Difference between revisions of "Shell"
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− | == Make URLs | + | == Make URLs clickable == |
− | (add-hook 'shell-mode-hook (lambda () (goto-address-mode ))) | + | (add-hook 'shell-mode-hook (lambda () (goto-address-mode ))) |
− | |||
== Make file paths clickable == | == Make file paths clickable == |
Revision as of 12:46, 30 September 2014
Shell-mode gives access to a shell in a normal emacs buffer, meaning you can move around and edit it as usual. A drawback is that you can not launch programs like htop or other ncurses ones, like you would in term-mode.
Usage
basics
M-x shell
Look at the menu: you have several keys to interact with the shell. Some of them are:
- [M-p] previous input of command line
- [M-r] search backward a regexp in commands' history (like C-r in term). Use C-r to cycle.
- [C-c r] go to beginning of output (useful when you have a large output and want to read through the beginning)
- [C-c-p] go to beginning of previous output group
- [C-c-c] send the C-c command to the shell
- [C-c-o] delete the output of the last command
To launch a shell in the directory of the current buffer, have a look to shell-here: https://github.com/ieure/shell-here (available through ELPA).
re-execute successive commands
Often it is useful to reexecute several successive shell commands that were previously executed in sequence. To do this, first find and reexecute the first command of the sequence. Then type [C-c C-x], that will fetch the following command--the one that follows the command you just repeated. Then type RET to reexecute this command. You can reexecute several successive commands by typing [C-c C-x RET] over and over.
Customisation
More colors
If you have bad colors in the output, try using ansi-mode:
(require 'ansi-color) (defun colorize-compilation-buffer () (toggle-read-only) (ansi-color-apply-on-region (point-min) (point-max)) (toggle-read-only)) (add-hook 'compilation-filter-hook 'colorize-compilation-buffer)
You can highlight some text based on regexp (useful to see "OK" or warnings):
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook (lambda () (highlight-regexp "\\[OK\\]" "hi-green-b")))
Make URLs clickable
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook (lambda () (goto-address-mode )))
Make file paths clickable
Every line representing a path to a file will be colorized and made clickable, so that you can jump to that file and that line, like in compilation-mode (specially useful when compiling a program or running tests):
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'compilation-shell-minor-mode)
Now you can use key bindings from the mode: use [C-x `] (or M-x next-error) (backquote) to go to the next error detected in the shell. You can't do that in an xterm !
Change directory with ido-mode
Using ido's completion system for changing directories is a big gain in usability and efficiency for emacs' shell. I urge you to check this Stack Overflow question: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/20952995/emacs-shell-change-directory-with-ido
By default a shell session inside emacs via shell-mode won't persist accross sessions and won't read your shell's history. The history shell command works as expected, but you can't search (with M-r) a command that you typed in shell-mode in another emacs instance or in a term. The following fixes that.
For comint-mode and derivatives (including shell-mode) the searchable history is read in via comint-read-input-ring, which uses comint-input-ring-file-name which you can set in a mode hook. However I would suggest that you actually set your HISTFILE environment variable to ~/.zsh_history because shell-mode automatically defers to that.
The documentation suggests that:
(add-hook 'shell-mode-hook 'my-shell-mode-hook)
(defun my-shell-mode-hook ()
(setq comint-input-ring-file-name "~/.zsh_history") ;; or bash_history
(comint-read-input-ring t))
Note that if you want to persist more variables (mini-buffer history,…), enable savehist-mode and configure the variables you wish to persist between sessions. See M-x customize-group RET savehist RET.
Sync environment variables like $PATH from the shell
On OSx (and elsewhere ?) the $PATH environment variable and `exec-path' used by a windowed Emacs instance will usually be the system-wide default path, rather than that seen in a terminal window. The library exec-path-from-shell (in MELPA) allows the user to set Emacs' exec-path
and $PATH from the shell path, so that shell-command
, compile
and the like work as expected. It also allows other environment variables to be retrieved from the shell, so that Emacs will see the same values you get in a terminal.
Change directory or find files based on "frecency" with z/autojump/fasd
Fasd, z or autojump are popular shell tools for jumping around commonly used directories and (for fasd) to execute actions on files. It uses "frecency" as a metric for determining which directory you intend to jump to based on keyword completions. So if I commonly cd to ~/.ssh, I can fasd ssh
to jump there.
The first question is: how to find files with these tools in Emacs ?
And next, since they work but can not use the built-in shell completion, how to get them use ido completion in emacs shell mode ?
Find files with fasd
There's an emacs package to find files with fasd: https://github.com/steckerhalter/emacs-fasd If you want it to be more interactive, you can set:
(setq fasd-enable-initial-prompt nil) ;; don't ask for first query but fire fuzzy completion straight away.
Get ido completion to cd in shell
A great complementary thing with these tools is the use of the shell's completion to change directories, where zsh is a winner. Let's use ido for that. This feature is available as a minor mode with this code: https://gitlab.com/emacs-stuff/fasd-shell/tree/master
Now you can type d my doc TAB
and ido will ask what directory (a directory that you already visited with the regular cd and that has both "my" and "doc" in its full path) to cd to.
See also
shell-pop
shell-pop to pop up and pop out a shell buffer window easily (installable via ELPA), a bit like guake terminal in Gnome.
Shell-here
Use shell-here to open an Emacs shell in the current directory.
dirswitch
With dirswitch, cycle through directories you've visited, like in fish shell.