# i for insensitive. the rest from
# X means dont remove the current screenworth of output upon exit
# R means to show colors n things
+# a useful flag is -F aka --quit-if-one-screen
export LESS=RXij12
export SYSTEMD_LESS=$LESS
fi
fi
-# based on readme.debian. dunno if this will break on other distros.
-if [[ -s /usr/share/wcd/wcd-include.sh ]]; then
- source /usr/share/wcd/wcd-include.sh
-fi
+
mysrc() {
mysrc /a/bin/small-misc-bash/ll-function
mysrc /a/bin/distro-functions/src/package-manager-abstractions
+# things to remember:
+# ALT-C - cd into the selected directory
+# CTRL-T - Paste the selected file path into the command line
+#
+# good guide to some of its basic features is the readme file
+# https://github.com/junegunn/fzf
+if [[ -s /usr/share/doc/fzf/examples/key-bindings.bash ]]; then
+ source /usr/share/doc/fzf/examples/key-bindings.bash
+fi
# * functions
-ccomp() { # copy completion
- local src=$1
- local c
+
+### begin FSF section ###
+
+# Comments before functions are meant to be good useful
+# documentation. If they fail at that, please improve them or send Ian a
+# note.
+
+## copy bash completion
+# Usage: ORIGINAL_COMMAND TARGET_COMMAND...
+#
+# It copies how the bash completion works from one command to other
+# commands.
+ccomp() {
+ local c src
+ src=$1
shift
if ! c=$(complete -p $src 2>/dev/null); then
_completion_loader $src &>/dev/null ||:
eval $c $*
}
+## directory history tracking and navigation.
+#
+# cd becomes a function, also aliased to c. b to go back, f to go
+# forward, cl to list recent directories and choose one.
+#
+# The finer details you may want to skip:
+#
+# We also define bl to print the list of back and forward directories.
+#
+# We keep 2 stacks, forward and back. Unlike with a web browser, the
+# forward stack is not erased when going somewhere new.
+#
+# Recent directories are stored in ~/.cdirs.
+#
+declare -a _dir_forward _dir_back
+c() {
+ # normally, the top of _dir_back is our current dir. if it isn't,
+ # put it on there, except we don't want to do that when we
+ # just launched a shell
+ if [[ $OLDPWD ]]; then
+ if (( ${#_dir_back[@]} == 0 )) || [[ ${_dir_back[-1]} != "$PWD" ]]; then
+ _dir_back+=("$PWD")
+ fi
+ fi
+ command cd "$@"
+ if (( ${#_dir_back[@]} == 0 )) || [[ ${_dir_back[-1]} != "$PWD" ]]; then
+ _dir_back+=("$PWD")
+ fi
+ echo "$PWD" >> ~/.cdirs
+}
+ccomp cd c
+
+# back
+b() {
+ local top_back
+ if (( ${#_dir_back[@]} == 0 )); then
+ echo "nothing left to go back to" >&2
+ return 0
+ fi
+ top_back="${_dir_back[-1]}"
+
+ if [[ $top_back == "$PWD" ]] && (( ${#_dir_back[@]} == 1 )); then
+ echo "already on last back entry" >&2
+ return 0
+ fi
+
+
+ if [[ $top_back == "$PWD" ]]; then
+ # add to dirf if not already there
+ if (( ${#_dir_forward[@]} == 0 )) || [[ ${_dir_forward[-1]} != "$top_back" ]]; then
+ _dir_forward+=("$top_back")
+ fi
+ unset "_dir_back[-1]"
+ command cd "${_dir_back[-1]}"
+ else
+ if (( ${#_dir_forward[@]} == 0 )) || [[ ${_dir_forward[-1]} != "$PWD" ]]; then
+ _dir_forward+=("$PWD")
+ fi
+ command cd "$top_back"
+ fi
+
+ # Interesting feature, not sure I want it.
+ # give us a peek at what is next in the list
+ # if (( ${#_dir_back[@]} >= 2 )); then
+ # printf "%s\n" "${_dir_back[-2]}"
+ # fi
+ #
+
+ # c/b/f Implementation notes:
+ #
+ # The top of the back is $PWD
+ # as long as the last directory change was due to c,b,or cl.
+ #
+ # Example of stack changes:
+ #
+ # a b c (d)
+ ## back
+ # a b (c)
+ # d
+ #back
+ #a (b)
+ #d c
+ #back
+ #(a)
+ #d c b
+ #forward
+ #a (b)
+ #d c
+ #
+ # a b c
+ ## back
+ # a b
+ # (c)
+ ## forward
+
+}
+# forward
+f() {
+ local top_forward
+ if (( ${#_dir_forward[@]} == 0 )); then
+ echo "no forward dir left" >&2
+ return 0
+ fi
+ top_forward="${_dir_forward[-1]}"
+ unset "_dir_forward[-1]"
+ c "$top_forward"
+
+ # give us a peek at what is next in the list
+ # if (( ${#_dir_forward[@]} )); then
+ # printf "%s\n" "${_dir_forward[-1]}"
+ # fi
+}
+# cd list
+cl() {
+ local i line input start
+ local -A buttondirs alines
+ local -a buttons dirs lines
+ buttons=( {a..z} {2..9} )
+ if [[ ! -s ~/.cdirs ]]; then
+ echo nothing in ~/.cdirs
+ return 0
+ fi
+
+ i=0
+
+ mapfile -t lines <~/.cdirs
+ start=$(( ${#lines[@]} - 1 ))
+
+ # we have ~33 buttons as of this writing, so lets
+ # prune down the history every once in a while.
+ if (( start > 500 )); then
+ tac ~/.cdirs | awk '!seen[$0]++' | head -n 200 | tac | sponge ~/.cdirs || [[ $? == 141 ]]
+ fi
+
+ for (( j=$start; j >= 0; j-- )); do
+ line="${lines[$j]}"
+ if [[ ! $line || ${alines[$line]} || ! -d "$line" || $line == "$PWD" || line == "$HOME" ]]; then
+ continue
+ fi
+ alines[$line]=t
+ buttondirs[${buttons[i]}]="$line"
+ printf "%s %s\n" ${buttons[i]} "$line"
+ if (( i == ${#buttons[@]} - 1 )); then
+ break
+ fi
+ i=$(( i + 1 ))
+ done
+
+ if (( i == 0 )); then
+ echo "no dirs in ~/.cdirs"
+ return 0
+ fi
+ read -r -N 1 input
+ if [[ $input != $'\n' ]]; then
+ c "${buttondirs[$input]}"
+ fi
+}
+# back list
+bl() {
+ local start i j max
+ max=10
+ start=$(( ${#_dir_back[@]} - 1 ))
+
+ # cleanup possible repeating of pwd
+ if (( start >= 0 )) && [[ ${_dir_back[$start]} == "$PWD" ]]; then
+ start=$(( start - 1 ))
+ fi
+ j=1
+ if (( start >= 0 )); then
+ for (( i=$start; i >= 0 ; i-- )); do
+ printf "%s %s\n" $j ${_dir_back[i]}
+ j=$(( j + 1 ))
+ if (( j >= max )); then
+ break
+ fi
+ done
+ fi
+
+ max=10
+ start=$(( ${#_dir_forward[@]} - 1 ))
+
+ # cleanup possible repeating of pwd
+ if (( start >= 0 )) && [[ ${_dir_forward[$start]} == "$PWD" ]]; then
+ start=$(( start - 1 ))
+ fi
+ if (( start < 0 )); then
+ return 0
+ fi
+ echo --
+ j=1
+ for (( i=$start; i >= 0 ; i-- )); do
+ printf "%s %s\n" $j ${_dir_forward[i]}
+ j=$(( j + 1 ))
+ if (( j >= max )); then
+ break
+ fi
+ done
+}
+
+# pee do. run args as a command with output copied to syslog.
+#
+# Usage: pd [-t TAG] COMMAND...
+#
+# -t TAG Override the tag in the syslog. The default is COMMAND with
+# any path part is removed, eg. for /bin/cat the tag is cat.
+#
+# You can view the log via "journalctl -t TAG"
+pd() {
+ local tag ret
+ ret=0
+ tag=${1##*/}
+ case $1 in
+ -t) tag="$2"; shift 2 ;;
+ esac
+ echo "PWD=$PWD command: $*" | logger -t $tag
+ "$@" |& pee cat "logger -t $tag" || ret=$?
+ echo "exited with status=$ret" | pee cat "logger -t $tag"
+ # this avoids any err-catch
+ (( $ret == 0 )) || return $ret
+}
+ccomp time pd
+
+# jdo = journal do. Run command as transient systemd service, tailing
+# its output in the journal until it completes.
+#
+# Usage: jdo COMMAND...
+#
+# Compared to pd: commands recognize this is a non-interactive shell.
+# The service is unaffected if our ssh connection dies, no need to run
+# in screen or tmux.
+#
+# Note: The last few lines of any existing entries for a unit by that
+# name will be output first, and there will be a few second delay at the
+# start of the command, and a second or so at the end.
+#
+# Note: Functions and aliases obviously won't work, we resolve the
+# command to a file.
+#
+# Note: requires running as root.
+jdo() {
+ local cmd cmd_name jr_pid ret
+ ret=0
+ cmd="$1"
+ shift
+ if [[ $EUID != 0 ]]; then
+ echo "jdo: error: rerun as root"
+ return 1
+ fi
+ cmd_name=${cmd##*/}
+ if [[ $cmd != /* ]]; then
+ cmd=$(type -P "$cmd")
+ fi
+ # -q = quiet
+ journalctl -qn2 -f -u "$cmd_name" &
+ # Trial and error of time needed to avoid missing initial lines.
+ # .5 was not reliable. 1 was not reliable. 2 was not reliable
+ sleep 4
+ jr_pid=$!
+ systemd-run --unit "$cmd_name" --wait --collect "$cmd" "$@" || ret=$?
+ # The sleep lets the journal output its last line
+ # before the prompt comes up.
+ sleep .5
+ kill $jr_pid &>/dev/null ||:
+ unset jr_pid
+ fg &>/dev/null ||:
+ # this avoids any err-catch
+ (( $ret == 0 )) || return $ret
+}
+ccomp time jdo
+#### end fsf section
+
..() { c ..; }
...() { c ../..; }
done
-b() {
- # backwards
- c -
-}
-
hexipv4() {
printf '%d.%d.%d.%d\n' $(echo $1 | sed 's/../0x& /g')
}
echo "print( ($1 $(date +%z | sed -r 's/..$//;s/^(-?)0*/\1/')) % 24)"|python3
}
-# c. better cd
-if type -p wcd &>/dev/null; then
- if [[ $LC_INSIDE_EMACS ]]; then
- c() { wcd -c -z 50 -o "$@"; }
- else
- # lets see what the fancy terminal does from time to time
- c() { wcd -c -z 50 "$@"; }
- fi
-else
- c() { cd "$@"; }
-fi
-ccomp cd c
+bwm() {
+ s bwm-ng -T avg -d
+}
+
+
+# for running in a fai rescue. iank specific.
+kdrescue() {
+ d=vgata-Samsung_SSD_850_EVO_2TB_S2RLNX0J502123D
+ for f in $d vgata-Samsung_SSD_870_QVO_8TB_S5VUNG0N900656V; do
+ cryptsetup luksOpen --key-file /p /dev/$f/root crypt-$f-root
+ cryptsetup luksOpen --key-file /p /dev/$f/o crypt-$f-o
+ done
+ mount -o subvol=root_trisquelaramo /dev/mapper/crypt-$d-root /mnt
+ mount -o subvol=a /dev/mapper/crypt-$d-root /mnt/a
+ mount -o subvol=o /dev/mapper/crypt-$d-o /mnt/o
+ mount -o subvol=boot_trisquelaramo /dev/sda2 /mnt/boot
+ cd /mnt
+ chrbind
+}
+
+
+
c4() { c /var/log/exim4; }
chumount() {
local d
# dev/pts needed for pacman signature check
- for d in dev proc sys dev/pts; do
+ for d in dev/pts dev proc sys; do
[[ -d $d ]]
if mountpoint $d &>/dev/null; then
m s umount $d
cat-new-files() {
local start=$SECONDS
local dir="$1"
- inotifywait -m "$dir" -e create -e moved_to |
- # shellcheck disable=SC2030
+ # shellcheck disable=SC2030
+ inotifywait -m "$dir" -e create -e moved_to | \
while read -r filedir _ file; do
cat "$filedir$file"
hr
}
+chownme() {
+ s chown -R $USER:$USER "$@"
+}
+
# shellcheck disable=SC2032
chown() {
# makes it so chown -R symlink affects the symlink and its target.
git commit -m "$*"
}
-cl() {
- # choose recent directory. cl = cd list
- c =
-}
d() { builtin bg "$@"; }
ccomp bg d
+# f would be more natural, but i already am using it for something
+z() { builtin fg "$@"; }
+ccomp fg z
+
+x() { builtin kill %%; }
+
dc() {
diff --strip-trailing-cr -w "$@" # diff content
}
done
}
+# df progress
+# usage: dfp MOUNTPOINT [SECOND_INTERVAL]
+# SECOND_INTERVAL defaults to 90
+dfp() {
+ # mp = mountpoint
+ local a b mp interval
+ mp=$1
+ interval=${2:-90}
+ if [[ ! $mp ]]; then
+ echo "dfp: error, missing 1st arg" >&2
+ return 1
+ fi
+ while true; do
+ a=$(df --output=used $mp | tail -n1)
+ sleep $interval
+ b=$(df --output=used $mp | tail -n1)
+ printf "used mib: %'d mib/min: %s\n" $(( b /1000 )) $(( (b-a) / (interval * 1000 / 60 ) ))
+ done
+}
+
+# get ipv4 ip from HOST. or if it is already a number, return that
+hostip() {
+ local host="$1"
+ case $host in
+ [0-9:])
+ echo "$host"
+ ;;
+ *)
+ getent ahostsv4 "$host" | awk '{ print $1 }' | head -n1
+ ;;
+ esac
+}
+
dig() {
command dig +nostats +nocmd "$@"
}
dt() {
date "+%A, %B %d, %r" "$@"
}
-ccomp date dt
+dtr() {
+ date -R "$@"
+}
+ccomp date dt dtr
dus() { # du, sorted, default arg of
du -sh ${@:-*} | sort -h
ccomp du dus
-e() { echo "$@"; }
+e() { printf "%s\n" "$*"; }
# echo args
ea() {
printf "%s" "${arg}" |& hexdump -C
done
}
-# echo vars. print var including escapes, etc
+
+# echo variables. print var including escapes, etc, like xxd for variable
ev() {
if (( ! $# )); then
echo no args
# mail related
etail() {
+ ngset
+ tail -F /var/log/exim4/mainlog /var/log/exim4/*main /var/log/exim4/paniclog /var/log/exim4/*panic -n 200 "$@"
+ ngreset
+}
+etailm() {
tail -F /var/log/exim4/mainlog -n 200 "$@"
}
-ccomp tail etail
+etail2() {
+ tail -F /var/log/exim4/mymain -n 200 "$@"
+}
+ccomp tail etail etail2
+
+
+showkeys() {
+ ssh "$@" cat .ssh/authorized_keys{,2}
+}
+
# print exim old pids
eoldpids() {
}
ccomp less eless
eqcat() {
- exiqgrep -i -o 60 | while read -r i; do
+ exiqgrep -ir.\* -o 60 | while read -r i; do
hlm exim -Mvc $i
echo
hlm exigrep $i /var/log/exim4/mainlog | cat ||:
done
}
eqrmf() {
- exiqgrep -i | xargs exim -Mrm
+ # other ways to get the list of message ids:
+ # exim -bp | awk 'NF == 4 {print $3}'
+ # # this is slower 160ms, vs 60.
+ # exipick -i
+ exiqgrep -ir.\* | xargs exim -Mrm
}
econfdevnew() {
update-exim4.conf -d /tmp/edev/etc/exim4 -o /tmp/edev/e.conf
}
+# exim grep in
+# show important information about incoming mail in the exim log
+egrin() {
+ sed -rn '/testignore|jtuttle|eximbackup/!s/^[^ ]+ ([^ ]+) [^ ]+ [^ ]+ <= ([^ ]+).*T="(.*)" from (<[^ ]+> .*$)/\1 \4\n \3/p' <${1:-/var/log/exim4/mainlog}
+}
-
-# shellcheck disable=SC2032
-f() {
- # cd forward
- c +
+# 2nd line is message-id:
+egrinid() {
+ sed -rn '/testignore|jtuttle|eximbackup/!s/^[^ ]+ ([^ ]+) [^ ]+ [^ ]+ <= ([^ ]+).* id=([^ ]+) T="(.*)" from (<[^ ]+> .*$)/\1 \5\n \3\n \4/p' <${1:-/var/log/exim4/mainlog}
}
+
+
+
fa() {
# find array. make an array of file names found by find into $x
# argument: find arguments
-o -name .undo-tree-history -prune \) -type f 2>/dev/null
}
-# todo: id like to do maybe a daily or hourly cronjob to
-# check that my history file size is increasing. Ive had it
-# inexplicably truncated in the past.
-histrm() {
- history -n
- history | awk -v IGNORECASE=1 '{ a=$1; sub(/^( *[^ ]+){4} */, "") }; /'"$*"'/'
- read -p "press anything but contrl-c to delete"
- for entry in $(history | awk -v IGNORECASE=1 '{ a=$1; sub(/^( *[^ ]+){4} */, "") }; /'"$*"'/ { print a }' | tac); do
- history -d $entry
+# usage ffconcat FILES_TO_CONCAT OUTPUT_FILE
+ffconcat() {
+ local tmpf
+ tmpf=$(mktemp)
+ printf "file '%s'\n" "$1" >$tmpf
+ while (( $# > 1 )); do
+ shift
+ printf "file '%s'\n" "$1" >>$tmpf
done
- history -w
+ # https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Concatenate
+ ffmpeg -f concat -safe 0 -i $tmpf -c copy "$1"
+ rm $tmpf
+}
+
+# full path without resolving symlinks
+fp() {
+ local dir base
+ base="${1##*/}"
+ dir="${1%$base}"
+ printf "%s/%s\n" $(cd $dir; pwd) "$base"
}
+
# mail related
frozen() {
rm -rf /tmp/frozen
# On first use, you input username/pass and it gets an oath token so you dont have to repeat
# it\'s at ~/.config/hub
hub() {
- local up uptar updir p
- p=/github/hub/releases/
- up=https://github.com/$(curl -s https://github.com$p| grep -o $p'download/[^/]*/hub-linux-amd64[^"]*' | head -n1)
+ local up uptar updir p v
+ # example https://github.com/github/hub/releases/download/v2.14.2/hub-linux-amd64-2.14.2.tgz
+ up=$(wget -q -O- https://api.github.com/repos/github/hub/releases/latest | jq -r .assets[].browser_download_url | grep linux-amd64)
+ re='[[:space:]]'
+ if [[ ! $up || $up == $re ]]; then
+ echo "failed to get good update url. got: $up"
+ fi
uptar=${up##*/}
updir=${uptar%.tgz}
if [[ ! -e /a/opt/$updir ]]; then
i() { git "$@"; }
ccomp git i
+# git status:
+# cvs -qn update
+
+# git checkout FILE
+# cvs update -C FILE
+
+# git pull
+# cvs up[date]
+
+# potentially useful command translation
+# https://fling.seas.upenn.edu/~giesen/dynamic/wordpress/equivalent-commands-for-git-svn-and-cvs/
+
+# importing cvs repo into git using git-cvs package:
+# /f/www $ /usr/lib/git-core/git-cvsimport -C /f/www-git
+
ic() {
# fast commit all
git commit -am "$*"
ifn() {
# insensitive find
+ # -L = follow symlinks
find -L . -not \( -name .svn -prune -o -name .git -prune \
-o -name .hg -prune -o -name .editor-backups -prune \
-o -name .undo-tree-history -prune \) -iname "*$**" 2>/dev/null
grep -Il "" "$@" &>/dev/null
}
+pst() {
+ pstree -apnA
+}
+
jtail() {
journalctl -n 10000 -f "$@"
}
journalctl -u exim4 _SYSTEMD_INVOCATION_ID=$(systemctl show -p InvocationID --value $1)
}
+
+
l() {
if [[ $PWD == /[iap] ]]; then
command ls -A --color=auto -I lost+found "$@"
fi
f="${arg##*/}"
new="${f,,}" # downcase
- new="${new//[^[:alnum:]._-]/_}" # sub bad chars
+ new="${new//[^a-zA-Z0-9._-]/_}" # sub bad chars
new="${new#"${new%%[[:alnum:]]*}"}" # remove leading/trailing non-alnum
new="${new%"${new##*[[:alnum:]]}"}"
# remove bad underscores, like __ and _._
k() { # history search
grep -iP --binary-files=text "$@" ${HISTFILE:-~/.bash_history} | tail -n 80 || [[ $? == 1 ]];
}
-ks() { # history search
+ks() { # history search with context
+ # args are an extended regex used by sed
+ history | sed -nr "h;s/^\s*(\S+\s+){4}//;/$*/{g;p}" | tail -n 80 || [[ $? == 1 ]];
+}
+ksu() { # history search unique
grep -P --binary-files=text "$@" ${HISTFILE:-~/.bash_history} | uniq || [[ $? == 1 ]];
}
-ccomp grep k ks
+
+# todo: id like to do maybe a daily or hourly cronjob to
+# check that my history file size is increasing. Ive had it
+# inexplicably truncated in the past.
+histrm() {
+ history -n
+ HISTTIMEFORMAT= history | awk -v IGNORECASE=1 '{ a=$1; sub(/^ *[^ ]+ */, "") }; /'"$*"'/'
+ read -p "press anything but contrl-c to delete"
+ for entry in $(HISTTIMEFORMAT= history | awk -v IGNORECASE=1 '{ a=$1; sub(/^ *[^ ]+ */, "") }; /'"$*"'/ { print a }' | tac); do
+ history -d $entry
+ done
+ history -w
+}
+
+ccomp grep k ks ksu histrm
make-targets() {
}
nmt() {
- s nmtui-connect "$@"
+ # cant use s because sudo -i doesnt work for passwordless sudo command
+ case $EUID in
+ 0)
+ sudo nmtui-connect "$@"
+ ;;
+ *)
+ nmtui-connect "$@"
+ ;;
+ esac
+}
+
+
+ngset() {
+ if shopt nullglob >/dev/null; then
+ ngreset=false
+ else
+ shopt -s nullglob
+ ngreset=true
+ fi
+}
+ngreset() {
+ if $ngreset; then
+ shopt -u nullglob
+ fi
}
nopanic() {
# shellcheck disable=SC2024
- sudo tee -a /var/log/exim4/paniclog-archive </var/log/exim4/paniclog; sudo truncate -s0 /var/log/exim4/paniclog
+ ngset
+ for f in /var/log/exim4/paniclog /var/log/exim4/*panic; do
+ base=${f##*/}
+ if [[ -s $f ]]; then
+ echo ================== $f =============
+ s tee -a /var/log/exim4/$base-archive <$f
+ s truncate -s0 $f
+ fi
+ done
+ ngreset
}
+
+ping() { command ping -O "$@"; }
p8() { ping "$@" 8.8.8.8; }
p6() { ping6 "$@" 2001:4860:4860::8888; }
scp() {
rsync --inplace "$@"
}
+ccomp rsync scp
randport() {
# available high ports are 1024-65535,
# rl without preserving modification time.
rsync -ahvic --delete --no-t "$@"
}
-rsu() { # [OPTS] HOST PATH
- # eg. rlu -opts frodo /testpath
+# [RSYNC_OPTS] HOST PATH
+rsu() {
+ # eg. rsu -opts frodo /testpath
# relative paths will expanded with readlink -f.
opts=("${@:1:$#-2}") # 1 to last -2
path="${*:$#}" # last
if [[ $path == .* ]]; then
path=$(readlink -f $path)
fi
- # rync here uses checksum instead of time so we dont mess with
- # unison relying on time as much. g is for group, same reason
- # to keep up with unison.
- m s rsync -rlpchviog --relative "${opts[@]}" "$path" "root@$host:/";
+ m rsync -ahvi --relative --no-implied-dirs "${opts[@]}" "$path" "root@$host:/";
}
ccomp rsync rsd rsa rst rsu
grep '^ *hosts:' /etc/nsswitch.conf
if systemctl is-enabled systemd-resolved &>/dev/null || [[ $(systemctl is-active systemd-resolved ||:) != inactive ]]; then
hr; m ser status systemd-resolved | cat || :
- hr; m systemd-resolve --status | cat
+ hr; m resolvectl status | cat
fi
}
ssh fencepost head -n 300 /gd/gnuorg/EventAndTravelInfo/rms-current-trips.txt | less
}
+urun () {
+ umask $1
+ shift
+ "$@"
+}
sudo () {
command sudo "$@" || return $?
DID_SUDO=true
local SUDOD="$PWD"
sudo -i bash -c "$@"
}
-ccomp sudo s sb
+# secret sudo
+se() { s urun 0077 "$@"; }
+ccomp sudo s sb se
safe_rename() { # warn and dont rename if file exists.
# mv -n exists, but it\'s silent
sk() {
- # note, if you do something like this
- # x=( prefix* )
- # then disable the warning with:
- # shellcheck disable=SC2206 # globbing is intended
-
- # 2029: "unescaped, this expands on the client side.": yes, I know how ssh works
- # 2164: "Use 'cd ... || exit' or 'cd ... || return' in case cd fails.": i have automatic error handling
- # 2086: unquoted $var: Quoting every var I set is way too much quotes.
- # 2068: Double quote array expansions to avoid re-splitting elements: same as above.
- # 2033: command arg is a function name: too many false positives.
-
+ # disable a warning with:
+ # shellcheck disable=SC2206 # reasoning
- # these ones I had disabled, but without a good written explanation, so enabling them temporarily
- # 2046: unquoted $(cmd)
- # 2119: Functions with optional args get bad warnings when none are passed.
+ # see bash-template/style-guide.md for justifications
- shellcheck -W 999 -x -e 2029,2164,2086,2068,2033 "$@" || return $?
+ local quotes others
+ quotes=2048,2068,2086,2206
+ others=2029,2033,2054,2164
+ shellcheck -W 999 -x -e $quotes,$others "$@" || return $?
}
if [[ $x ]]; then echo "$x"; else echo $l; fi;
done
}
+nonet() {
+ if ! s ip netns list | grep -Fx nonet &>/dev/null; then
+ s ip netns add nonet
+ fi
+ sudo -E env /sbin/ip netns exec nonet sudo -E -u iank /bin/bash
+}
m() { printf "%s\n" "$*"; "$@"; }
+# update file. note: duplicated in mail-setup
+u() {
+ local tmp tmpdir dest="$1"
+ local base="${dest##*/}"
+ local dir="${dest%/*}"
+ if [[ $dir != "$base" ]]; then
+ # dest has a directory component
+ mkdir -p "$dir"
+ fi
+ ur=false # u result
+ tmpdir=$(mktemp -d)
+ cat >$tmpdir/"$base"
+ tmp=$(rsync -ic $tmpdir/"$base" "$dest")
+ if [[ $tmp ]]; then
+ printf "%s\n" "$tmp"
+ ur=true
+ if [[ $dest == /etc/systemd/system/* ]]; then
+ reload=true
+ fi
+ fi
+ rm -rf $tmpdir
+}
+
+
uptime() {
if type -p uprecords &>/dev/null; then
uprecords -B
"|sort -r
}
+# Run script by copying it to a temporary location first,
+# and changing directory, so we don't have any open
+# directories or files that could cause problems when
+# remounting.
+zr() {
+ local tmp
+ tmp=$(type -p "$1")
+ if [[ $tmp ]]; then
+ cd $(mktemp -d)
+ cp -a "$tmp" .
+ shift
+ ./"${tmp##*/}" "$@"
+ else
+ "$@"
+ fi
+}
+
+
+# * spark
+# spark 1 5 22 13 53
+# # => ▁▁▃▂▇
+
+# The MIT License
+# Copyright (c) Zach Holman, https://zachholman.com
+# https://github.com/holman/spark
+
+# As of 2022-10-28, I reviewed github forks that had several newer
+# commits, none had anything interesting. I did a little refactoring
+# mostly to fix emacs indent bug.
+
+# Generates sparklines.
+_spark_echo()
+{
+ if [ "X$1" = "X-n" ]; then
+ shift
+ printf "%s" "$*"
+ else
+ printf "%s\n" "$*"
+ fi
+}
+
+
+spark()
+{
+ local f tc
+ local n numbers=
+
+ # find min/max values
+ local min=0xffffffff max=0
+
+ for n in ${@//,/ }
+ do
+ # on Linux (or with bash4) we could use `printf %.0f $n` here to
+ # round the number but that doesn't work on OS X (bash3) nor does
+ # `awk '{printf "%.0f",$1}' <<< $n` work, so just cut it off
+ n=${n%.*}
+ (( n < min )) && min=$n
+ (( n > max )) && max=$n
+ numbers=$numbers${numbers:+ }$n
+ done
+
+ # print ticks
+ local ticks=(▁ ▂ ▃ ▄ ▅ ▆ ▇ █)
+
+ # use a high tick if data is constant
+ (( min == max )) && ticks=(▅ ▆)
+
+ tc=${#ticks[@]}
+ f=$(( ( (max-min) <<8)/( tc - 1) ))
+ (( f < 1 )) && f=1
+
+ for n in $numbers
+ do
+ _spark_echo -n ${ticks[$(( ((($n-$min)<<8)/$f) ))]}
+ done
+ _spark_echo
+}
+
+
# * misc stuff
history -a # save history
fi
- # assigned in brc2
- # shellcheck disable=SC1303
- if [[ $jr_pid ]]; then
- if [[ -e /proc/$jr_pid ]]; then
- kill $jr_pid
- fi
- unset jr_pid
- fi
-
case $return in
0) ps_color="$term_purple"
ps_char='\$'
if [[ $MAIL_HOST && $MAIL_HOST != "$HOSTNAME" ]]; then
ps_char="@ $ps_char"
fi
+ jobs_char=
+ if [[ $(jobs -p) ]]; then
+ jobs_char='\j '
+ fi
# We could test if sudo is active with sudo -nv
# but then we get an email and log of lots of failed sudo commands.
# We could turn those off, but seems better not to.
if [[ ! $HISTFILE ]]; then
ps_char="NOHIST $ps_char"
fi
- PS1="${PS1%"${PS1#*[wW]}"} $psudo\[$ps_color\]$ps_char\[$term_nocolor\] "
+ PS1="${PS1%"${PS1#*[wW]}"} $jobs_char$psudo\[$ps_color\]$ps_char\[$term_nocolor\] "
# set titlebar. instead, using more advanced
# titelbar below
_title_escape="\033]0;"
fi
+ # make the titlebar be the last command and the current directory.
settitle () {
- # this makes it so we show the current command if
- # one is running, otherwise, show nothing
- if [[ $1 == prompt-command ]]; then
+
+ # These are some checks to help ensure we dont set the title at
+ # times that the debug trap is running other than the case we
+ # want. Some of them might not be needed.
+ if (( ${#FUNCNAME[@]} != 1 || ${#BASH_ARGC[@]} != 2 || $BASH_SUBSHELL != 0 )); then
return 0
fi
- if (( ${#BASH_ARGC[@]} == 1 && BASH_SUBSHELL == 0 )); then
- echo -ne "$_title_escape ${PWD/#$HOME/~} "
- printf "%s" "$*"
- echo -ne "\007"
+ if [[ $1 == prompt-command ]]; then
+ return 0
fi
+ echo -ne "$_title_escape ${PWD/#$HOME/~} "
+ printf "%s" "$*"
+ echo -ne "\007"
}
# note, this wont work: