This patch adds very simple support for the Perforce SCM:
https://www.perforce.com/
Although perforce is proprietary software, it's somewhat prevalent in enterprise
companies. This patch looks to provide some basic bash_it functionality that
I've come to love for git. I base everything off of two perforce commands:
$ p4 set
This command does not require a connection the perforce server, it simply tells
us if a directory is managed by the Perforce SCM or not. In addition the
command:
$ p4 opened
is used to provide the list of pending changes in the client and the number of
opened files in the client. The `p4 opened` command requires a connection to the
perforce server, hence it's run under a `timeout` command. The "p4 opened"
processing into it's own bash file that now has to be sourced at the top-level
bash-it.sh. Since the processing in simple the newly added: _p4-opened-counts
function returns a number of things that are not currently used, but since I had
awk open and doing the processing, I've chosen to include them in the output
anyway.
Testing:
- Tested with the powerline-multiline theme in a few perforce based
workspaces/clients
- Ran:
❯ shellcheck themes/p4helpers.theme.bash
and fixed all the errors
- Ran the test suite:
❯ test/run
[...]
182 tests, 0 failures, 1 skipped
46 lines
1.2 KiB
Bash
46 lines
1.2 KiB
Bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
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function _p4-opened {
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timeout 2.0s p4 opened -s 2> /dev/null
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}
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function _p4-opened-counts {
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# Return the following counts seperated by tabs:
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# - count of opened files
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# - count of pending changesets (other than defaults)
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# - count of files in the default changeset
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# - count of opened files in add mode
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# - count of opened files in edit mode
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# - count of opened files in delete mode
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_p4-opened | awk '
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BEGIN {
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opened=0;
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type_array["edit"]=0;
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type_array["add"]=0;
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type_array["delete"]=0;
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change_array["change"]=0;
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}
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{
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# p4 opened prints one file per line, and all lines begin with "//"
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# Here is an examples:
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#
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# $ p4 opened
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# //depot/some/file.py#4 - edit change 716431 (text)
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# //depot/another/file.py - edit default change (text)
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# //now/add/a/newfile.sh - add change 435645 (text+k)
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#
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#
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if ($1 ~ /^\/\//) {
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opened += 1
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change_array[$5] += 1
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type_array[$3] += 1
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}
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}
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END {
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default_changes=change_array["change"];
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non_default_changes=length(change_array) - 1;
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print opened "\t" non_default_changes "\t" default_changes "\t" type_array["add"] "\t" type_array["edit"] "\t" type_array["delete"]
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}
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'
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}
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