mirror of
https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell
synced 2024-12-27 05:13:10 +00:00
29f35d6cdf
This gives us more accurate completions because completion scripts get expanded paths
137 lines
6.2 KiB
Fish
137 lines
6.2 KiB
Fish
function __fish_print_hostnames -d "Print a list of known hostnames"
|
|
# This function used to primarily query `getent hosts` and only read from `/etc/hosts` if
|
|
# `getent` did not exist or `getent hosts` failed, based off the (documented) assumption that
|
|
# the former *might* return more hosts than the latter, which has never been officially noted
|
|
# to be the case. As `getent` is several times slower, involves shelling out, and is not
|
|
# available on some platforms (Cygwin and at least some versions of macOS, such as 10.10), that
|
|
# order is now reversed and `getent hosts` is only used if the hosts file is not found at
|
|
# `/etc/hosts` for portability reasons.
|
|
|
|
begin
|
|
test -r /etc/hosts && read -z </etc/hosts | string replace -r '#.*$' ''
|
|
or type -q getent && getent hosts 2>/dev/null
|
|
end |
|
|
# Ignore own IP addresses (127.*, 0.0[.0[.0]], ::1), non-host IPs (fe00::*, ff00::*),
|
|
# and leading/trailing whitespace. Split results on whitespace to handle multiple aliases for
|
|
# one IP.
|
|
string replace -irf '^\s*?(?!(?:0\.|127\.|ff0|fe0|::1))\S+\s*(.*?)\s*$' '$1' |
|
|
string split ' '
|
|
|
|
# Print nfs servers from /etc/fstab
|
|
if test -r /etc/fstab
|
|
string match -r '^\s*[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}:|^[a-zA-Z\.]*:' </etc/fstab |
|
|
string replace -r ':.*' ''
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Check hosts known to ssh.
|
|
# Yes, seriously - the default specifies both with and without "2".
|
|
# Termux puts these in the android data directory if not rooted.
|
|
# The directory is available as $PREFIX/etc, but that variable name is so generic that
|
|
# it would cause false-positives.
|
|
# Also, some people might use /usr/local/etc.
|
|
set -l known_hosts ~/.ssh/known_hosts{,2} \
|
|
{/data/data/com.termux/files/usr,/usr/local,}/etc/ssh/{,ssh_}known_hosts{,2}
|
|
# Check default ssh configs.
|
|
set -l ssh_config ~/.ssh/config
|
|
|
|
# Inherit settings and parameters from `ssh` aliases, if any
|
|
if functions -q ssh
|
|
# Get alias and commandline options.
|
|
set -l ssh_func_tokens (functions ssh | string match '*command ssh *' | string split ' ')
|
|
set -l ssh_command $ssh_func_tokens (commandline -cpx)
|
|
# Extract ssh config path from last -F short option.
|
|
if contains -- -F $ssh_command
|
|
set -l ssh_config_path_is_next 1
|
|
for token in $ssh_command
|
|
if contains -- -F $token
|
|
set ssh_config_path_is_next 0
|
|
else if test $ssh_config_path_is_next -eq 0
|
|
set ssh_config (eval "echo $token")
|
|
set ssh_config_path_is_next 1
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Extract ssh config paths from Include option
|
|
function _ssh_include --argument-names ssh_config
|
|
# Relative paths in Include directive use /etc/ssh or ~/.ssh depending on
|
|
# system or user level config. -F will not override this behaviour
|
|
set -l relative_path $HOME/.ssh
|
|
if string match '/etc/ssh/*' -- $ssh_config
|
|
set relative_path /etc/ssh
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
function _recursive --no-scope-shadowing
|
|
set -l paths
|
|
for config in $argv
|
|
if test -r "$config" -a -f "$config"
|
|
set paths $paths (
|
|
# Keep only Include lines and remove Include syntax
|
|
string replace -rfi '^\s*Include\s+' '' <$config \
|
|
# Normalize whitespace
|
|
| string trim | string replace -r -a '\s+' ' ')
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
set -l new_paths
|
|
for path in $paths
|
|
set -l expanded_path
|
|
# Scope "relative" paths in accordance to ssh path resolution
|
|
if string match -qrv '^[~/]' $path
|
|
set path $relative_path/$path
|
|
end
|
|
# Use `eval` to expand paths (eg ~/.ssh/../test/* to /home/<user>/test/file1 /home/<user>/test/file2),
|
|
# and `set` will prevent "No matches for wildcard" messages
|
|
eval set expanded_path $path
|
|
for path in $expanded_path
|
|
# Skip unusable paths.
|
|
test -r "$path" -a -f "$path"
|
|
or continue
|
|
echo $path
|
|
set new_paths $new_paths $path
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
if test -n "$new_paths"
|
|
_recursive $new_paths
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
_recursive $ssh_config
|
|
end
|
|
set -l ssh_configs /etc/ssh/ssh_config (_ssh_include /etc/ssh/ssh_config) $ssh_config (_ssh_include $ssh_config)
|
|
|
|
for file in $ssh_configs
|
|
if test -r $file
|
|
# Don't read from $file twice. We could use `while read` instead, but that is extremely
|
|
# slow.
|
|
read -alz -d \n contents <$file
|
|
|
|
# Print hosts from system wide ssh configuration file
|
|
# Multiple names for a single host can be given separated by spaces, so just split it explicitly (#6698).
|
|
string replace -rfi '^\s*Host\s+(\S.*?)\s*$' '$1' -- $contents | string split " " | string match -rv '[\*\?]'
|
|
# Also extract known_host paths.
|
|
set known_hosts $known_hosts (string replace -rfi '.*KnownHostsFile\s*' '' -- $contents)
|
|
end
|
|
end
|
|
|
|
# Read all files and operate on their combined content
|
|
for file in $known_hosts
|
|
if test -r $file
|
|
read -z <$file
|
|
end
|
|
end |
|
|
# Ignore hosts that are hashed, commented or @-marked and strip the key
|
|
# Handle multiple comma-separated hostnames sharing a key, too.
|
|
#
|
|
# This one regex does everything we need, finding all matches including comma-separated
|
|
# values, but fish does not let us print only a capturing group without the entire match,
|
|
# and we can't use `string replace` instead (because CSV then fails).
|
|
# string match -ar "(?:^|,)(?![@|*!])\[?([^ ,:\]]+)\]?"
|
|
#
|
|
# Instead, manually piece together the regular expressions
|
|
string match -v -r '^\s*[!*|@#]' | string replace -rf '^\s*(\S+) .*' '$1' |
|
|
string split ',' | string replace -r '\[?([^\]]+).*' '$1'
|
|
|
|
return 0
|
|
end
|