* lib/utilities: shellcheck
SC2059
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-get-component-type-from-path()`
Account for plugins with names that contain periods.
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-array-dedup()`
Use fewer subprocesses and newline-delimited not space-delimited.
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-component-list()`
Use fewer subprocesses and return newline-delimited, not space-delimited.
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-component-list-matching()`
Use `sort -u` instead of `sort | uniq`
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-component-list-enabled()`
Use fewer subprocesses, return newline-delimited instead of space-delimited, and use `sort -u` instead of `uniq | sort`
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-component-list-disabled()`
Use fewer subprocesses, return newline-delimited instead of space-delimited, and use `sort -u` instead of `uniq | sort`
* lib/utilities: fix `_bash-it-grep()`
1. Executing `'/usr/bin/grep'` does *not* return the path to grep...
2. use `type -p` instead of external binary `which`.
3. Simplify parameter definition.
4. Why was there a space after `%s`?
* lib/utilities: use `_bash-it-grep`
Alsö, lose a spurious `cat`
* lib/utilities: lint `_bash-it-component-help`
* lib/utilities: lint `_bash-it-component-cache-file()`
* lib/utilities: `shfmt`
My apologies to future `git blame` hunters ♥
* lib/helpers: fix `_bash-it-get-component-name-from-path()`
Use `${BASH_IT_LOAD_PRIORITY_SEPARATOR}`
New function to do a search looking for a sibling to a parent of the current directory, for example to find `../../.git` to indicate that `$PWD` is inside a git repository.
* CI: disable Ubuntu 16.04 as it's EOL
https://github.blog/changelog/2021-04-29-github-actions-ubuntu-16-04-lts-virtual-environment-will-be-removed-on-september-20-2021/
* main: lint false positive
* install: lint
* plugins/cmd-returned-notify: don't `export`
* plugins/xterm: lint
* plugins/git: lint
* plugins/goenv: lint
* plugins/alias-completion: lint false positives
* plugins/alias-completion: fix SC2155, SC2154
Declare `locals` at the top of the function
* completion: lint completions using `bash_completion` functions
Match the style of the existing code
* completion/knife: lint false positives
* completion/knife: lint
* completion/sdkman: lint
* completion/composer: lint
* Move `.shellcheckrc` under `themes/`
* lib/theme: fix SC2155, SC2154, SC2034
* lib/colors: don't warn on unused variables
We assign a large number of variables here and they may or may not be used anywhere else, so disable SC2034 for this file (only).
Alsö disable SC2005 as the functions in this file were written before `printf` was invented and have to do some fancy metascripting to get escape sequences interpreted reliably. I’m not smart enough to fix this to use `printf`, so leave it for now.
* themes/agnoster: lint
* themes: disable SC2154 for colors
Each one of these themes will need it’s own fix for SC2154, possibly upstream.
Due to the way themes are, it's entirely normal to have a *lot* of false positives for SC2034. So much so, that I have to admit that it is probably just not worth linting for SC2034 despite my dislike of blanket ignore rules.
* themes: disable SC2154, fix SC2155
Each one of these themes will need it’s own fix for SC2154, possibly upstream.
Due to the way themes are, it's entirely normal to have a *lot* of false positives for SC2034. So much so, that I have to admit that it is probably just not worth linting for SC2034 despite my dislike of blanket ignore rules.
* Delete `.shellcheckrc`
* remove executable bit
Convert `var=${dirname $filename)` to `var="${filename%/*}` in cases where there is no ambiguity.
Make sure that the path in `$BASH_IT` is absolute because this path gets embedded in the template `.bash_profile` file if selected by the user.
If the user hasn't defined BASH_IT_LOG_LEVEL, then the integer comparison fails. Handle it by defaulting to '1'.
If lib/log is loaded improperly, the BASH_IT_LOG_PREFIX may be undefined. Unlikely, but no harm in handling it too.
Likewise, if no theme is loaded, then $echo_green, $echo_normal, et al are not defined.
Check if `brew` is installed every time, and *unset* `$BASH_IT_HOMEBREW_PREFIX` if not found. This accounts for the edge-case of a user _uninstalling_ Homebrew without restarting the shell.
New function `_bash_it_homebrew_check()` sets global variable `$BASH_IT_HOMEBREW_PREFIX` using `brew --prefix` if `brew` exists as a valid command. If `brew` isn't installed, then return failure.
Plugins can test for `brew` by calling this function and, if it succeeds, they can rely on `$BASH_IT_HOMEBREW_PREFIX` being defined properly.
Renamed the function to _bash-it_update_migrate_and_restart
Use pushd/popd instead of passing another parameter
Document the function so it will be clear that it does not return
* lib/helpers: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* plugins/osx: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* plugins/boot2docker: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* plugins/python: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* plugins/base: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
Alsö, use `[[` instead of `[` as the former has less insane argument handling being shell syntax rather than a builtin command that must emulate being a real binary
* completion/brew: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* completion/git: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
Alsö, use `[[` instead of `[`.
* completion/fabric: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `uname`
* theme/demula: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
* theme/rana: use `$OSTYPE` instead of `$(uname)`
Added a vendored lib loading routine in bash-it.sh
Added documentation on how to vendor libs in bash-it
Added and fixed plugins using preexec
Added tests for two plugins
Removed the old preexec lib
Found if this `${cache}` file doesn't exist, the single line conditional command would return false causing a `exit 1`.
This little change makes the conditional verbose and not cause a false return failing the function.
In e5b6869 (part of #1283), a regression was introduced, which caused
`bash-it reload` to return with the working directory set to
`.bash_it` and the original working directory discarded.
The root cause is the function wrapper of `bash-it reload`, which has
always relied on the working directory not to change during execution
of the wrapped code. This assumption no longer holds with the changes
introduced in #1283.
This commit fixes the regression by using `pushd`/`popd` in `bash-it
reload`.
Adding `--first-parent` ensures that only commits from the master branch
are used when showing the history. I've verified this change directly
by comparing the `rev-list` output for `703105c..97df5c45`:
```console
$ git rev-list --merges 703105c...97df5c4
97df5c4540b5976ada25
$ git rev-list --merges --first-parent 703105c...97df5c4
97df5c4540
```
Note: I've created this branch from 703105c so that I can merge `master`
into it and test `bash-it update` once merged.
This utilizes the body of the merged PR requests to show the commits
that are included in this update. It gives the user a chance to
decline the upgrades by pressing n or N.
* Extracting common utilities into utilities.bash
* Adding new tests for utilities
* Relocating the cache file to be under $BASH_IT
* Removing cache cleanup deferral code for now
* Wiping the cache in local_setup in tests.
This commit improves Bash-It search functionality in a couple of ways:
* bash-it search (with no arguments) will print detailed help.
* bash-it search now accepts terms prefixed with '@' sign, indicating an exact match.
* bash-it search now performs smarter caching of the component listings/status
New search syntax is as follows:
bash-it search [-|@]term1 [-|@]term2 [ --enable | --disable | --help ]
Added completion for reload.
Fixed order in completion
Added unit tests for completion
The variable BASH_IT_AUTOMATIC_RELOAD_AFTER_CONFIG_CHANGE has to be unset.
In order to make a swift comparison between the currently-installed
version vs the latest commits on `master`, emit a clickable URL that
will show the user the exact changes.
Signed-off-by: Mike Fiedler <miketheman@gmail.com>
This is an artifact left over from when this function was extracted from
inside a loop b524bb6047
However, `continue` isn't doing anything when not inside a loop and this
now raises a warning in bash 4.4:
"continue: only meaningful in a `for', `while', or `until' loop"