#!/bin/bash # # Bash completion generated for '{{name}}' at {{date}}. # # The original template lives here: # https://github.com/trentm/node-dashdash/blob/master/etc/dashdash.bash_completion.in # # # Copyright 2016 Trent Mick # Copyright 2016 Joyent, Inc. # # # A generic Bash completion driver script. # # This is meant to provide a re-usable chunk of Bash to use for # "etc/bash_completion.d/" files for individual tools. Only the "Configuration" # section with tool-specific info need differ. Features: # # - support for short and long opts # - support for knowing which options take arguments # - support for subcommands (e.g. 'git log ' to show just options for the # log subcommand) # - does the right thing with "--" to stop options # - custom optarg and arg types for custom completions # - (TODO) support for shells other than Bash (tcsh, zsh, fish?, etc.) # # # Examples/design: # # 1. Bash "default" completion. By default Bash's 'complete -o default' is # enabled. That means when there are no completions (e.g. if no opts match # the current word), then you'll get Bash's default completion. Most notably # that means you get filename completion. E.g.: # $ tool ./ # $ tool READ # # 2. all opts and subcmds: # $ tool # $ tool -v # assuming '-v' doesn't take an arg # $ tool - # matching opts # $ git lo # matching subcmds # # Long opt completions are given *without* the '=', i.e. we prefer space # separated because that's easier for good completions. # # 3. long opt arg with '=' # $ tool --file= # $ tool --file=./d # We maintain the "--file=" prefix. Limitation: With the attached prefix # the 'complete -o filenames' doesn't know to do dirname '/' suffixing. Meh. # # 4. envvars: # $ tool $ # $ tool $P # Limitation: Currently only getting exported vars, so we miss "PS1" and # others. # # 5. Defer to other completion in a subshell: # $ tool --file $(cat ./ # We get this from 'complete -o default ...'. # # 6. Custom completion types from a provided bash function. # $ tool --profile # complete available "profiles" # # # Dev Notes: # - compgen notes, from http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/151118/understand-compgen-builtin-command # - https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Programmable-Completion-Builtins.html # # Debugging this completion: # 1. Uncomment the "_{{name}}_log_file=..." line. # 2. 'tail -f /var/tmp/dashdash-completion.log' in one terminal. # 3. Re-source this bash completion file. #_{{name}}_log=/var/tmp/dashdash-completion.log function _{{name}}_completer { # ---- cmd definition {{spec}} # ---- locals declare -a argv # ---- support functions function trace { [[ -n "$_{{name}}_log" ]] && echo "$*" >&2 } function _dashdash_complete { local idx context idx=$1 context=$2 local shortopts longopts optargs subcmds allsubcmds argtypes shortopts="$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_shortopts}")" longopts="$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_longopts}")" optargs="$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_optargs}")" subcmds="$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_subcmds}")" allsubcmds="$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_allsubcmds}")" IFS=', ' read -r -a argtypes <<< "$(eval "echo \${cmd${context}_argtypes}")" trace "" trace "_dashdash_complete(idx=$idx, context=$context)" trace " shortopts: $shortopts" trace " longopts: $longopts" trace " optargs: $optargs" trace " subcmds: $subcmds" trace " allsubcmds: $allsubcmds" # Get 'state' of option parsing at this COMP_POINT. # Copying "dashdash.js#parse()" behaviour here. local state= local nargs=0 local i=$idx local argtype local optname local prefix local word local dashdashseen= while [[ $i -lt $len && $i -le $COMP_CWORD ]]; do argtype= optname= prefix= word= arg=${argv[$i]} trace " consider argv[$i]: '$arg'" if [[ "$arg" == "--" && $i -lt $COMP_CWORD ]]; then trace " dashdash seen" dashdashseen=yes state=arg word=$arg elif [[ -z "$dashdashseen" && "${arg:0:2}" == "--" ]]; then arg=${arg:2} if [[ "$arg" == *"="* ]]; then optname=${arg%%=*} val=${arg##*=} trace " long opt: optname='$optname' val='$val'" state=arg argtype=$(echo "$optargs" | awk -F "-$optname=" '{print $2}' | cut -d' ' -f1) word=$val prefix="--$optname=" else optname=$arg val= trace " long opt: optname='$optname'" state=longopt word=--$optname if [[ "$optargs" == *"-$optname="* && $i -lt $COMP_CWORD ]]; then i=$(( $i + 1 )) state=arg argtype=$(echo "$optargs" | awk -F "-$optname=" '{print $2}' | cut -d' ' -f1) word=${argv[$i]} trace " takes arg (consume argv[$i], word='$word')" fi fi elif [[ -z "$dashdashseen" && "${arg:0:1}" == "-" ]]; then trace " short opt group" state=shortopt word=$arg local j=1 while [[ $j -lt ${#arg} ]]; do optname=${arg:$j:1} trace " consider index $j: optname '$optname'" if [[ "$optargs" == *"-$optname="* ]]; then argtype=$(echo "$optargs" | awk -F "-$optname=" '{print $2}' | cut -d' ' -f1) if [[ $(( $j + 1 )) -lt ${#arg} ]]; then state=arg word=${arg:$(( $j + 1 ))} trace " takes arg (rest of this arg, word='$word', argtype='$argtype')" elif [[ $i -lt $COMP_CWORD ]]; then state=arg i=$(( $i + 1 )) word=${argv[$i]} trace " takes arg (word='$word', argtype='$argtype')" fi break fi j=$(( $j + 1 )) done elif [[ $i -lt $COMP_CWORD && -n "$arg" ]] && $(echo "$allsubcmds" | grep -w "$arg" >/dev/null); then trace " complete subcmd: recurse _dashdash_complete" _dashdash_complete $(( $i + 1 )) "${context}__${arg/-/_}" return else trace " not an opt or a complete subcmd" state=arg word=$arg nargs=$(( $nargs + 1 )) if [[ ${#argtypes[@]} -gt 0 ]]; then argtype="${argtypes[$(( $nargs - 1 ))]}" if [[ -z "$argtype" ]]; then # If we have more args than argtypes, we use the # last type. argtype="${argtypes[@]: -1:1}" fi fi fi trace " state=$state prefix='$prefix' word='$word'" i=$(( $i + 1 )) done trace " parsed: state=$state optname='$optname' argtype='$argtype' prefix='$prefix' word='$word' dashdashseen=$dashdashseen" local compgen_opts= if [[ -n "$prefix" ]]; then compgen_opts="$compgen_opts -P $prefix" fi case $state in shortopt) compgen $compgen_opts -W "$shortopts $longopts" -- "$word" ;; longopt) compgen $compgen_opts -W "$longopts" -- "$word" ;; arg) # If we don't know what completion to do, then emit nothing. We # expect that we are running with: # complete -o default ... # where "default" means: "Use Readline's default completion if # the compspec generates no matches." This gives us the good filename # completion, completion in subshells/backticks. # # We cannot support an argtype="directory" because # compgen -S '/' -A directory -- "$word" # doesn't give a satisfying result. It doesn't stop at the trailing '/' # so you cannot descend into dirs. if [[ "${word:0:1}" == '$' ]]; then # By default, Bash will complete '$' to all envvars. Apparently # 'complete -o default' does *not* give us that. The following # gets *close* to the same completions: '-A export' misses envvars # like "PS1". trace " completing envvars" compgen $compgen_opts -P '$' -A export -- "${word:1}" elif [[ -z "$argtype" ]]; then # Only include opts in completions if $word is not empty. # This is to avoid completing the leading '-', which foils # using 'default' completion. if [[ -n "$dashdashseen" ]]; then trace " completing subcmds, if any (no argtype, dashdash seen)" compgen $compgen_opts -W "$subcmds" -- "$word" elif [[ -z "$word" ]]; then trace " completing subcmds, if any (no argtype, empty word)" compgen $compgen_opts -W "$subcmds" -- "$word" else trace " completing opts & subcmds (no argtype)" compgen $compgen_opts -W "$shortopts $longopts $subcmds" -- "$word" fi elif [[ $argtype == "none" ]]; then # We want *no* completions, i.e. some way to get the active # 'complete -o default' to not do filename completion. trace " completing 'none' (hack to imply no completions)" echo "##-no-completion- -results-##" elif [[ $argtype == "file" ]]; then # 'complete -o default' gives the best filename completion, at least # on Mac. trace " completing 'file' (let 'complete -o default' handle it)" echo "" elif ! type complete_$argtype 2>/dev/null >/dev/null; then trace " completing '$argtype' (fallback to default b/c complete_$argtype is unknown)" echo "" else trace " completing custom '$argtype'" completions=$(complete_$argtype "$word") if [[ -z "$completions" ]]; then trace " no custom '$argtype' completions" # These are in ascii and "dictionary" order so they sort # correctly. echo "##-no-completion- -results-##" else echo $completions fi fi ;; *) trace " unknown state: $state" ;; esac } trace "" trace "-- $(date)" #trace "\$IFS: '$IFS'" #trace "\$@: '$@'" #trace "COMP_WORDBREAKS: '$COMP_WORDBREAKS'" trace "COMP_CWORD: '$COMP_CWORD'" trace "COMP_LINE: '$COMP_LINE'" trace "COMP_POINT: $COMP_POINT" # Guard against negative COMP_CWORD. This is a Bash bug at least on # Mac 10.10.4's bash. See # . if [[ $COMP_CWORD -lt 0 ]]; then trace "abort on negative COMP_CWORD" exit 1; fi # I don't know how to do array manip on argv vars, # so copy over to argv array to work on them. shift # the leading '--' i=0 len=$# while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do argv[$i]=$1 shift; i=$(( $i + 1 )) done trace "argv: '${argv[@]}'" trace "argv[COMP_CWORD-1]: '${argv[$(( $COMP_CWORD - 1 ))]}'" trace "argv[COMP_CWORD]: '${argv[$COMP_CWORD]}'" trace "argv len: '$len'" _dashdash_complete 1 "" } # ---- mainline # Note: This if-block to help work with 'compdef' and 'compctl' is # adapted from 'npm completion'. if type complete &>/dev/null; then function _{{name}}_completion { local _log_file=/dev/null [[ -z "$_{{name}}_log" ]] || _log_file="$_{{name}}_log" COMPREPLY=($(COMP_CWORD="$COMP_CWORD" \ COMP_LINE="$COMP_LINE" \ COMP_POINT="$COMP_POINT" \ _{{name}}_completer -- "${COMP_WORDS[@]}" \ 2>$_log_file)) || return $? } complete -o default -F _{{name}}_completion {{name}} elif type compdef &>/dev/null; then function _{{name}}_completion { local _log_file=/dev/null [[ -z "$_{{name}}_log" ]] || _log_file="$_{{name}}_log" compadd -- $(COMP_CWORD=$((CURRENT-1)) \ COMP_LINE=$BUFFER \ COMP_POINT=0 \ _{{name}}_completer -- "${words[@]}" \ 2>$_log_file) } compdef _{{name}}_completion {{name}} elif type compctl &>/dev/null; then function _{{name}}_completion { local cword line point words si read -Ac words read -cn cword let cword-=1 read -l line read -ln point local _log_file=/dev/null [[ -z "$_{{name}}_log" ]] || _log_file="$_{{name}}_log" reply=($(COMP_CWORD="$cword" \ COMP_LINE="$line" \ COMP_POINT="$point" \ _{{name}}_completer -- "${words[@]}" \ 2>$_log_file)) || return $? } compctl -K _{{name}}_completion {{name}} fi ## ## This is a Bash completion file for the '{{name}}' command. You can install ## with either: ## ## cp FILE /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/{{name}} # Mac ## cp FILE /etc/bash_completion.d/{{name}} # Linux ## ## or: ## ## cp FILE > ~/.{{name}}.completion ## echo "source ~/.{{name}}.completion" >> ~/.bashrc ##