smartcd is a library for bash and zsh which brings transformative power to your fingertips.
The basic premise is that as you move around your computer using the shell, actions can be automatically taken to provide you with the environment you really want, not the one you're accustomed to putting up with.
-
Created a file for a project to alter your environment by setting variables or creating aliases so that things work correctly, one which you need to remember to load by hand
-
Struggled to set up your shell's configuation to support conflicting needs for different uses
-
Wished that your prompt could be made to say something or be a different color when you are in a sensitive directory
-
Wanted a daemon process to run automatically when you go to work on a project, and shut down when you finish
-
Wanted to automatically update your project from source control when you enter
-
Needed to attach to a particular screen(1) session when working in a particular directory
These are just a few examples of problems people are solving with smartcd.
It's stupid easy. If you have already downloaded the archive or checked out the source, you can:
make install
source load_smartcd
smartcd config
However, if you would rather skip all that and simply have it install itself, try this:
curl -L http://smartcd.org/install | bash
Either method will prompt you to configure a small number of settings, and then help you set up your shell to load it on login.
Once it is installed, you're ready to go. All actions are available through
the smartcd
command.
Usage: smartcd (edit|append|show|delete|filename|helper|template|setup|config) [args]
If you run smartcd edit enter
, it will launch your editor to allow you to
begin creating a script for the current directory which will run when you
enter. Its counterpart, smartcd edit leave
, will create a script that runs
when you cd away from the current directory.
An auxiliary library is provided with smartcd called varstash. This provides you with a powerful mechanism which saves the definitions of variables, aliases, and shell functions to allow you to change or unset them temporarily. Once you are finished, it will allow you to (or automatically) restore their prior values.
For example,
autostash PATH=/path/to/my/project/bin:$PATH
autostash alias restart="apachectl restart"
restart
will save the value of your $PATH, and prepend a project-specific directory to it. smartcd will automagically restore its old value when you leave the directory.
The second line creates a temporary alias which is probably something only meaningful to the directory you are in, allowing you to keep concise aliases that won't get in your way, and allow you to re-use them between projects.
And these commands are immediately available, as shown by the third line, which makes use of the newly defined alias to restart your server.
You could instead create the files non-interactively
echo 'autostash PATH=__PATH__/temporary/path:$PATH' | smartcd edit enter
which also highlights a convenient feature that replaces PATH with the directory name before the script is run.
If you like doing things by hand, you may prefer
mkdir -p ~/.smartcd/scripts/some/directory
echo 'autostash PATH=__PATH__/temporary/path:$PATH' >> ~/.smartcd/scripts/some/directory/bash_enter
Scripts for smartcd are contained in a directory structure under your home, in the .smartcd directory. As you change directory, it will look for files which correspond to where you are leaving from and going to, and run them for you.
The primary way of doing this is to create a "cd" function which calls
smartcd cd
. This also works with push and popd. The simplest way to
create these wrappers is to call smartcd setup cd
, smartcd setup pushd
,
and smartcd setup pushd
. When you smartcd config
, this will be set up
for you.
If you prefer (or in addition), you can hook the prompt command.
This sets PROMPT_COMMAND in bash, or precmd in zsh. This is enabled using
smartcd setup prompt-hook
. After calling smartcd, it will call any prior
command for those hooks. This feature allows users with the "autocd" option
set in their shell to also benefit from smartcd.
The structure of .smartcd will mirror the filesystem hierarchy you wish to configure. For example:
Path Action Script
------------------------------------------------------------
/foo/bar enter ~/.smartcd/scripts/foo/bar/bash_enter
/foo/bar/baz leave ~/.smartcd/scripts/foo/bar/baz/bash_leave
You can edit and read these files with the smartcd command using the "edit", "append", "show", and "filename" actions.
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ smartcd filename enter
/home/user/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ smartcd show leave
No leave script for /usr/local/bin
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ smartcd show enter
# ---8<--- begin /home/user/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter
smartcd inform "testing"
# ---8<--- end /home/user/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter
# edit ~/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ smartcd edit enter
# truncate ~/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter and replaces
# its contents with what is piped
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ echo "some-command" | smartcd edit enter
# add a line to ~/.smartcd/scripts/usr/local/bin/bash_enter
user@host:/usr/local/bin$ echo "some-command" | smartcd edit enter
One thing to note is that going from a directory to its child is not considered "leaving", so the bash_leave will not be run until you go to another directory that doesn't contain that same directory as part of its path. The scripts are run as appropriate if they exist for each level going back to the common element between the paths.
If you cd from /foo/bar/baz to /foo/quux/biff, the following actions would take place:
1) bash_leave for /foo/bar/baz
2) bash_leave for /foo/bar
3) bash_enter for /foo/quux
4) bash_enter for /foo/quux/biff
These scripts are run in the interactive shell using eval, so any variables or other environment effects will take place in the user's shell directly.
Here are some examples of useful setups that have been created so far
Sometimes you may want a message to be shown when you enter or leave the directory, either to remind to you do something, or simply to let you know what the script has done.
You could use echo
for this, but the issue with that is if you are doing
something sophisticated with pipes, you may not want this message to
interfere with the command being piped. For example, you might use the
following command to copy some files
( cd foo; tar -cf - sub-dir ) | ( cd bar; tar -xf - )
but if "foo" has an enter script which echos something, this will corrupt
the tar file. By using smartcd inform
, this will suppress the output when
it is detected that the output is not a terminal
smartcd inform "Reminder, don't forget to commit your code!"
If you want a visual cue that you need to be careful, it might make sense to change your prompt. Here's one that will temporarily make your prompt red while leaving its actual value alone.
autostash PS1='\[\e[1;31m\]'"$PS1"'\[\e[0m\]'
Note the double-quotes around $PS1. This is not superfluous, if your current value has any space characters in it, it's important to use quoting because otherwise it would be seen as a second argument to autostash
This one can be a bit tricky since screen commands from within screen tend to confuse it. And of course, creating a new screen window will execute your bash_enter scripts.
So what we'll do is set a variable in the attaching shell which is seen from within screen to prevent it from doing so.
if [[ -z $MYSCREEN ]]; then
autostash MYSCREEN=1
screen -c __PATH__/.screenrc -RRD my-special-screen-session
fi
perlbrew is a system for installing multiple builds and versions of the Perl language, allowing you to easily switch between them. This is very valuable for development, but probably not what you want for your whole system.
smartcd now ships with a helper designed to integrate perlbrew and smartcd seamlessly together. Simply put this line in your enter script:
smartcd helper run perlbrew init /path/to/perlbrew/install
When you leave the directory, perlbrew will stop being in effect and you will get your previous perl back.
perlbrew is available at http://search.cpan.org/~gugod/App-perlbrew/
Perl currently ships with a module named local::lib, which is handy for installing module dependencies outside of the standard install locations.
A helper is included for interacting with this module as well.
smartcd helper run perl-locallib activate __PATH__/perl5lib
If you want to explicitly remove a path (as you might do with -Mlocal::lib=--deactivate), this is supported
smartcd helper run perl-locallib deactivate __PATH__/perl5lib
but not required. If you don't perform this set, it will still be automatically cleared when you cd away restoring any prior local::lib or PERL5LIB state.
RVM is the Ruby Version Manager, which like perlbrew, can manage multiple
versions of the language being installed at once. Because it too wants to
wrap the cd
command, things are a little tricker than with perlbrew.
Fortunately, the RVM project has added express support for smartcd as the
action taken during its own cd. If both projects are installed, RVM's cd()
will call smartcd's, regardless of which order the two are set up.
RVM is available at https://rvm.io/
If you want something to start running when you enter the directory, and stop running when you leave, you can certainly use smartcd for this. Here's an example of how someone is using smartcd to start and stop a Plack service
### enter script ###
# temporarily define the functions stop and start
autostash stop start pidfile="__PATH__/.pid"
start() {
if [[ ! -f "$pidfile" ]] || ! kill -0 $(cat "$pidfile") >/dev/null 2>&1; then
(
builtin cd __PATH__/html
plackup &> /dev/null &
local pid=$!
echo $pid > "$pidfile"
smartcd inform "Started Plack with pid $pid"
)
fi
}
stop() {
if [[ -f "$pidfile" ]] && kill -0 $(cat "$pidfile") >/dev/null 2>&1; then
kill $(cat "$pidfile")
rm "$pidfile"
fi
}
# Create an alias that calls both functions
autostash alias restart="stop; sleep 2; start"
# And automatically start-up on enter
start
### leave script ###
# Shut down when leaving. Yes, this function is still available here, and
# it will be removed by autounstash after this leave is complete
stop
# There are several things to make a note of here
#
# 1) The sub-shell created in the start() function is not actually necessary
# if `start` is _only_ run from within smartcd, since the extra `cd` command
# will not prevent you from ending up in the right directory. However, since
# this function can be called manually, it's safer to do this in a subshell.
#
# 2) I used `builtin cd` instead of just `cd` in start() to avoid smartcd being
# called during another call, possibly causing surprising results. However,
# if you actually want smartcd to be run in that situation, it's ok to do so.
#
# 3) Use __PATH__ liberally to ensure that files and actions are taken in the
# correct place, even after you've changed to a subdirectory of where the script
# was defined.
and of course, if you want to be sure that this daemon is shut down properly if you simply log out or close your shell, you will want the exit hook as well
# in your ~/.smartcd_config, see `smartcd config`
smartcd setup exit-hook
A system for pre-written scripts is provided which implement things that you may find useful. This system allows people to distribute and share these independently of the core smartcd distribution.
Some helpers are provided with smartcd, including:
-
path:
Simple ways to temporarily add elements to your PATH
smartcd helper run path append __PATH__/bin smartcd helper run path prepend __PATH__/bin
-
history:
This keeps commands run in the current and any subdirectories in a separate history file specified as an argument. The also-read command will prepend another history file into the shell's buffer when setting up, so that other history can be availble "further back" in your history.
smartcd helper run history also-read ~/.bash_history smartcd helper run history localize __PATH__/.history
You can also have ask it to save and/or reload this history file on each prompt
smartcd helper run history prompt-append smartcd helper run history prompt-reload
-
perlbrew:
Automagic setup and teardown of Perlbrew
smartcd helper run perlbrew init /path/to/perlbrew/install
In addition to configuring scripts individually, smartcd supports a template system, which can be set up to re-use common configuration among many directories. This is controlled with the "smartcd template" action.
To create a new template based on the current directory, run:
smartcd template create some_template_name
This will create a new template named "some_template_name", and prepopulate it from the bash_enter and bash_leave files corresponding to the working directory, replacing any instance of your working directory with PATH.
You can then edit the contents with smartcd template edit some_template_name
.
The create
step is optional, and if you edit
a template that is not yet
created you will start with an empty one.
Now that your template is ready, you'll want to use it somewhere. For this, there are two options:
-
Run it "in-place", and all changes to the template will be dynamically picked up by the enter and exit scripts which execute it
echo 'smartcd template run some_template_name' | smartcd edit enter
The run
action will determine if you are in an "enter" or "leave" script,
and execute the correct portion of the template. This does not need to be
the only line in your script, and in fact you can even run more than one
template from the same script.
-
Copy the current contents of the template to the scripts for a directory, as a one-time operation. This will not automatically propagate changes to the places it is in use, and can be used as a way to quickly bootstrap scripts but allow them to exist independently.
smartcd template install some_template_name
The other template editor actions are show
, list
, and delete
.
Users can define their own actions which will be taken just before each prompt is displayed. In fact, smartcd itself can use this mechanism to invoke itself.
smartcd on-prompt takes this concept to a new level. By specifying commands to be run, they will be run on each prompt, similar to the built-in feature, but only while you are in the current directory and its children. In addition to this, further on-prompt commands specified in child directories will run in addition to the current ones rather than replacing them.
For example:
~/foo$ smartcd on-prompt 'echo test 1'
test 1
~/foo$ cd bar
test 1
~/foo/bar$ smartcd on-prompt 'echo test 2'
test 1
test 2
~/foo/bar$ cd ..
test 1
~/foo$ cd
~$
By default, your enter scripts will be run when a shell is started. However, the opposite is not the case. If you'd like your leave scripts to run when the shell exits, smartcd is able to utilize the shell's EXIT trap hook to do so, or in zsh, the zshexit hook. This is enabled by running
smartcd setup exit-hook
If you would like to back up your scripts and templates, or copy them to another computer, you can use the provided export/import feature.
# Export your scripts
smartcd export > my_smartcd_backup
# Several methods to import them
smartcd import my_smartcd_backup
cat my_smartcd_backup | smartcd import
For more complete documentation, see the documentation in lib/core/smartcd.
As already discussed, the included library lib/core/varstash provides several functions for saving values to a temporary location so that you can edit them, and then later restore the original value.
In addition to autostash, you could manually stash and unstash using functions with those names if there is some need to do so
echo 'stash FOO=bar' | smartcd edit enter
echo 'unstash FOO' | smartcd edit leave
You may also trigger autostash's restore mechanism by calling
autounstash
by hand. It's safe to do so multiple times and it won't harm smartcd if you do this.
If you run stash, unstash, or autostash interactively, they will instruct
you on how to create files for smartcd to run those commands for you. If
you do not wish to see this advice, set VARSTASH_QUIET=1
. The library can
automatically follow its own advice and configure these files if you set
VARSTASH_AUTOCONFIG=1
. It can do so, but also give you an opportunity to
make additional edits to the relevant file, if you set VARSTASH_AUTOEDIT=1
.
Alias stashing was briefly mentioned, and it is supported to do in-line stashing and declaration of an alias with autostash
autostash alias mycmd="do something crazy"
However, stashing functions looks like this:
autostash my_func
my_func() {
some_new_definition
}
It's useful to autostash something even before it's set, because that triggers the mechanism which will unset them upon leaving. Since functions cannot be declared inline with autostash, this is how you should do it.
Bash added array support in version 2.0, but it doesn't have a very good set of supporting built-ins. In particular, I find myself missing the Perl functions push, pop, shift, unshift, reverse.
To provide these capabilities, another library, lib/core/arrays, is included. The provided functions are:
apush - Add an element to the end of your array
apop - Remove the last element from the array and print it
ashift - Remove the first element from the array and print it
aunshift - Add an element to the beginning of the array
areverse - Reverse the order of elements in the array
afirst - Like ashift, but doesn't remove anything.
alast - Like apop, but doesn't remove anything.
anth - Retreive the n-th element of an array.
alen - Print the current number of elements in the array
acopy - Copy an array into a new variable
See documentation included in lib/core/arrays for more detail.
This code is Copyright (c) 2009,2012 Dave Olszewski [email protected]
You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License v2 or the Artistic License.
As with most ideas worth doing, there are other implementations of some of the things provided by smartcd. Here are a few of them, and how they differ from this library.
-
ondir - http://swapoff.org/ondir.html
- Written in C, and is executed by a "cd" function
- Requires manual and explicit variable setting and unsetting
-
direnv - https://github.com/zimbatm/direnv/
- Requires ruby
- Works only with PROMPT_COMMAND or precmd
- Does not walk directory hierarchy
- Does not support functions or aliases
- Is entirely "snapshot" based
- Runs files directly out of local directory, similar to "legacy mode"
-
EnvWatcher - https://github.com/MrMasterplan/EnvWatcher
- Requires python
- Only supports bash
- Is triggered manually, not automatically
- Does not walk directory hierarchy
- Is entirely "snapshot" based
- Does not allow other actions besides environment variable switching