react-native/docs/understanding-cli.md
Héctor Ramos e5a4ea97d9 Restore missing ejected banner
Summary:
A few more docs where the ejected metadata was lost in the autodocs flattening transition that happened in 9ec95673909beac7798f589e0e9821b4225f8fa9.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/16773

Differential Revision: D6286368

Pulled By: hramos

fbshipit-source-id: bb7c032ca386e473c393821ce031714168d31719
2017-11-09 11:10:50 -08:00

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Markdown

---
id: understanding-cli
title: Understanding the CLI
layout: docs
category: Contributing
permalink: docs/understanding-cli.html
banner: ejected
next: activityindicator
previous: testing
---
Though you may have installed the `react-native-cli` via npm as a separate module, it is a shell for accessing the CLI embedded
in the React Native of each project. Your commands and their effects are dependent on the version of the module of `react-native`
in context of the project. This guide will give a brief overview of the CLI in the module.
# The local CLI
React Native has a [`local-cli`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/tree/master/local-cli) folder with a file named
[`cliEntry.js`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/local-cli/cliEntry.js). Here, the commands are read
from `commands.js` and added as possible CLI commands. _E.G._ the `react-native link` command, exists in the
[`react-native/local-cli/link`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/local-cli/link/) folder, and is
required in `commands.js`, which will register it as a documented command to be exposed to the CLI.
# Command definitions
At the end of each command entry is an export. The export is an object with a function to perform, description of the command, and the command name. The object structure for the `link` command looks like so:
```js
module.exports = {
func: link,
description: 'links all native dependencies',
name: 'link [packageName]',
};
```
### Parameters
The command name identifies the parameters that a command would expect. When the command parameter is surrounded by greater-than, less-than symbols `< >`, this indicates that the parameter is expected. When a parameter is surrounded by brackets `[ ]`, this indicates that the parameter is optional.