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https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell
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43 lines
1.9 KiB
Fish
43 lines
1.9 KiB
Fish
function __fish_make_completion_signals --description 'Make list of kill signals for completion'
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set -q __kill_signals
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and return 0
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set -g __kill_signals
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# Cygwin's kill is special, and the documentation lies.
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# Just hardcode the signals.
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if uname | string match -q 'CYGWIN*'
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set -a __kill_signals "1 HUP" "2 INT" "3 QUIT" "4 ILL" "5 TRAP" "6 ABRT" \
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"6 IOT" "7 BUS" "8 FPE" "9 KILL" "10 USR1" "11 SEGV" \
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"12 USR2" "13 PIPE" "14 ALRM" "15 TERM" "16 STKFLT" "17 CHLD" \
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"17 CLD" "18 CONT" "19 STOP" "20 TSTP" "21 TTIN" "22 TTOU" \
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"23 URG" "24 XCPU" "25 XFSZ" "26 VTALRM" "27 PROF" "28 WINC" \
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"29 IO" "29 POLL" "30 PWR" "31 SYS" "34 RTMIN" "64 RTMA"
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return
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end
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# Some systems use the GNU coreutils kill command where `kill -L` produces an extended table
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# format that looks like this:
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#
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# 1 HUP Hangup: 1
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# 2 INT Interrupt: 2
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#
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# The procps `kill -L` produces a more compact table. We can distinguish the two cases by
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# testing whether it supports `kill -t`; in which case it is the coreutils `kill` command.
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# Darwin doesn't have kill -t or kill -L
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if kill -t 2>/dev/null >/dev/null
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or not kill -L 2>/dev/null >/dev/null
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# Posix systems print out the name of a signal using 'kill -l SIGNUM'.
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complete -c kill -s l --description "List names of available signals"
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for i in (seq 31)
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set -a __kill_signals $i" "(kill -l $i | string upper)
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end
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else
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# util-linux (on Arch) and procps-ng (on Debian) kill use 'kill -L' to write out a numbered list
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# of signals. Use this to complete on both number _and_ on signal name.
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complete -c kill -s L --description "List codes and names of available signals"
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kill -L | string trim | string replace -ra ' *' \n | while read -l signo signame
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set -a __kill_signals "$signo $signame"
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end
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end
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end
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