@fvictorio/tabtab
v0.0.3
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tab completion helpers, for node cli programs. Inspired by npm completion.
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@pnpm/tabtab
A node package to do some custom command line <tab><tab>
completion for any
system command, for Bash, Zsh, and Fish shells.
Made possible using the same technique as npm (whose completion is quite awesome) relying on a shell script bridge to do the actual completion from node's land.
Warning / Breaking changes
- Windows is not supported
- Cache has been removed
- Now only support node
> 7.10.1
, for previous version with support for node 6 be sure to use tabtab2.2.x
Table of Contents
Goal of this 3.0.0 version
Simplify everything, major overhaul, rewrite from scratch.
Functional, less abstraction, clearer documentation, good test coverage, support for node 10 without babel.
Up to date dependencies, easier to debug, easier to test.
Should still support bash, zsh and fish but bash is the primary focus of this alpha version.
No binary file anymore, just a library (still debating with myself)
The goal of this rewrite is two-folded:
- Integrate nicely with yo (Yeoman)
- Have a robust and fast enough library for yarn-completions
Installation
pnpm add @pnpm/tabtab
Usage
Writing completion is a two-step process: Installation and Logging. Tabtab provides just that.
Here is a basic example using minimist to parse arguments.
#! /usr/bin/env node
const tabtab = require('@pnpm/tabtab');
const opts = require('minimist')(process.argv.slice(2), {
string: ['foo', 'bar'],
boolean: ['help', 'version', 'loglevel']
});
const args = opts._;
const completion = env => {
if (!env.complete) return;
// Write your completions there
if (env.prev === 'foo') {
return tabtab.log(['is', 'this', 'the', 'real', 'life']);
}
if (env.prev === 'bar') {
return tabtab.log(['is', 'this', 'just', 'fantasy']);
}
if (env.prev === '--loglevel') {
return tabtab.log(['error', 'warn', 'info', 'notice', 'verbose']);
}
return tabtab.log([
'--help',
'--version',
'--loglevel',
'foo',
'bar',
'install-completion',
'completion',
'someCommand:someCommand is some kind of command with a description',
{
name: 'someOtherCommand:hey',
description: 'You must add a description for items with ":" in them'
},
'anotherOne'
]);
};
const run = async () => {
const cmd = args[0];
// Write your CLI there
// Here we install for the program `tabtab-test` (this file), with
// completer being the same program. Sometimes, you want to complete
// another program that's where the `completer` option might come handy.
if (cmd === 'install-completion') {
await tabtab
.install({
name: 'tabtab-test',
completer: 'tabtab-test'
})
.catch(err => console.error('INSTALL ERROR', err));
return;
}
if (cmd === 'uninstall-completion') {
// Here we uninstall for the program `tabtab-test` (this file).
await tabtab
.uninstall({
name: 'tabtab-test'
})
.catch(err => console.error('UNINSTALL ERROR', err));
return;
}
// The completion command is added automatically by tabtab when the program
// is completed.
if (cmd === 'completion') {
const env = tabtab.parseEnv(process.env);
return completion(env);
}
};
run();
Please refer to the examples/tabtab-test-complete package for a working example. The following usage documentation is based on it.
1. Install completion
To enable completion for a given program or package, you must enable the
completion on your or user's system. This is done by calling tabtab.install()
usually behind a program install-completion
command or something similar.
// Here we install for the program `tabtab-test`, with completer being the same
// program. Sometimes, you want to complete another program that's where the
// `completer` option might come handy.
tabtab.install({
name: 'tabtab-test',
completer: 'tabtab-test'
})
.then(() => console.log('Completion installed'))
.catch(err => console.error(err))
The method returns a promise, so await / async
usage is possible. It takes an
options
parameter, with:
name
: The program to completecompleter
: The program that does the completion (can be the same program).
tabtab.install()
will ask the user which SHELL to use, and optionally a path
to write to. This will add a new line to either ~/.bashrc
, ~/.zshrc
or
~/.config/fish/config.fish
file to source tabtab completion script.
Only one line will be added, even if it is called multiple times.
2. Log completion
Once the completion is enabled and active, you can write completions for the
program (here, in this example tabtab-test
). Briefly, adding completions is
as simple as logging output to stdout
, with a few particularities (namely on
Bash, and for descriptions), but this is taken care of by tabtab.log()
.
tabtab.log([
'--help',
'--version',
'command'
'command-two'
]);
This is the simplest way of adding completions. You can also use an object,
instead of a simple string, with { name, description }
property if you want
to add descriptions for each completion item, for the shells that support them
(like Zsh or Fish). Or use the simpler name:description
form.
tabtab.log([
{ name: 'command', description: 'Description for command' },
'command-two:Description for command-two'
]);
The { name, description }
approach is preferable in case you have completion
items with :
in them.
Note that you can call tabtab.log()
multiple times if you prefer to do so, it
simply logs to the console in sequence.
Filesystem completion
If you have a parameter that expects a path to some file, you could want to let the shell use its native autocompletion. This saves you the work of writing custom filesystem autocomplete logic. Plus, the native autocomplete has a better handling of things like dircolors or hidden files.
To trigger the filesystem completion, use tabtab.logFiles()
without any
argument.
if (previousFlag === '--file') {
tabtab.logFiles();
}
3. Parsing env
If you ever want to add more intelligent completion, you'll need to check and
see what is the last or previous word in the completed line, so that you can
add options for a specific command or flag (such as loglevels for --loglevel
for instance).
Tabtab adds a few environment variables for you to inspect and use, this is
done by calling tabtab.parseEnv()
method.
const env = tabtab.parseEnv(process.env);
// env:
//
// - complete A Boolean indicating whether we act in "plumbing mode" or not
// - words The Number of words in the completed line
// - point A Number indicating cursor position
// - line The String input line
// - partial The String part of line preceding cursor position
// - last The last String word of the line
// - lastPartial The last word String of partial
// - prev The String word preceding last
Usually, you'll want to check against env.last
or env.prev
.
if (env.prev === '--loglevel') {
tabtab.log(['error', 'warn', 'info', 'notice', 'verbose']);
}
Completion mechanism
Feel free to browse the scripts directory to inspect the various
template files used when creating a completion with tabtab.install()
.
Here is a Bash completion snippet created by tabtab.
###-begin-tabtab-test-completion-###
if type complete &>/dev/null; then
_tabtab-test_completion () {
local words cword
if type _get_comp_words_by_ref &>/dev/null; then
_get_comp_words_by_ref -n = -n @ -n : -w words -i cword
else
cword="$COMP_CWORD"
words=("${COMP_WORDS[@]}")
fi
local si="$IFS"
IFS=$'\n' COMPREPLY=($(COMP_CWORD="$cword" \
COMP_LINE="$COMP_LINE" \
COMP_POINT="$COMP_POINT" \
tabtab-test completion -- "${words[@]}" \
2>/dev/null)) || return $?
IFS="$si"
if type __ltrim_colon_completions &>/dev/null; then
__ltrim_colon_completions "${words[cword]}"
fi
}
complete -o default -F _tabtab-test_completion tabtab-test
fi
###-end-tabtab-test-completion-###
The system is quite simple (though hard to nail it down, thank you npm). A new
Bash function is created, which is invoked whenever tabtab-test
is tab
completed. This function then invokes the completer tabtab-test completion
with COMP_CWORD
, COMP_LINE
and COMP_POINT
environment variables (which is
parsed by tabtab.parseEnv()
).
The same mechanism can be applied to Zsh and Fish.
Completion install
As described in the Usage > Install Completion
section, installing a completion involves adding a new line to source in either
~/.bashrc
, ~/.zshrc
or ~/.config/fish/config.fish
file.
In the 3.0.0
version, it has been improved to only add a single line instead
of multiple ones, one for each completion package installed on the system.
This way, a single line is added to enable the completion of for various programs without cluttering the Shell configuration file.
Example for ~/.bashrc
# tabtab source for packages
# uninstall by removing these lines
[ -f ~/.config/tabtab/__tabtab.bash ] && . ~/.config/tabtab/__tabtab.bash || true
It'll load a file __tabtab.bash
, created in the ~/.config/tabtab
directory,
which will hold all the source lines for each tabtab packages defining a
completion.
# tabtab source for foo package
# uninstall by removing these lines
[ -f ~/.config/tabtab/foo.bash ] && . ~/.config/tabtab/foo.bash || true
# tabtab source for tabtab-test package
# uninstall by removing these lines
[ -f ~/.config/tabtab/tabtab-test.bash ] && . ~/.config/tabtab/tabtab-test.bash || true
Completion uninstall
You can follow the file added in your SHELL configuration file and disable a completion by removing the above lines.
Or simply disable tabtab by removing the line in your SHELL configuration file.
Or, you can use tabtab.uninstall()
to do this for you.
if (cmd === 'uninstall-completion') {
// Here we uninstall for the program `tabtab-test`
await tabtab
.uninstall({
name: 'tabtab-test'
})
.catch(err => console.error('UNINSTALL ERROR', err));
return;
}
Debugging
tabtab internally logs a lot of things, using the debug package.
When testing a completion, it can be useful to see those logs, but writing to
stdout
or stderr
while completing something can be troublesome.
You can use the TABTAB_DEBUG
environment variable to specify a file to log to
instead.
export TABTAB_DEBUG="/tmp/tabtab.log"
tail -f /tmp/tabtab.log
# in another shell
tabtab-test <tab>
See tabtabDebug.js file for details.
API Documentation
Please refer to api directory to see generated documentation (using jsdoc2md)
Changelog
Please refer to CHANGELOG file to see all possible changes to this project.
Credits
npm does pretty amazing stuff with its completion feature. bash and zsh provides command tab-completion, which allow you to complete the names of commands in your $path. usually these functions means bash scripting, and in the case of npm, it is partially true.
there is a special npm completion
command you may want to look around,
if not already.
npm completion
running this should dump this
script
to the console. this script works with both bash/zsh and map the correct
completion functions to the npm executable. these functions takes care
of parsing the comp_*
variables available when hitting tab to complete
a command, set them up as environment variables and run the npm
completion
command followed by -- words
where words match value of
the command being completed.
this means that using this technique npm manage to perform bash/zsh completion using node and javascript. actually, the comprehensiveness of npm completion is quite amazing.
this whole package/module is based entirely on npm's code and @isaacs work.
mit · > mklabs.github.io · > @mklabs