22 KiB
Fish config
- Presentation
- Fish from within Emacs
- Global variables
- Tramp remote access
- Regular fish shell appearance
- Setting up external tools
- Abbreviations
- Last thing before we’re done
Presentation
The file present in ~/.config/fish/config.fish
is the configuration file for
the fish shell. It contains custom functions, environment variables and
abbreviations.
Just in case, we might sometimes need to declare the fish function fish_title
as true
, so let’s do so.
function fish_title
true
end
Fish from within Emacs
I sometimes call fish from within emacs, with M-x ansi-term
. In this case, the
variable TERM
needs to have the value eterm-color
.
if test -n "$EMACS"
set -x TERM eterm-color
end
Global variables
An important thing to do is to load all variables from my ~/.profile
file (which you can find here). The foreign-env plugin comes in handy:
fenv source ~/.profile
Development
Finally, some development packages require the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
to be set, so
let’s do so.
set -gx PKG_CONFIG_PATH /usr/local/lib/pkgconfig/ $PKG_CONFIG_PATH
Tramp remote access
When accessing from a remote machine our computer from Emacs, tramp
needs a precise shell appearance: a simple $
followed by a space after
which to put the commands it needs to execute, and nothing else. Due
to this, let’s deactivate and redefine some functions defining the
appearance of fish.
if test "$TERM" = "dumb"
function fish_prompt
echo "\$ "
end
function fish_right_prompt; end
function fish_greeting; end
function fish_title; end
end
Regular fish shell appearance
Now, there is only one function I modify when it comes to the
appearance of fish when I’m the one using it: the fish_greeting
function. I just want it empty.
function fish_greeting; end
For my fish prompt, I use starship, a shell-agnostic prompt. Let’s load it:
starship init fish | source
Setting up external tools
Starship configuration
As mentioned above, starship is a shell-agnostic prompt, written in Rust and which can be configured separately from the shell. I decided to configure it here though, since fish is the only shell I use which is compatible with starship.
First I’ll modify the default format variable, removing the modules I don’t need.
format = """
$username\
$hostname\
$shlvl\
$singularity\
$kubernetes\
$directory\
$vcsh\
$git_branch\
$git_commit\
$git_state\
$git_metrics\
$git_status\
$hg_branch\
$docker_context\
$package\
$cmake\
$dart\
$deno\
$lua\
$nodejs\
$python\
$rlang\
$rust\
$scala\
$zig\
$memory_usage\
$env_var\
$custom\
$cmd_duration\
$line_break\
$jobs\
$battery\
$time\
$status\
$shell\
$character"""
I want starship to be able to detect Lisp files, be it CommonLisp or EmacsLisp. Unfortunately, it seems nerd-font doesn’t have any symbol for either language, so I’m just using a lambda character.
[custom.lisp]
extensions = ["lisp", "el"]
symbol = "λ "
style = "bold green"
Finally, let’s disable all modules I don’t need.
[cobol]
disable = true
[dotnet]
disable = true
[elixir]
disable = true
[elm]
disable = true
[erlang]
disable = true
[golang]
disable = true
[helm]
disable = true
[java]
disable = true
[julia]
disable = true
[kotlin]
disable = true
[nim]
disable = true
[ocaml]
disable = true
[perl]
disable = true
[php]
disable = true
[pulumi]
disable = true
[purescript]
disable = true
[red]
disable = true
[ruby]
disable = true
[swift]
disable = true
[terraform]
disable = true
[vlang]
disable = true
[vagrant]
disable = true
[nix_shell]
disable = true
[conda]
disable = true
[aws]
disable = true
[gcloud]
disable = true
[openstack]
disable = true
[crystal]
disable = true
Loading zoxide
zoxide
is a smarter cd
command, accessible through z
. It can be loaded like so:
zoxide init fish | source
Abbreviations
Abbreviations are a great way to keep correctly track of which commands are run
in the shell without polluting the history of the shell with obscure commands.
When typing an abbreviation, fish will replace it with replace it with its
expanded equivalent. Below are some of the abbreviations I use. Be aware some of
them that invoke GUI programs can be invoked through devour
which will make
the terminal disappear while the program runs, and once the GUI program exists
the terminal window will come back.
System monitoring
Here I have some abbreviations which are quite useful when performing
some system monitoring. With df
, we can get an overview of our
filesystem usage, while with diskspace
we get some more precise
information. meminfo
is a call to free
with sane defaults, and similar
to meminfo
, we also have gpumeminfo
to get a quick look at the
memory-related logs of our X session. I also declared cpuinfo
an alias
of lscpu
in order to keep consistent with meminfo
. pscpu
gives us
information on what the CPU is running right now, and pscpu10
limits
that to the top 10 threads. Similarly, psmem
gives us information on
the memory usage of the current threads, and psmem10
only the ten most
important threads in terms of memory usage.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
df | df -H |
diskspace | sudo df -h | grep -E "sd|lv|Size" |
du | du -ch |
meminfo | free -m -l -t |
gpumeminfo | grep -i –color memory /var/log/Xorg.0.log |
cpuinfo | lscpu |
pscpu | ps auxf | sort -nr -k 3 |
pscpu10 | ps auxf | sort -nr -k 3 | head -10 |
psmem | ps auxf | sort -nr -k 4 |
psmem10 | ps auxf | sort -nr -k 4 | head -10 |
<<generate-abbr(table=mgmt-abbr)>>
System management (packages and services)
I added some of these abbreviations due to how often I have to write the whole thing.
Package management
The first command is remove
which removes a package from my system, as well as
its dependencies no longer needed. p
. pacman
's or paru
's. This is why I
simply type purge
. And if I want to simply seach among the pacman
repos, I
can type search
. Otherwise, if I want to include AUR results, I’ll use paru
.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
remove | sudo pacman -Rsc |
purge | paru -Sc |
<<generate-abbr(table=pm-abbr)>>
Service management
I don’t have the muscle memory of systemctl
. So instead, I simply type c
when I want to do something user service related. And if I want to manipulate
system services, I can instead type a simple capital S
.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
s | systemctl |
suser | systemctl –user |
<<generate-abbr(table=service-abbr)>>
Development
A good amount of these commands are development related, especially when it comes to compilation or Docker.
CMake
I have the following abbreviations to quickly run CMake and create a configuration for debug or release profiles.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
cdebug | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug |
crelease | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=abbr-cmake)>>
Docker
And of course, when it comes to Docker Compose, I don't have time to write the full command, so I use these instead.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
dc | docker-compose |
dcb | docker-compose build |
dcd | docker-compose down |
dcl | docker-compose logs |
dclf | docker-compose logs -f |
dcp | docker-compose pull |
dcr | docker-compose run –rm |
dcu | docker-compose up |
dcub | docker-compose up –build |
dcud | docker-compose up -d |
dcudb | docker-compose up -d –build |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=abbr-docker)>>
Text editors
I greatly prefer to use Emacsclient as my main text editor; Emacs has basically
all I need. So, it's only normal I have an abbreviation to launch a new instance
of it. If launched in the terminal, I’ll usually want Emacs to be displayed in
CLI mode and not in GUI mode, otherwise I would invoke it with my WM’s shortcut.
In case we want to launch Emacs in GUI mode anyway, egui
is available too.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
e | emacsclient -c -n |
egui | devour emacsclient -c |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=abbr-text-ed)>>
Compilation
By default, I set clang
, clang++
, gcc
and g++
to the latest standard and
with the -Wall
flag activated.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
clang | clang -Wall |
clang++ | clang++ -Wall |
g++ | g++ -Wall -std=c++20 |
gcc | gcc -Wall -std=c18 |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=abbr-comp)>>
Git
And let's face it: we all at one point just wanted to commit our code without thinking about the message, to just get over with it. Don't worry, I got you covered.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
randcommit | git commit -m (curl -s whatthecommit.com/index.txt) |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=abbr-git)>>
LaTeX
Yes, although I use org-mode, I still have some use for LaTeX, especially when
it comes to PDF exports of my org files. Hence, why I use the LaTeX package
manager. It is recommended to use tllocalmgr
instead of tlmgr
, but I can
never remember the command, and the latter is faster to type, so time for an
abbreviation. Same goes for texhash
which must be run as sudo.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
tlmgr | tllocalmgr |
texhash | sudo texhash |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=latex-abbr)>>
Some security measures
Some commands can be quite dangerous when not used properly, which is
why I added default flags and options in order to get warnings before
things get ugly. The -i
and -I
add prompts in case we might not want
to do what we asked the shell to do. Notice lns
which creates
symlinks, rmd
which removes directories, rmf
which forces deletion,
and rmdf
which forces the delition of a directory. Notice also the
--preserve-root
which will prevent me from accidentally removing the
root folder. I added the same option to chgrp
, chmod
, and chown
.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
cp | cp -i |
rsync | rsync -Pa –progress |
ln | ln -i |
lns | ln -si |
mv | mv -i |
rm | rm -Iv |
rmd | rm –preserve-root -Irv |
rmdf | rm –preserve-root -Irfv |
rmf | rm –preserve-root -Ifv |
chgrp | chgrp –preserve-root -v |
chmod | chmod –preserve-root -v |
chown | chown –preserve-root -v |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=sec-abbr)>>
Typos
Let's admit it, we all make typos from time to time in the shell, and some are
recurrent enough we make abbreviations or aliases of the correct command. Well,
I have some of my abbreviations which were make exactly because of this.
Sometimes for some reasons, my brain makes me write clean
instead of clear
.
So, let's just replace the former by the latter. I'm also very bad at typing
exit
. And sometimes I suck at typing htop
.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
clean | clear |
exi | exit |
exti | exit |
hotp | htop |
Here is the corresponding fish configuration:
<<generate-abbr(table=typo-abbr)>>
Misc
Finally, some miscellaneous abbreviations that don't really fit into any of the above categories.
Screens setup
I have an automatic screen setup for when I am at home, but it
unfortunately doesn’t match my setup at work. autorandr horizontal
does not work because my third screen is vertical, the wallpaper is
misaligned, and picom becomes too taxing on my system. I ended up
writing the following command each morning, but now a simple abbrev
does the work for me.
abbr work 'autorandr -l work && xwallpaper --zoom (cat $HOME/.cache/wallpaper) && pkill picom'
Media
Here you will find various commands related to media in general. the first one is a command to play some chillhop from the Chillhop YouTube channel's livestream.
abbr chill 'mpv --force-window=no --no-video "https://www.youtube.com/user/Chillhopdotcom/live" &'
When it comes to mpv, I do not want to force it to open a graphical window if for example I want to listen to an audio file. I also do not want any border on that window. So, I declared this abbreviation.
abbr mpv 'mpv --no-border --force-window=no'
When I want to download a song from YouTube, I'll just use the command flac
videoIdentifier
to get it through youtube-dl
.
abbr flac 'youtube-dl -x --audio-format flac --audio-quality 0 -o "~/Music/%(uploader)s/%(title)s.%(ext)s"'
Some sane default options for nsxiv
. This includes playing GIFs and
not displaying the filename below. Nsxiv will also open in fullscreen
and will fit the displayed image to the frame. It will also output to
stdout the selected files in case I want to pipe them to another
program.
abbr nsxiv 'nsxiv -abfos f'
The following abbreviation is here to launch software with my Nvidia GPU.
abbr nv 'env __NV_PRIME_RENDER_OFFLOAD=1 __GLX_VENDOR_LIBRARY_NAME=nvidia'
Finally, let's declare the following abbreviation that will launch a MPV instance displaying my webcam:
abbr webcam 'devour mpv --demuxer-lavf-format=video4linux2 --demuxer-lavf-o-set=input_format=mjpeg av://v4l2:/dev/video0 --profile=low-latency --untimed'
Sudo
First, I make it so that sudo
comes with the -A
switch in order to call my
custom graphical script for getting my password (see askpass). I also made it so
please
is an equivalent to sudo -A
as a joke.
abbr please 'sudo -A'
History
I find it more intuitive and faster to just write hist
instead of history
,
so let's declare that.
abbr hist history
Compression
It seems it's just like many other people, but I cannot for the life of me
remember the syntax of tar
. So, I made the following abbreviations, and one
day hopefully, after seeing the abbreviations' expansion over and over I'll
remember the command like I did for the abbreviation of remove
(see Package
management).
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
compress | tar -czf |
untar | tar -xvzf |
<<generate-abbr(table=tar-abbr)>>
exa
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
exa | exa -halg@ –group-directories-first –git |
lsl | exa -halg@ –group-directories-first –git |
<<generate-abbr(table=exa-abbr)>>
Network Management
First, we have just nmcli
with sane default options, that is a pretty output
with colors.
abbr nmcli 'nmcli -p -c auto'
NordVPN
Next, we have some NordVPN-related shortcuts. The first one is a simple
abbreviation to nordvpn
. The second one is a shortcut to connect to a server,
and to disconnect from the current server. I also have a couple of shortcuts to
quickly connect to some preselected countries, mainly France, Germany, Japan and
the US.
abbreviation | command |
---|---|
n | nordvpn |
nc | nordvpn c |
nd | nordvpn d |
ncf | nordvpn c France |
ncg | nordvpn c Germany |
ncj | nordvpn c Japan |
ncu | nordvpn c United_States |
<<generate-abbr(table=nordvpn-abbr)>>
Wget
By default, continue a download that was interupted.
abbr wget 'wget --hsts-file="$XDG_DATA_HOME/wget-hsts" -c'
Last thing before we’re done
For some reason, Fish began searching for packages when I enter a command name
wrong. For instance, if I type vim
, I get something like this:
$ vim
fish: Unknown command: vim
usr/bin/vim is owned by extra/gvim 8.2.2653-1
usr/bin/vim is owned by extra/vim 8.2.2653-1
But I don’t want that, it slows down my shell. So, in order to fix that, we need the following lines:
function fish_command_not_found
__fish_default_command_not_found_handler $argv
end
Tadah! No more package suggestions from fish!
I also have some private abbreviations I don’t want people to know about that I store in a separate configuration file.
source $HOME/.config/fish/private.fish