add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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# This file is part of systemd.
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#
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# Copyright 2010 Ran Benita
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#
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# systemd is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
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# under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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# the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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# (at your option) any later version.
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#
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# systemd is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
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# WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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# General Public License for more details.
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#
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# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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# along with systemd; If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
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__systemctl() {
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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systemctl --full --no-legend "$@"
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2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
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}
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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__contains_word () {
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local word=$1; shift
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for w in $*; do [[ $w = $word ]] && return 0; done
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return 1
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}
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__filter_units_by_property () {
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local property=$1 value=$2 ; shift ; shift
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local -a units=( $* )
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2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
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local -a props=( $(__systemctl show --property "$property" -- ${units[*]} | grep -v ^$) )
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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for ((i=0; $i < ${#units[*]}; i++)); do
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if [[ "${props[i]}" = "$property=$value" ]]; then
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echo "${units[i]}"
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fi
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done
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}
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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__get_all_units () { __systemctl list-units --all | awk ' {print $1}' ; }
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__get_active_units () { __systemctl list-units | awk ' {print $1}' ; }
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__get_inactive_units () { __systemctl list-units --all | awk '$3 == "inactive" {print $1}' ; }
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__get_failed_units () { __systemctl list-units | awk '$3 == "failed" {print $1}' ; }
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__get_enabled_units () { __systemctl list-unit-files | awk '$2 == "enabled" {print $1}' ; }
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__get_disabled_units () { __systemctl list-unit-files | awk '$2 == "disabled" {print $1}' ; }
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__get_masked_units () { __systemctl list-unit-files | awk '$2 == "masked" {print $1}' ; }
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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_systemctl () {
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local cur=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD]} prev=${COMP_WORDS[COMP_CWORD-1]}
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local verb comps
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local -A OPTS=(
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2011-02-16 21:59:31 +01:00
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[STANDALONE]='--all -a --defaults --fail --ignore-dependencies --failed --force -f --full --global
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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--help -h --no-ask-password --no-block --no-legend --no-pager --no-reload --no-wall
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--order --require --quiet -q --privileged -P --system --user --version --runtime'
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[ARG]='--host -H --kill-mode --kill-who --property -p --signal -s --type -t --root'
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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)
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if __contains_word "$prev" ${OPTS[ARG]}; then
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case $prev in
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--signal|-s)
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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comps=$(compgen -A signal)
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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;;
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--type|-t)
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comps='automount device mount path service snapshot socket swap target timer'
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;;
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--kill-who)
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comps='all control main'
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;;
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--kill-mode)
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2011-03-29 23:31:38 +02:00
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comps='control-group process'
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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;;
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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--root)
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comps=$(compgen -A directory -- "$cur" )
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compopt -o filenames
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;;
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--host|-H)
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comps=$(compgen -A hostname)
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;;
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--property|-p)
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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comps=''
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;;
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esac
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COMPREPLY=( $(compgen -W "$comps" -- "$cur") )
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return 0
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fi
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if [[ "$cur" = -* ]]; then
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COMPREPLY=( $(compgen -W "${OPTS[*]}" -- "$cur") )
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return 0
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fi
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local -A VERBS=(
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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[ALL_UNITS]='is-active is-enabled status show mask preset'
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[ENABLED_UNITS]='disable reenable'
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[DISABLED_UNITS]='enable'
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add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
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[FAILED_UNITS]='reset-failed'
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2011-08-01 18:43:01 +02:00
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[STARTABLE_UNITS]='start'
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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[STOPPABLE_UNITS]='stop condstop kill try-restart condrestart'
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2011-04-08 04:29:20 +02:00
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[ISOLATABLE_UNITS]='isolate'
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
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[RELOADABLE_UNITS]='reload condreload reload-or-try-restart force-reload'
|
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[RESTARTABLE_UNITS]='restart reload-or-restart'
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[MASKED_UNITS]='unmask'
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
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[JOBS]='cancel'
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|
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[SNAPSHOTS]='delete'
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[ENVS]='set-environment unset-environment'
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2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
|
|
|
[STANDALONE]='daemon-reexec daemon-reload default dot dump
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|
|
|
emergency exit halt kexec list-jobs list-units
|
|
|
|
list-unit-files poweroff reboot rescue show-environment'
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
[NAME]='snapshot load'
|
2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
|
|
|
[FILE]='link'
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
for ((i=0; $i <= $COMP_CWORD; i++)); do
|
|
|
|
if __contains_word "${COMP_WORDS[i]}" ${VERBS[*]} &&
|
|
|
|
! __contains_word "${COMP_WORDS[i-1]}" ${OPTS[ARG}]}; then
|
|
|
|
verb=${COMP_WORDS[i]}
|
|
|
|
break
|
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
done
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
if [[ -z $verb ]]; then
|
|
|
|
comps="${VERBS[*]}"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[ALL_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __get_all_units )
|
|
|
|
|
2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[ENABLED_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __get_enabled_units )
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[DISABLED_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __get_disabled_units )
|
|
|
|
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[STARTABLE_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __filter_units_by_property CanStart yes \
|
|
|
|
$( __get_inactive_units | grep -Ev '\.(device|snapshot)$' ))
|
|
|
|
|
2011-08-01 18:43:01 +02:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[RESTARTABLE_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __filter_units_by_property CanStart yes \
|
|
|
|
$( __get_all_units | grep -Ev '\.(device|snapshot|socket|timer)$' ))
|
|
|
|
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[STOPPABLE_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __filter_units_by_property CanStop yes \
|
|
|
|
$( __get_active_units ) )
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[RELOADABLE_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __filter_units_by_property CanReload yes \
|
|
|
|
$( __get_active_units ) )
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[ISOLATABLE_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __filter_units_by_property AllowIsolate yes \
|
|
|
|
$( __get_all_units ) )
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[FAILED_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __get_failed_units )
|
|
|
|
|
2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[MASKED_UNITS]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( __get_masked_units )
|
|
|
|
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[STANDALONE]} ${VERBS[NAME]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[JOBS]}; then
|
2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
|
|
|
comps=$( __systemctl list-jobs | awk '{print $1}' )
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[SNAPSHOTS]}; then
|
2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
|
|
|
comps=$( __systemctl list-units --type snapshot --full --all | awk '{print $1}' )
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[ENVS]}; then
|
2011-10-12 02:56:53 +02:00
|
|
|
comps=$( __systemctl show-environment | sed 's_\([^=]\+=\).*_\1_' )
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
compopt -o nospace
|
2011-11-02 09:48:49 +01:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
elif __contains_word "$verb" ${VERBS[FILE]}; then
|
|
|
|
comps=$( compgen -A file -- "$cur" )
|
|
|
|
compopt -o filenames
|
add bash completion for systemctl --system
I've been playing recently with systemd on Arch, and had much fun. But
soon, alas, my fingers started to ache from repeatedly writing
systemctl restart some-long-service.service. So, I wrote a completion
script. I figured other people may want to use it, so I prepared a
patch against systemd-git (attached).
There are some notes/disclaimers, however:
- It requires bash>=4.0, sed, grep and awk. A bash-completion package
is not strictly needed; sourcing the file is enough.
- It wouldn't work properly with --session, as I had no way to test it.
- It uses the output of systemctl list-units directly when that's
enough, but also runs systemctl show when completing on some verbs
(for example, to check for AllowIsolate=yes). This /may/ be somewhat
slow once there are many units, since it calls a dbus method on each
one. Is there a faster way to have that information?
- The code is perhaps a bit long and messy; honestly, I blame the tool ;)
One way to improve on the situation is to integrate some completion
code in systemctl itself, the way e.g. gdbus, gsettings and django do
it. This will allow for finer grained and faster completions, and it
won't be necessary to keep the verb/option tables in sync with some
other file. But it does mean adding all of this code in C. If this is
acceptable, I'll try to have a go at it.
Finally, a couple of completion tips I run into:
- If you alias systemctl to, say, sctl, you get completions on that
too by running to following command:
complete -F _systemctl sctl
- Add the following line to your .inputrc, to have the completion show
after only a single tab press:
set show-all-if-ambiguous on
It makes the shell quite more pleasant.
Hope it's good enough!
Ran
2010-11-09 00:03:27 +01:00
|
|
|
fi
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
COMPREPLY=( $(compgen -W "$comps" -- "$cur") )
|
|
|
|
return 0
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
complete -F _systemctl systemctl
|