This is made much harder than it has to be by the fact that -k (where specified)
may be in any of a million different places, including as the first parameter,
as -ka, as a random standalone parameter, or tagged on to some other parameter
elsewhere; making it difficult to tell where it's actually missing!
Next job: automate cleaning up the order of arguments in this completions file.
* add adb options
only complete device serial when space after '-s' option
* keep current `adb -s` completion
* add adb reboot fastboot
* only show tcp/ip devices for disconnect
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix: files not complete when options given
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
* fix: use old-style options for adb generic options
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
* completion/usbip: use string-match to detect remote (#9250)
* simplify output
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Next Alone <12210746+NextAlone@users.noreply.github.com>
I have about fifty git branches for fish and I almost always `git checkout`
between the most recent two or three - this makes the completions list more
usable. If you're using `git cherry-pick` or `git merge`, etc. you also most
likely to want to reference a recently changed branch.
The decision was made to only sort local branches and not remote ones in the PR
at #9248.
The performance of changing from one `git for-each-ref` invocation to two
separate ones (so we could sort them separately) was checked and found to be OK.
Food for future thought: consider ergonomics, caveats, and performance of
excluding the current branch's name from the list of completions (or perhaps
only from the first completion). Or maybe there's another way to have
`for-each-ref` give priority to a different branch while still sorting by
recency?
There are a million existing ways of skinning this cat, but it's a good parallel
to `__fish_seen_argument` to have, in a similar vein to
`__fish_seen_subcommand_from`.
Confirmed on NetBSD: The `ls -o` option groups. I tested `ls -gon` and
it didn't give an error.
It's quite suspect that this one option couldn't be grouped, so I'm
assuming this was a typo.
Commit 09685c3682 tried making the apt
completions faster by doing two things:
1. Introduce a limiting "head"
2. Re-replace our "string" usage with tr
Unfortunately, in doing so it introduced a few issues:
1. The "tr" had a dangling "+" so it cut apart package
descriptions that contained a "+".
This caused e.g. "a C++ library" to generate another completion
candidate, "library".
2. In reusing "tr" it probably reintroduced #8575,
as tr is not 8-bit-clean.
3. It filtered too early, on the raw apt-cache output,
which caused it to fill up with long descriptions.
So e.g. for "texlive" it would only generate 10 completions,
where it should have matched 54 packages.
Because most of the speedup is in the "head" stopping early, we
instead go back to the old string way, but introduce a limiting "head"
after the "sed" (which will have removed everything but the package
name line and the first line of the description)
In my tests this is about ~10% slower than doing head early and using
tr, but it's more correct.
Admittedly I haven't been able to reproduce the 35s scenario that
09685 talks about, but the most likely cause of that is *apt-cache*
being slow - I don't see how string can be that much slower on another
system - and so it will most likely also be fixed by doing head here.
Future possibilities here include:
1. Using "apt-cache search --names-only", which gives a much nicer
format (but only for non-installed packages - the search strings are
apparently ANDed?)
2. Switching to `string split`, possibly using NUL and using `string
split0`?
3. Introducing a `string --null-in` switch so we can get by with one
`string`
4. (multi-threaded execution so the `string`s run in parallel)
`apt-cache` is just so incredibly slow that filtering against the final results
just doesn't cut it. Attempting to match against 'ac.*' (already taking
advantage of changing short search terms into prefix-only matches) would take
35 seconds, all of bottlenecked before the filtering step. This change uses more
of a heuristic to filter `apt-cache` results directly (before additional
filtering) to speed things up.
A variety of different limits from 100 to 5000 were timed and their result sets
compared to see what ended up artificially limiting valid completions vs what
took too long to be considered functional/usable and this is where we ended up.
`gh` doesn't write its errors to stderr and doesn't exit with a non-zero status
code in case of failure. The completions are short enough that buffering them
isn't a huge deal.
This cuts down `__fish_git_using_command` calls from 75 to 68, saving
some time in the common case.
(it would be possible to remove the check from
`__fish_git_stash_using_command` now, but that's brittle and it's one
call, so it's not a big issue)
* Replace ";" with "\n" in alias-generated functions
This can let us add a "#" in our aliases to make
them ignore additional arguments.
* Update changelog about aliases that ignore arguments
* Update test for alias.fish
This is now compliant with the aliases that can
ignore arguments.
This used a prompt command, but since the prompt was interpolated and
included a `?` it would be run as a glob without qmark-noglob.
Since it's simpler to pass a prompt string, just do that.
This checked the locale, but did so in a way that's fundamentally
broken:
1. $LANG isn't the only variable ($LC_ALL and $LC_CTYPE)
2. Even if $LANG is set that doesn't mean it's actually working
We could add a `status is-multibyte` here to figure out if we have a
multibyte locale?
But instead, since this is dealing with adding an ellipsis, let's just
add it to `string ellipsize`.
One slight difference is that shortening the branch now counts the ellipsis width.
I.e. assuming the branch is "long-branch-name"
```fish
set -g __fish_git_prompt_shorten_branch_len 8
```
might now print "long-br…" instead of "long-bra…". This is nicer because we can now give the actual maximum width.
The alternative is to add a "--exclusive" option to "string ellipsize" that doesn't count the ellipsis width. So `string ellipsize --char "..." --max 8" long-branch-name` might result in "long-bra...", which is 11 wide.
This is essentially the inverse of `string pad`.
Where that adds characters to get up to the specified width,
this adds an ellipsis to a string if it goes over a specific maximum width.
The char can be given, but defaults to our ellipsis string.
("…" if the locale can handle it and "..." otherwise)
If the ellipsis string is empty, it just truncates.
For arguments given via argv, it goes line-by-line,
because otherwise length makes no sense.
If "--no-newline" is given, it adds an ellipsis instead and removes all subsequent lines.
Like pad and `length --visible`, it goes by visible width,
skipping recognized escape sequences, as those have no influence on width.
The default target width is the shortest of the given widths that is non-zero.
If the ellipsis is already wider than the target width,
we truncate instead. This is safer overall, so we don't e.g. move into a new line.
This is especially important given our default ellipsis might be width 3.
pipenv switched from older click-completion package to new built-in completions
from click framework in v2021.11.9.
This command achieves compatibility with both, older and more recent versions.
`cargo search` can be used to quickly get crates matching a search string, so we
can pass the current token for first-arg completions to `cargo add` and `cargo
install` to `cargo search` to look up matches.
`cargo search` doesn't restrict itself to (nor prioritize for) prefix matches,
while fish will only display prefix matches (for dynamically generated
completions) so it's perfectly possible for `cargo search foo` to return 20
results none of which will successfully result in a completion, but for a
further-narrowed completion of `cargo install foob^I" to then result in
completions because `cargo search` ended up returning a prefix match for `foob`
while it didn't for `foo`.
The only other oob cargo subcommand that takes a crate name (that isn't the name
of a crate specified in `Cargo.toml`) is `cargo search` but there's no point in
providing completions to that... I think (it's possible to search for crate
"foo" in order to get its latest version number rather than its name, but I'm
not sure that's worth supporting).
This expands completions of `cargo^I` to list any commands named `cargo-xxx` as
cargo subcommands invokable as `cargo xxx` in addition to the default oob
subcommands cargo ships with.
(This is very similar to how git allows users to shim their own subcommands.)
NOTE: This would stay even after cargo someday moves to clap and generates or
even ships/installs an official machine-generated `cargo.fish` completions
script.
The old way of generating cargo completions no longer work, so we need
to manually maintain the completions until clap completions support[1].
[1]: https://github.com/clap-rs/clap/issues/3166
This used `realpath -eq`, which for GNU realpath:
1. Suppresses "most error messages" (-q)
2. Requires that all parts exist (rather than allowing the last not
to)
Since we don't actually need a real path here, just filter.
Fixes#9099
* added completions for sad and added note in changelog
* ran fish_indent on completion file
* split -h and --help into two distinct completion options
This moves the stuff that creates skeleton/boilerplate files to
the same place we initialize uvars for the first time or on upgrade.
Being a bit less aggresssive here theoretically makes launch a little
lighter but really I personally just found it weird I couldn't
just delete my empty config.fish file without it getting recreated
and sourced every launch.
A recenty commit was loathe to assume the unicode ellipsis character
was safe so just used '..' instead. However I noticed we actually
already do use that character elsehwere in the completions.
So, just make both spots try to somewhat carefully use it.
We do this same `string match` check on LANG in fish_job_summary.fish
When adding a VLAN-enabled interface, it is named like enp0s31f6.100@enp0s31f6
with the physical interface being appended behind an @.
But subsequent ip commands operate on the interface name without this suffix,
so it needs to be removed when completing interface names in __fish_ip_device
These should be friendlier, but aren't as pedantically accurate.
I think the term "index" is terrible and much prefer "staging area".
Also "rev-parse" simply must be believed to be seen, it can't be
described in a single paragraph. (did you know you can use `git
rev-parse --parseopt` as a replacement for `getopt` in arbitrary
shell scripts?)
"socket.has_ipv6" is basically useless - it tells you python has
been *compiled* with ipv6 support.
Instead just try ipv6 and if that fails with EAFNOSUPPORT (checking
the actual errno), try v4.
Yes, I explicitly do not care to test this on python2.
Fixes#3857
I have an alias called "lg" for
log --color --graph --pretty=format:\'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)<%an>%Creset\' --abbrev-commit --first-parent
Having that in my completions ensures that git commands essentially
always use one column at most. That's not great, so we now shorten it
to 35 chars (plus an annoying 2 for ".." because I can't be bothered
to check for unicode support - an argument for a "string ellipsize", I guess?)
"git add ./" shows only hidden files (if at all). It should show all files
that can be added.
The problem is that candidates come from "git status" which prints clean
relative paths. Let's allow some unclean paths.
This is far from a complete fix but it should work for the common scenario.
Observe that wildcard_complete_internal() actually filters out all non-hidden
files, if the query is `./`.
Closes#9091
This reimplements ridiculousfish/control_r which is a more future-proof
approach than #6686.
Pressing Control+R shows history in our pager and allows to search filter
commands with the pager search field.
On the surface, this works just like in other shells; though there are
some differences.
- Our pager shows multiple results at a time.
- Other shells allow to use up arrow/down arrow to select adjacent entries
in history. Shouldn't be hard to implement but the hidden state might
confuse users and it doesn't play well with up-or-search, so this is
left out.
Users might expect the history pager to use subsequence matching (fuzzy
matching) like the completion pager, however due to the history pager design it
uses substring matching. We could change this in future, however that means
we would also want to change the ordering from "reverse-chronological" to
"longest common subsequence" (e.g. what fuzzy finders do), because otherwise
a query "fis" might give this ordering:
fsck /dev/disk/by-partlabel/Linux\x20filesystem
fish
which is probably not what the user wants.
The pager shows only a small number of history items at a time. This is
because, as explained above, the history pager does not support subsequence
matching, so navigating it does not scale well.
Closes#602
These are used in prompts only, and it feels weird not to have them.
In practice, fish_color_host_remote would not be used at all (just
because you switched from the default theme!), while fish_color_status
would fall back on a different value.
That'll be adjusted in the next commit.
This can be used to print the modification time, like `stat` with some
options.
The reason is that `stat` has caused us a number of portability
headaches:
1. It's not available everywhere by default
2. The versions are quite different
For instance, with GNU stat it's `stat -c '%Y'`, with macOS it's `stat
-f %m`.
So now checking a cache file can be done just with builtins.
/etc/hosts specifies, that everything after a #-character is to be
treated as a comment. The current __fish_print_hostnames however only
considers #-characters at the beginning of a line.
Thus the comment from following valid hosts-entry would end up in the
completion output:
1.2.3.4 myhost # examplecomment
getent hosts properly handles comments.
- Generally better descriptions,
- uname checks to not complerte unavailable options on
NetBSD, FreeBSD, DragonFly, Solaris, Darwin
- Describe/complete GNU's --time=access,mtime... arg
- Remove -f it is a no-op and not documented.
When we want to print something while the prompt is still active, we move the
cursor by printing a newline for each line in the prompt beyond the first
one. As established by 80fe0a7fc (fish_job_summary: Format message better
for multiline prompts, 2022-06-28), our use of "string repeat" actually
prints an extra newline. Let's remove it here as well.
This was supposed to be number of lines in the prompt minus 1, but
string repeat added one.
Also it triggered even in case of the stopped job message, which is
already repainted differently.
So we add it when we need to repaint ourselves.
As a bonus add a newline before in that case so the message isn't
awkwardly printed into the commandline.
Fixes#9044.
This is sort of slow because it's called hundreds of times.
We used to have a cache, introduced in ad9b4290e, but it was removed
in fee5a9125a because it had
false-positives.
So what we do, because the issue is that this is called hundreds of
times per-commandline, we cache it keyed on the commandline.
This speeds up `complete -C'git sta'` by a factor of 2.3x.
Commit ad9b4290e optimized git completions by adding a completion that would
run on every completion request, which allows to precompute data used by
other completion entries. Unfortunately, the completion entry is not run
when the commandline contains a flag like `git -C`. If we didn't
already load git.fish, we'd error. Additionally, we got false positive
completions for `git diff -c`.
So this hack was a very bad idea. We should optimize in another way.
Discussions with the tmux maintainer show that:
1. We no longer need the passthrough sequence at all (and it's
deactivated by default)
2. Tmux can check if the outer terminal supports cursor shaping
Fixes#8981
This commit lets you check the manpage for a leading command by moving
the cursor over it, matching the behavior of tab complete.
It also lets you select the man page for the base of a two-part command
like `string match`.
The additional regex case is added because
`commandline -t` returns an empty string when the cursor is after a
space, e.g. at the end of 'sudo ', which the later checks don't handle.
This diagram shows the manpage picked for different cursor positions:
> sudo -Es time git commit -m foo
+-------++---++--++------------+
| || || || |
| || || |+------------+
| || || | git-commit
| || |+--+
| || | git
| |+---+
| | time
+-------+
sudo
* updated function __fish_print_portage_repository_paths.fish to support file, dir and modified defaults
* Revised version of share/functions/__fish_print_portage_repository_paths.fish
* improved syntax and regex as suggested
The recent improvements to multiline prompts and vi-mode in #3481 appear
to be sufficient to make iTerm2 well behaved, so remove our hack which
disabled it by default.
Fixes#3696
git versions that only support porcelain v1 output (like on CentOS 7,
which has 1.8.3) weren't completing files prefixed with : correctly iff
the name after the colon was also a valid relative path.
Fixes the tests on CentOS 7.
This removes the awkward secondary logic.
Note that we still ship a function called `__terlar_git_prompt`
because people who picked the prompt will still be calling it - we
don't update the prompt.
Git's pathspec system is kind of annoying:
> A pathspec that begins with a colon : has special meaning. In the short form, the leading colon : is followed by zero or more "magic signature" letters (which optionally is terminated by another colon :), and the remainder is the pattern to match against the path. The "magic signature" consists of ASCII symbols that are neither alphanumeric, glob, regex special characters nor colon. The optional colon that terminates the "magic signature" can be omitted if the pattern begins with a character that does not belong to "magic signature" symbol set and is not a colon.
So if we complete `:/foo`, that "works" because "f" is alphanumeric
and so the "/" is the only magic character here.
If, however the filename starts with a magic character, that's used as
a magic signature.
So we do what the docs say and terminate the magic signature after the
"/" (which means "from the repo root").
Fixes#9004
This makes it so
1. The informative status can work without showing untracked
files (previously it was disabled if bash.showUntrackedFiles was
false)
2. If untrackedfiles isn't explicitly enabled, we use -uno, so git
doesn't have to scan all the files.
In a large repository (like the FreeBSD ports repo), this can improve
performance by a factor of 5 or up.
Previously, `kill-whole-line` kills the line and its following
newline. This is insufficient when we are on the last line, because
it would not actually clear the line. The cursor would stay on the
line, which is not the correct behavior for bindings like `dd`.
Also, `cc` in vi-mode used `kill-whole-line`, which is not correct
because it should not remove any newlines. We have to introduce
another special input function (`kill-inner-line`) to fix this.
Arguments to --ignored were introduced in Git 2.16, from January 2018.
The git completions specifically work around this, allowing older
versions to be used; match this in the git prompt.
Fixes the tests on CentOS 7.
When switching this to use `git status`, I neglected to use the
correct definition of what a "dirty" and a "staged" change is.
So this now showed already staged files still as "dirty".
Fixes#8986
This adds a path builtin to deal with paths.
It offers the following subcommands:
filter to go through a list of paths and only print the ones that pass some filter - exist, are a directory, have read permission, ...
is as a shortcut for filter -q to only return true if one of the paths passed the filter
basename, dirname and extension to print certain parts of the path
change-extension to change the extension to a different one (as a string operation)
normalize and resolve to canonicalize the paths in various flavors
sort to sort paths, also only using the basename or dirname as a key
The definition of "extension" here was carefully considered and should line up with how extensions are actually used - ~/.bashrc doesn't have an extension, but ~/.conf.d does (".d").
These subcommands all compose well - they can read from arguments or stdin (like string), they can use null-delimited input or output (input is autodetected - if a NULL happens in the first PATH_MAX bytes it switches automatically).
It is both a failglob exception (so like set if a glob passed to it fails it just doesn't get any arguments for it instead of triggering an error), and passes output to command substitution buffers explicitly split (like string split0) so newlines are easy to handle.
The best effort parser over-eagerly strips all extensions off a manual
page file's basename, hence commands containing dots will output
completions for a different command.
Prominent examples are the mkfs.*(8) and fsck.*(8) families, e.g.
completions for mkfs.xfs.8.gz are generated for the command `mkfs`
is not only incorrect but can also filename collisions in case .fish
files for multiple commands are put into the same directory.
Thus do not strip everything past the first dot from the left, but
instead merely strip expected extensions from the right.
edit_command_buffer uses the "norm" command for moving the cursor to a column
with the "|" primitive. The problem is that the user can remap "|". Fix this
by using the "norm!" variant which ignores user mappings (see ":h norm").
Closes#8971
Previously, running `fish_add_path /foo /foo` would result in /foo
being added to $PATH twice.
Now we check that it hasn't already been given, so we skip the
second (and any further) occurence.
`wg show` command shows entire interfaces configuration, not just the
list. This breaks completion when running fish from root, because
command output looks like this:
interface: wg0
public key: fred2rX85AxpcTObLuiWTzkRPZaXjnhd1C4XOdZOGWs=
private key: (hidden)
listening port: 12345
fwmark: 0xca6c
peer: g2YHHDkxmgoT9EV0TxKtq556WLXpaOh4zgC5L7EAGTQ=
endpoint: 192.168.88.50:54321
allowed ips: 0.0.0.0/0, ::/0
latest handshake: 1 minute, 37 seconds ago
transfer: 1.83 MiB received, 927.19 KiB sent
To show just the list of active interfaces, `wg show interfaces` should
be used instead.
man-db's man 2.7 as shipped in OpenSUSE fails to set a non-zero
exit code when invoked like "man ls-some/dir". This means
that we fail to display the man page if the commandline is
"ls some/dir". Work around this by never treating tokens
with slashes as subcommand.
Because TAGs are easy to type and complete, but commits with its SHA are
difficult to complete manualy. Keep commits and TAGs order to show more recent
commits first.
Pressing Ctrl-D while a command is running results in a null key code in
our input queue. That key code is bound to insert a space (without expanding
abbreviations). Make it only insert a space if the commandline is non-empty,
to accommodate this use case.
This probably affects other keys as well.
Closes#8871
Whenever completing any git commandline, we invoke __fish_git_using_command
173 times*. Every invocation calls "commandline" and "argparse"
to the same effect. Let's parse the command line once, and reuse the results
later.
I'm observing a speed-up from 200ms to 120ms with
perf stat -r 10 buildrel/fish -c 'complete -C "git checkout ">/dev/null'
Alternative solutions:
1. teach fish to cache such things automatically.
2. rewrite git completions to compute most completions in a single function,
which will naturally avoid redundant work. This sounds viable but it's
a lot of work.
* we have a thousand uses of __fish_git_using_command, so I'm not sure why
it's only 173.
See the discussion in #8266
As we've noticed a few times now, mingw/msys/cygwin has a fairly
horrible kill implementation that annoys us here.
However our workaround wasn't enough - "mingw" is also a name that is
used here and "msys" can also be a substring.
Also we need to silence the `kill` because it's better to not list the
signals than it is to spew errors.
Fixes#8915.