fish-shell/share/completions/service.fish
Fabian Boehm e6f4c9e162 completions/service: Fix output on OpenRC systems
This used `type -f`, which prints, and only silenced stderr.

Detected by running the check-completions test on Alpine.

It appears nobody does that.
2022-07-24 09:51:15 +02:00

25 lines
1.4 KiB
Fish

# First argument is the names of the service, i.e. a file in /etc/init.d
complete -c service -n "__fish_is_nth_token 1" -xa "(__fish_print_service_names)" -d Service
# as found in __fish_print_service_names.fish
if test -d /run/systemd/system # Systemd systems
complete -c service -n 'not __fish_is_nth_token 1' -xa "start stop restart status enable disable"
else if command -sq rc-service # OpenRC (Gentoo)
complete -c service -n 'not __fish_is_nth_token 1' -xa "start stop restart"
else if test -d /etc/init.d # SysV on Debian and other linuxen
complete -c service -n 'not __fish_is_nth_token 1' -xa "start stop --full-restart"
else # FreeBSD
# Use the output of `service -v foo` to retrieve the list of service-specific verbs
complete -c service -n 'not __fish_is_nth_token 1' -xa "(__fish_complete_freebsd_service_actions)"
end
function __fish_complete_freebsd_service_actions
# Use the output of `service -v foo` to retrieve the list of service-specific verbs
# Output takes the form "[prefix1 prefix2 ..](cmd1 cmd2 cmd3)" where any combination
# of zero or one prefixe(s) and any one command is a valid verb.
set -l service_name (commandline --tokenize --cut-at-cursor)[-1]
set -l results (service $service_name -v 2>| string match -r '\\[(.*)\\]\\((.*)\\)')
set -l prefixes "" (string split '|' -- $results[2])
set -l commands (string split '|' -- $results[3])
printf '%s\n' $prefixes$commands
end