hello
This module has been generated via dagger init and serves as a reference tobasic module structure as you get started with Dagger.
Two functions have been pre-created. You can modify, delete, or add to them,
as needed. They demonstrate usage of arguments and return types using simple
echo and grep commands. The functions can be called from the dagger CLI or
from one of the SDKs.
The first line in this comment block is a short description line and the
rest is a long description with more detail on the module's purpose or usage,
if appropriate. All modules should have a short description.
Installation
dagger install github.com/JCzz/lego/dagger-demo/modules/hello@fee007177e24ba42bf68852e09fb51265b686a29
Entrypoint
Return Type
Hello
Example
dagger -m github.com/JCzz/lego/dagger-demo/modules/hello@fee007177e24ba42bf68852e09fb51265b686a29 call \
func (m *myModule) example() *Hello {
return dag.
Hello()
}
@function
def example() -> dag.Hello:
return (
dag.hello()
)
@func()
example(): Hello {
return dag
.hello()
}
Types
Hello 🔗
hello() 🔗
Return Type
String !
Arguments
Name | Type | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
message | String ! | - | No description provided |
Example
dagger -m github.com/JCzz/lego/dagger-demo/modules/hello@fee007177e24ba42bf68852e09fb51265b686a29 call \
hello --message string
func (m *myModule) example(ctx context.Context, message string) string {
return dag.
Hello().
Hello(ctx, message)
}
@function
async def example(message: str) -> str:
return await (
dag.hello()
.hello(message)
)
@func()
async example(message: string): Promise<string> {
return dag
.hello()
.hello(message)
}