/bash_completion_historian

Experimental bash completion for historian

Primary LanguageShellMIT LicenseMIT

Historian Bash Completion

Incredibly basic bash completion for historian.

License: MIT

Usage

$ hist <tab>
config count import search shell version

See historian for more information on the different commands available to hist (historian), can also be retrieved via hist without arguments.

Download

$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jonasbn/bash_completion_historian/master/hist > hist

Installation

Where your completions are located might vary.

Personal

If you want to install them for your personal use, do the following.

Create the file: ~/.bash_completion, containing the code below:

for bcfile in ~/.bash_completion.d/* ; do
  . $bcfile
done

Ref: ServerFault.com: Standard place for user defined bash_completion.d scripts?

Create a directiory for your completions:

$ mkdir ~/.bash_completion.d

Copy your completions into the newly created directory:

$ cp hist ~/.bash_completion.d/

Start a new shell and you should be good to go.

System-wide example from Debian

Based on an introduction to bash completions on Debian.

$ sudo cp hist /etc/bash_completion.d/

System-wide example from OSX

This assumes you are using Homebrew

Do note that paths vary based on whether you are using bash 3 or 4

bash 3 (Formula: bash-completions):

$ cp hist /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/

And to activate right away:

$ source  /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/hist

bash 4 (Formula: bash-completions2)

$ cp hist /usr/local/share/bash-completion/completions/

And to activate right away:

$ source /usr/local/share/bash-completion/completions/hist

Motivation

I just fell over historian in a blog post on tools, playing around with it, might aswell implement a basic bash completion to level the learning curve (remembering stuff).

See Also

A more elaborate piece of documentation on bash completions is available from The Linux Documentation Project in the Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide.

From the GNU Documentation.

Good two-part article, "An Introduction to Bash Completion": Part 1 and Part 2.

Please note that this experimental implementation has only been tested with bash version 4.

The most comprehensive collection of bash completions I have come across is the one from the Debian Linux distribution. It is also the one offered for OSX via Homebrew.

License

This is made available under the MIT license, see separate license file.

Copyright

©️ jonasbn 2017