fisher/README.md

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# Fisher
Ahoy my mateys! fisherman 2.0.0 (beta) is here. A lot has changed, in fact, fisherman as you knew it, is no longer with us. Let me explain. The new fisherman, is in fact a rewired clone of ``fin´´, a short-lived 2 week experiment that started because it was easier to rewrite everything than moving fisherman forward. Let me explain. I was longing for a lightweight, simpler fisherman with minimal maintanance cost. This fin lad is one of the most pragmatic pieces of code I've ever written, but attempting to maintain two drastically different plugin managers was not a sane decision. fin's goal was to get out of my way and let me be productive with fish and it did. Now fin is fisherman and fisherman is fin. The most notable change is that fisherman no longer depends on an index, so like fin, it's neutral and agnostic to what plugins you use. No index means fisherman completions are no longer as clever as to show you description of plugins, but you will still get enough information to know whether the plugin is a theme or not. I hope you always check the plugin's README / online docs before installing anything anyway. With the index gone, we had no use for ``search``, so this command is also gone. If you were using search often or depended on the removed features above, I am afraid they are gone *gone*, but trust me it's all for the very best. Now, with this out of the way, it's all unicorns and dartfish. Almost. To upgrade to fisherman 2.0.0 you need to REMOVE your current version of fisherman: 1. ```rm -rf "$fisher_home" "$fisher_config"``` 2. Open your config.fish and remove the fisherman initialization code. 3. ```exec fish < /dev/tty``` to reload the session. 4. Run `curl -Lo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish --create-dirs git.io/fisherman` That's it. Probably. The new fisherman brings a lot more stability and maturity to the project and we need this change in order to move forward. I will be actively fixing any bugs that may have sneaked in during the ```fin->fisherman``` rewiring, but please do ping me: @bucaran on GitHub or directly to my email j@bucaran.me if you find anything out of place. Feel free and invited to go wild with issues in order to get this into shape ASAP. Cheers!
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> A plugin manager for [fish](https://fishshell.com)—the friendly interactive shell.
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Manage functions, completions, bindings, and snippets from the command line. Extend your shell capabilities, change the look of your prompt and create repeatable configurations across different systems effortlessly.
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- Oh My Fish! plugin support.
- Build and distribute shell scripts in a portable way.
- Insanely fast concurrent plugin downloads with built-in cache fallback.
- Zero configuration out of the box. Need to tweak a thing? You can do that too.
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Fishing for plugins? Browse [git.io/awesome.fish](https://git.io/awesome.fish) or [search](https://github.com/topics/fish-packages) [on](https://github.com/topics/fish-plugins) [GitHub](https://github.com/topics/fish-plugin).
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breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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## Installation
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Just drop [`fisher.fish`](fisher.fish) on any directory in your function path and you are done.
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```console
curl https://git.io/fisher --create-dirs -sLo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish
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```
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## Quickstart
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You've found an interesting utility you'd like to try out. Or maybe you've [created a new plugin](#creating-your-own-plugin). How do you install it? How to update or remove it?
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You can use Fisher to add, update, and remove plugins interactively, taking advantage of fish [tab completion](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/index.html#completion) and syntax highlighting. Or [edit your fishfile](#using-the-fishfile) and commit your changes. Do you prefer a CLI-centered approach, text-based approach, or a mix of both?
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### Adding plugins
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Add plugins using the `add` command followed by the path to the repository on GitHub.
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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fisher add jethrokuan/z rafaelrinaldi/pure
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```
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To add a plugin from a different location, use the address of the server and the path to the repository. HTTPS is always assumed, so you don't need to specify the protocol.
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```console
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fisher add gitlab.com/big/fish
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```
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To add a plugin from a private repository set the `fisher_user_api_token` variable to your username followed by a colon and your authorization token or password.
```fish
set -g fisher_user_api_token jorgebucaran:ce04da9bd93ddb5e729cfff4a58c226322c8d142
```
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For a specific version of a plugin add an `@` symbol after the plugin name followed by the tag, branch or [commit-ish](https://git-scm.com/docs/gitglossary#gitglossary-aiddefcommit-ishacommit-ishalsocommittish). Only one plugin version can be installed at any given time.
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```console
fisher add edc/bass@20f73ef jethrokuan/z@pre27
```
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You can add plugins from a local directory too. Local plugins will be installed as [symbolic links](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_link) so changes in the original files will be reflected in new shell sessions without having to re-run `fisher`.
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```console
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fisher add ~/path/to/local/plugin
```
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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### Listing plugins
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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List all the plugins that are currently installed using the `ls` command. This doesn't show plugin dependencies.
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```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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fisher ls
jethrokuan/z
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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rafaelrinaldi/pure
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gitlab.com/big/fish
edc/bass
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~/path/to/myfish/plugin
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```
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You can use a regular expression after `ls` to refine the output.
```
fisher ls "^gitlab|fish-.*"
```
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
### Removing plugins
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Remove plugins using the `rm` command. If a plugin has dependencies, they too will be removed. If any dependencies are still shared by other plugins, they will remain installed.
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
fisher rm rafaelrinaldi/pure
Ahoy my mateys! fisherman 2.0.0 (beta) is here. A lot has changed, in fact, fisherman as you knew it, is no longer with us. Let me explain. The new fisherman, is in fact a rewired clone of ``fin´´, a short-lived 2 week experiment that started because it was easier to rewrite everything than moving fisherman forward. Let me explain. I was longing for a lightweight, simpler fisherman with minimal maintanance cost. This fin lad is one of the most pragmatic pieces of code I've ever written, but attempting to maintain two drastically different plugin managers was not a sane decision. fin's goal was to get out of my way and let me be productive with fish and it did. Now fin is fisherman and fisherman is fin. The most notable change is that fisherman no longer depends on an index, so like fin, it's neutral and agnostic to what plugins you use. No index means fisherman completions are no longer as clever as to show you description of plugins, but you will still get enough information to know whether the plugin is a theme or not. I hope you always check the plugin's README / online docs before installing anything anyway. With the index gone, we had no use for ``search``, so this command is also gone. If you were using search often or depended on the removed features above, I am afraid they are gone *gone*, but trust me it's all for the very best. Now, with this out of the way, it's all unicorns and dartfish. Almost. To upgrade to fisherman 2.0.0 you need to REMOVE your current version of fisherman: 1. ```rm -rf "$fisher_home" "$fisher_config"``` 2. Open your config.fish and remove the fisherman initialization code. 3. ```exec fish < /dev/tty``` to reload the session. 4. Run `curl -Lo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish --create-dirs git.io/fisherman` That's it. Probably. The new fisherman brings a lot more stability and maturity to the project and we need this change in order to move forward. I will be actively fixing any bugs that may have sneaked in during the ```fin->fisherman``` rewiring, but please do ping me: @bucaran on GitHub or directly to my email j@bucaran.me if you find anything out of place. Feel free and invited to go wild with issues in order to get this into shape ASAP. Cheers!
2016-04-21 17:34:06 +02:00
```
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
You can remove everything that is currently installed in one sweep using the following pipeline.
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
fisher ls | fisher rm
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
```
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
### Updating plugins
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Run `fisher` to update everything currently installed. There is no dedicated update command. Using the command line to add and remove plugins is the easiest way to modify and commit changes to your fishfile.
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Looking for a way to self update Fisher? Use the `self-update` command.
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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fisher self-update
```
### Other commands
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Display usage help on the command line.
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```console
fisher --help
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```
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Display the current version of Fisher.
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```console
fisher --version
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```
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Remove installed plugins, cache, your fishfile, and Fisher.
```console
fisher self-uninstall
```
## Changing the installation path
Fisher expands plugins into your fish configuration directory by default, overwriting existing files. To change this behavior, set `$fisher_path` to your preferred location and put it in your function path.
```fish
set -g fisher_path /path/to/another/location
set -p fish_function_path fish_function_path[1] $fisher_path/functions
set -p fish_complete_path fish_complete_path[1] $fisher_path/completions
for file in $fisher_path/conf.d/*.fish
builtin source $file 2>/dev/null
end
```
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## Using the fishfile
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Whenever you add or remove a plugin from the command-line, Fisher writes the exact list of installed plugins to `~/.config/fish/fishfile`. This is your fishfile. Add this file to your dotfiles or version control in order to reproduce your configuration on a different system.
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You can also edit this file and run `fisher` to commit your changes. Only the plugins listed in this file will be installed (or remained installed) after `fisher` returns. If a plugin is already installed, it will be updated. Everything after a `#` symbol will be ignored.
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```fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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vi ~/.config/fish/fishfile
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```
```diff
- rafaelrinaldi/pure
- jethrokuan/z@pre27
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gitlab.com/jorgebucaran/kraken
edc/bass
+ FabioAntunes/fish-nvm
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
~/path/to/myfish/plugin
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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```
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```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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fisher
```
That will remove **rafaelrinaldi/pure** and **jethrokuan/z**, add **FabioAntunes/fish-nvm** and update the rest.
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## What is a plugin?
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plugins help you organize shell scripts into reusable, independent components that can be shared through a git URL or the path to a local directory. Even if your plugin is not meant to be shared with others, you can benefit from composition and the ability to depend on other plugins.
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The structure of a plugin can be adopted from the fictional project described below. These are the files that Fisher looks for when installing or uninstalling a plugin. The name of the root directory can be anything you like.
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```console
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fish-kraken
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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├── fishfile
├── functions
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│ └── kraken.fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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├── completions
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│ └── kraken.fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
└── conf.d
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└── kraken.fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
```
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
If your project depends on other plugins, it should list them as dependencies in a fishfile. There is no need for a fishfile otherwise. The rules concerning the usage of the fishfile are the same rules we've already covered in [using the fishfile](#using-the-fishfile).
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While some plugins contain every kind of file, some plugins include only functions or configuration snippets. You are not limited to a single file per directory either. There can be as many files as you need or just one as in the following example.
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```
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fish-kraken
└── kraken.fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
```
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
The lack of private scope in fish causes all plugin functions to share the same namespace. A good rule of thumb is to prefix functions intended for private use with the name of your plugin to prevent conflicts.
2018-10-17 15:30:39 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
## Creating your own plugin
2016-05-28 11:09:53 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
The best way to show you how to create your own plugin is by building one together. Our first example will be a function that prints the raw non-rendered markdown source of a README file from GitHub to standard output. Its inputs will be the name of the owner, repository, and branch. If no branch is specified, we'll use the master branch.
2019-02-22 19:24:05 +01:00
Create the following directory structure and function file. Make sure the function name matches the file name; otherwise fish won't be able to autoload it the first time you try to use it.
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
```
fish-readme
└── readme.fish
```
```fish
2018-10-17 03:43:51 +02:00
function readme -a owner repo branch
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
if test -z "$branch"
set branch master
end
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/$owner/$repo/$branch/README.md
end
```
2018-10-17 03:43:51 +02:00
You can install it with the `add` command followed by the path to the directory.
Ahoy my mateys! fisherman 2.0.0 (beta) is here. A lot has changed, in fact, fisherman as you knew it, is no longer with us. Let me explain. The new fisherman, is in fact a rewired clone of ``fin´´, a short-lived 2 week experiment that started because it was easier to rewrite everything than moving fisherman forward. Let me explain. I was longing for a lightweight, simpler fisherman with minimal maintanance cost. This fin lad is one of the most pragmatic pieces of code I've ever written, but attempting to maintain two drastically different plugin managers was not a sane decision. fin's goal was to get out of my way and let me be productive with fish and it did. Now fin is fisherman and fisherman is fin. The most notable change is that fisherman no longer depends on an index, so like fin, it's neutral and agnostic to what plugins you use. No index means fisherman completions are no longer as clever as to show you description of plugins, but you will still get enough information to know whether the plugin is a theme or not. I hope you always check the plugin's README / online docs before installing anything anyway. With the index gone, we had no use for ``search``, so this command is also gone. If you were using search often or depended on the removed features above, I am afraid they are gone *gone*, but trust me it's all for the very best. Now, with this out of the way, it's all unicorns and dartfish. Almost. To upgrade to fisherman 2.0.0 you need to REMOVE your current version of fisherman: 1. ```rm -rf "$fisher_home" "$fisher_config"``` 2. Open your config.fish and remove the fisherman initialization code. 3. ```exec fish < /dev/tty``` to reload the session. 4. Run `curl -Lo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish --create-dirs git.io/fisherman` That's it. Probably. The new fisherman brings a lot more stability and maturity to the project and we need this change in order to move forward. I will be actively fixing any bugs that may have sneaked in during the ```fin->fisherman``` rewiring, but please do ping me: @bucaran on GitHub or directly to my email j@bucaran.me if you find anything out of place. Feel free and invited to go wild with issues in order to get this into shape ASAP. Cheers!
2016-04-21 17:34:06 +02:00
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
```console
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
fisher add /absolute/path/to/fish-readme
```
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
To publish the plugin upload it to GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket, or anywhere you like. Keep in mind that Fisher is not a plugin registry. Its function is to fetch fish scripts and put them in place so that your shell can find them.
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Now let's install the plugin from the net. Open your [fishfile](#using-the-fishfile) and replace the local version of the plugin you added with the URL of the repository. Save your changes and run `fisher`.
2018-10-17 03:43:51 +02:00
```diff
- /absolute/path/to/fish-readme
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
+ gitlab.com/jorgebucaran/fish-readme
2018-10-17 03:43:51 +02:00
```
2019-07-09 14:31:41 +02:00
```console
2018-10-17 03:43:51 +02:00
fisher
```
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
You can leave off the `github.com` part of the URL when adding or removing plugins hosted on GitHub. If your plugin is hosted anywhere else, the address of the server is required.
## Plugin Events
2016-03-09 05:24:47 +01:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
> [Coming in Fisher 4](https://github.com/jorgebucaran/fisher/issues/582): `install` and `update`.
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### `uninstall`
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Plugins may provide custom uninstall logic through an uninstall [event handler](https://fishshell.com/docs/current/#event).
Ahoy my mateys! fisherman 2.0.0 (beta) is here. A lot has changed, in fact, fisherman as you knew it, is no longer with us. Let me explain. The new fisherman, is in fact a rewired clone of ``fin´´, a short-lived 2 week experiment that started because it was easier to rewrite everything than moving fisherman forward. Let me explain. I was longing for a lightweight, simpler fisherman with minimal maintanance cost. This fin lad is one of the most pragmatic pieces of code I've ever written, but attempting to maintain two drastically different plugin managers was not a sane decision. fin's goal was to get out of my way and let me be productive with fish and it did. Now fin is fisherman and fisherman is fin. The most notable change is that fisherman no longer depends on an index, so like fin, it's neutral and agnostic to what plugins you use. No index means fisherman completions are no longer as clever as to show you description of plugins, but you will still get enough information to know whether the plugin is a theme or not. I hope you always check the plugin's README / online docs before installing anything anyway. With the index gone, we had no use for ``search``, so this command is also gone. If you were using search often or depended on the removed features above, I am afraid they are gone *gone*, but trust me it's all for the very best. Now, with this out of the way, it's all unicorns and dartfish. Almost. To upgrade to fisherman 2.0.0 you need to REMOVE your current version of fisherman: 1. ```rm -rf "$fisher_home" "$fisher_config"``` 2. Open your config.fish and remove the fisherman initialization code. 3. ```exec fish < /dev/tty``` to reload the session. 4. Run `curl -Lo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish --create-dirs git.io/fisherman` That's it. Probably. The new fisherman brings a lot more stability and maturity to the project and we need this change in order to move forward. I will be actively fixing any bugs that may have sneaked in during the ```fin->fisherman``` rewiring, but please do ping me: @bucaran on GitHub or directly to my email j@bucaran.me if you find anything out of place. Feel free and invited to go wild with issues in order to get this into shape ASAP. Cheers!
2016-04-21 17:34:06 +02:00
2020-08-07 18:38:34 +02:00
Let's walk through an example that uses this feature to add a new key binding for the Control-G sequence. Let's say we want to use it to open the fishfile in the `vi` editor quickly. When you install the plugin, `fishfile_quick_edit_key_bindings.fish` will be sourced, adding the specified key binding and loading the event handler function. When you uninstall it, Fisher will emit an uninstall event where you can erase the bindings!
Ahoy my mateys! fisherman 2.0.0 (beta) is here. A lot has changed, in fact, fisherman as you knew it, is no longer with us. Let me explain. The new fisherman, is in fact a rewired clone of ``fin´´, a short-lived 2 week experiment that started because it was easier to rewrite everything than moving fisherman forward. Let me explain. I was longing for a lightweight, simpler fisherman with minimal maintanance cost. This fin lad is one of the most pragmatic pieces of code I've ever written, but attempting to maintain two drastically different plugin managers was not a sane decision. fin's goal was to get out of my way and let me be productive with fish and it did. Now fin is fisherman and fisherman is fin. The most notable change is that fisherman no longer depends on an index, so like fin, it's neutral and agnostic to what plugins you use. No index means fisherman completions are no longer as clever as to show you description of plugins, but you will still get enough information to know whether the plugin is a theme or not. I hope you always check the plugin's README / online docs before installing anything anyway. With the index gone, we had no use for ``search``, so this command is also gone. If you were using search often or depended on the removed features above, I am afraid they are gone *gone*, but trust me it's all for the very best. Now, with this out of the way, it's all unicorns and dartfish. Almost. To upgrade to fisherman 2.0.0 you need to REMOVE your current version of fisherman: 1. ```rm -rf "$fisher_home" "$fisher_config"``` 2. Open your config.fish and remove the fisherman initialization code. 3. ```exec fish < /dev/tty``` to reload the session. 4. Run `curl -Lo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish --create-dirs git.io/fisherman` That's it. Probably. The new fisherman brings a lot more stability and maturity to the project and we need this change in order to move forward. I will be actively fixing any bugs that may have sneaked in during the ```fin->fisherman``` rewiring, but please do ping me: @bucaran on GitHub or directly to my email j@bucaran.me if you find anything out of place. Feel free and invited to go wild with issues in order to get this into shape ASAP. Cheers!
2016-04-21 17:34:06 +02:00
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
```
fish-fishfile-quick-edit
└── conf.d
└── fishfile_quick_edit_key_bindings.fish
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
2018-10-05 13:20:31 +02:00
```
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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```fish
bind \cg "vi ~/.config/fish/fishfile"
set -l name (basename (status -f) .fish){_uninstall}
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function $name --on-event $name
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bind --erase \cg
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end
```
breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) SUMMARY This PR rewrites fisher from the ground up and adds new documentation. It introduces some breaking changes as described in the next section. For a historical background of this work see the original V3 proposal #307 and the more recent discussion about the future of the project #443. After much debate and careful consideration I decided it is in the best interest of the project to keep the CLI-based approach to dependency management as a facade to the fishfile-based approach originally proposed. The new `add` commands (previously `install`) and good ol' `rm` interactively update your fishfile and commit all your changes in one sweep. To the end user, it's as if you were adding or removing packages like you already do now. Internally, these commands affect how the fishfile is parsed and result in adding new or replacing/removing existing entries followed by a regular `fisher` run. INSTALLING - `install` has been renamed to `add` - Installing from a gist is no longer supported (but it will be back in a future release—removed only to simplify the rewrite) - To install a package from a tag or branch use an at symbol `@`—the colon `:` is deprecated LISTING - `ls` and `rm` are still available with a few minor differences - `ls` followed by a package name does not list specific package information (may be added back in a future release) - `ls` output format no longer displays a legend to indicate whether a package is a theme or a local package; now it's a flat dump of every installed package specifier - For local packages the full path is shown instead - I want to add a `--tree` option in to display packages in a tree-like format in the future - `ls-remote` has been removed as there is no longer a preferred organization to look for packages— there is no plan to add it back UPDATING - A new `self-update` command has been introduced to update fisher itself - fisher will be only updated when a new version is actually available - `update` has been removed - Everything is installed from scratch everytime you add or remove something, so there is no need to update specific packages—you're always up-to-date - To lock on a specific package version install from a tag/branch, e.g., `mypkg/foobar@1.3.2` UNINSTALLING - `self-uninstall` works as usual HELP & VERSION - `help` only displays fisher usage help - help is dumped to stdout instead of creating a man page on the fly and piping it to your pager `version` works as usual ENVIRONMENT - `$fish_path` been renamed to `$fisher_path` to make it clear that this is a fisher specific extension, not your shell's ECOSYSTEM - Oh My Fish! packages are still supported, albeit less attention is paid to them - Some packages that use Oh My Fish! specific environment variables or events might not work - Most of Oh My Fish! extensions are no longer necessary since fish 2.3, therefore it should be a simple matter to upgrade them to modern fish DEPENDENCIES - fisher can now run on fish 2.0 - It's a good idea to upgrade to at least fish 2.3 to use the string builtin and configuration snippets, but there's no reason for fisher to force you to use any fish version - `curl` is required for fetching packages - I am considering adding a fallback to `wget` if `curl` is not available on your system - `git` is optional - V3 fetches packages directly from github, gitlab and bitbucket, if you are using them - git is only used (implementation still wip) if you want to install a package from an unknown git host like your own git server
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## License
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[MIT](LICENSE.md)