-v |
Show debug info |
--help |
-h |
Show help |
Managing Tools
# Launch the UI to manage tools
smarttools
# Or use CLI directly:
smarttools list # List all tools
smarttools create sum # Create new tool
smarttools edit sum # Edit existing tool
smarttools delete sum # Delete tool
smarttools test sum # Test with mock provider
Lightweight UI
A simple terminal UI using dialog or whiptail (available on most Linux systems).
Main Menu
┌──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ SmartTools Manager │
├──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ > List Tools │
│ Create New Tool │
│ Edit Tool │
│ Delete Tool │
│ Test Tool │
│ Exit │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘
Create/Edit Tool Form
┌──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Create New Tool │
├──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Name: [sum________________] │
│ Description: [Summarize documents_] │
│ Provider: [codex_____________] │
│ Provider Args: [-p________________] │
│ │
│ Prompt: │
│ ┌──────────────────────────────────┐ │
│ │ Summarize the following text │ │
│ │ in {max} words or less: │ │
│ │ │ │
│ │ {input} │ │
│ └──────────────────────────────────┘ │
│ │
│ Custom Arguments: │
│ --max (default: 500) │
│ [Add Argument] │
│ │
│ Post-process Script: [none______▼] │
│ │
│ [Save] [Test] [Cancel] │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘
Test Tool
┌──────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Test Tool: sum │
├──────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Input: [Select file...] or [Paste] │
│ │
│ ┌─ Final Prompt ───────────────────┐ │
│ │ Summarize the following text │ │
│ │ in 500 words or less: │ │
│ │ │ │
│ │ Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet... │ │
│ └──────────────────────────────────┘ │
│ │
│ Provider: [mock_____▼] │
│ │
│ [Run Test] [Copy Command] │
└──────────────────────────────────────┘
"Copy Command" shows: sum -i test.txt --dry-run
Implementation
Directory Structure
smarttools/
__init__.py
cli.py # Entry point, argument parsing
ui.py # Dialog-based UI
tool.py # Tool loading/saving
runner.py # Execute tools
providers.py # Provider abstraction (minimal)
Provider Abstraction (Simple)
# providers.py
import subprocess
def call_provider(provider: str, args: str, prompt: str) -> str:
"""Call an AI CLI tool with the given prompt."""
cmd = f"{provider} {args}"
result = subprocess.run(
cmd,
shell=True,
input=prompt,
capture_output=True,
text=True
)
if result.returncode != 0:
raise RuntimeError(f"Provider failed: {result.stderr}")
return result.stdout
def mock_provider(prompt: str) -> str:
"""Return a mock response for testing."""
return f"[MOCK RESPONSE]\nReceived prompt of {len(prompt)} chars"
Tool Runner (Simple)
# runner.py
import yaml
from pathlib import Path
TOOLS_DIR = Path.home() / ".smarttools"
def load_tool(name: str) -> dict:
config_path = TOOLS_DIR / name / "config.yaml"
return yaml.safe_load(config_path.read_text())
def build_prompt(tool: dict, input_text: str, args: dict) -> str:
prompt = tool["prompt"]
prompt = prompt.replace("{input}", input_text)
for key, value in args.items():
prompt = prompt.replace(f"{{{key}}}", str(value))
return prompt
def run_tool(name: str, input_text: str, args: dict, provider_override: str = None) -> str:
tool = load_tool(name)
prompt = build_prompt(tool, input_text, args)
provider = provider_override or tool["provider"]
if provider == "mock":
return mock_provider(prompt)
return call_provider(provider, tool.get("provider_args", ""), prompt)
Generated Wrapper Script
When you create a tool, SmartTools generates a wrapper script:
#!/bin/bash
# ~/.smarttools/sum/sum (auto-generated)
exec python3 -m smarttools.run sum "$@"
And symlinks it to ~/.local/bin/sum so you can call sum directly.
What This Design Doesn't Include
Intentionally omitted (not needed for personal use):
- Trust tiers / security levels
- Cryptographic signing
- Container isolation / sandboxing
- Certification testing
- Distribution packaging
- PII redaction
- Audit logging
- Provider capability negotiation
Why? This is a personal tool builder. You write the tools, you run the tools, you accept the responsibility. Just like any bash script you write.
Dependencies
Minimal:
- Python 3.10+
- PyYAML
dialogorwhiptail(pre-installed on most Linux)
Optional:
textual(if you want a fancier TUI later)
File Sizes
Estimated implementation:
cli.py: ~100 linesui.py: ~150 linestool.py: ~80 linesrunner.py: ~60 linesproviders.py: ~40 lines
Total: ~430 lines of Python
Example Workflow
- Run
smarttoolsto open UI - Select "Create New Tool"
- Fill in: name=
sum, prompt, provider=codex - Click "Test" to verify with mock provider
- Click "Save"
- Exit UI
- Run
sum -i myfile.txt -o summary.txt
Done. No containers, no signing, no certification. Just a tool that works.