### Command-not-found handlers # This can be overridden by defining a new fish_command_not_found function # Read the OS/Distro from /etc/os-release. # This has a "ID=" line that defines the exact distribution, # and an "ID_LIKE=" line that defines what it is derived from or otherwise like. # For our purposes, we use both. set -l os if test -r /etc/os-release set os (string match -r '^ID(?:_LIKE)?\s*=.*' < /etc/os-release | \ string replace -r '^ID(?:_LIKE)?\s*=(.*)' '$1' | string trim -c '\'"' | string split " ") end function __fish_default_command_not_found_handler printf "fish: Unknown command: %s\n" (string escape -- $argv[1]) >&2 end # If an old handler already exists, defer to that. if functions -q __fish_command_not_found_handler function fish_command_not_found # The fish_command_not_found event was removed in fish 3.2.0, # and future versions of fish will just call a function called "fish_command_not_found". # You have defined a custom handler, we suggest renaming it to "fish_command_not_found". __fish_command_not_found_handler $argv end # First check if we are on OpenSUSE since SUSE's handler has no options # but the same name and path as Ubuntu's. else if contains -- suse $os || contains -- sles $os && type -q command-not-found function fish_command_not_found command-not-found $argv[1] end # Check for Fedora's handler else if test -f /usr/libexec/pk-command-not-found function fish_command_not_found /usr/libexec/pk-command-not-found $argv end # Check in /usr/lib, where Ubuntu places this command else if test -f /usr/lib/command-not-found function fish_command_not_found /usr/lib/command-not-found -- $argv[1] end # Check for NixOS handler else if test -f /run/current-system/sw/bin/command-not-found function fish_command_not_found /run/current-system/sw/bin/command-not-found $argv end # Ubuntu Feisty places this command in the regular path instead else if type -q command-not-found function fish_command_not_found command-not-found -- $argv[1] end # pkgfile is an optional, but official, package on Arch Linux # it ships with example handlers for bash and zsh, so we'll follow that format else if type -q pkgfile function fish_command_not_found set -l __packages (pkgfile --binaries --verbose -- $argv[1] 2>/dev/null) if test $status -eq 0 printf "%s may be found in the following packages:\n" "$argv[1]" printf " %s\n" $__packages else __fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv[1] end end # pacman is too slow, see #7841. # else if type -q pacman # function fish_command_not_found # set -l paths $argv[1] # # If we've not been given an absolute path, try $PATH as the starting point, # # otherwise pacman will try *every path*, and e.g. bash-completion # # isn't helpful. # string match -q '/*' -- $argv[1]; or set paths $PATH/$argv[1] # # Pacman only prints the path, so we still need to print the error. # __fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv[1] # pacman -F $paths # end else # Use standard fish command not found handler otherwise function fish_command_not_found --on-event fish_command_not_found __fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv end end