A plugin manager for Fish
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Jorge Bucaran 54170ef1c3
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 20:20:31 +09:00
.travis.yml breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) 2018-10-05 20:20:31 +09:00
fisher.fish breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) 2018-10-05 20:20:31 +09:00
LICENSE.md refactor: remove ability to rename fisher command itself 2018-09-11 09:07:25 +09:00
README.md breaking: implement fisher V3 (#445) 2018-10-05 20:20:31 +09:00

Fisher

Build Status Releases

Fisher is a package manager for the fish shell. It defines a common interface for package authors to build and distribute their shell scripts in a portable way. You can use it to extend your shell capabilities, change the look of your prompt and create repeatable configurations across different systems effortlessly.

Features

  • Zero configuration
  • Oh My Fish package support
  • High-speed concurrent package downloads⌁!
  • If you've installed a package before, then it can be installed again offline
  • Add, update and remove functions, completions, keybindings and configuration snippets from a variety of sources using the command line or editing your fishfile

Installation

Download fisher to your fish functions directory or any directory in your $fish_function_path.

curl https://git.io/fisher --create-dirs -sLo ~/.config/fish/functions/fisher.fish

If the XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment variable is defined on your system, use $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fish to resolve the path to your fish configuration directory instead of ~/.config/fish.

Dependencies

  • fish 2.0+ (prefer 2.3 or newer)
  • curl 7.10.3+
  • git 1.7.12+

Legacy fish support

Stuck in legacy fish and can't upgrade your shell? You'll need to run some code on startup to support packages that use configuration snippets. Open your ~/.config/fish/config.fish and add the following code at the beginning of the file.

set -q XDG_CONFIG_HOME; or set XDG_CONFIG_HOME ~/.config
for file in $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/conf.d/*.fish
    builtin source $file 2>/dev/null
end

Bootstrap installation

To automate installing fisher on a new system, add the following code to your ~/.config/fish/config.fish. This will download fisher and install all the packages listed in your fishfile (if there is one).

if not functions -q fisher
    echo "Installing fisher for the first time..." >&2
    set -q XDG_CONFIG_HOME; or set XDG_CONFIG_HOME ~/.config
    curl https://git.io/fisher --create-dirs -sLo $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/fish/functions/fisher.fish
    fisher
end

Changing the installation prefix

Use the $fisher_path environment variable to change the prefix location where functions, completions, and configuration snippets will be copied to when a package is installed. The default location is where fisher itself is installed. If you followed the installation instructions above it should be in ~/.config/fish.

Make sure to append your functions and completions directories to the $fish_function_path and $fish_complete_path environment variables so that they can be autoloaded by fish in future sessions and to source every fish file inside your conf.d directory to run configuration snippets on startup.

Here is a boilerplate configuration you can add to your ~/.config/fish/config.fish file to get you started.

set -g fisher_path ~/another/path

set fish_function_path $fish_function_path $fisher_path/functions
set fish_complete_path $fish_complete_path $fisher_path/completions

for file in $fisher_path/conf.d/*.fish
    builtin source $file 2> /dev/null
end

Usage

You've found an interesting utility you'd like to try out. Or perhaps you've created a package yourself. How do you install it on your system? You may want to update or remove it later too. How do you do that?

You can use fisher to add, update and remove packages interactively, taking advantage of fish tab completions and syntax highlighting. Or edit your fishfile and commit your changes. Do you prefer a CLI-centered approach, text-based approach, or both?

Adding packages

Install packages using the add command.

fisher add jethrokuan/z rafaelrinaldi/pure

Packages will be downloaded from GitHub if the name of the host is not specified. To install a package hosted anywhere else use the address of the remote server and the path to the repository.

fisher add gitlab.com/owner/foobar bitbucket.org/owner/fumbam

Install a package from a tag or a branch.

fisher add jethrokuan/z@pre27

Install a package from a local directory. Local packages are managed through symbolic links, so you can develop and use them at the same time.

fisher add ~/myfish/mypkg

Notice you can only install one package version at a time. If two packages depend on a different version of the same package, the first one that gets installed will take precedence over the other.

Listing packages

List all the packages that are currently installed using the ls command. This includes packages you didn't install yourself but were installed on your system as a dependency of another package.

fisher ls
jethrokuan/z@pre27
rafaelrinaldi/pure
~/myfish/mypkg
gitlab.com/owner/foobar
bitbucket.org/owner/fumbam

Removing packages

Remove packages using the rm command. If a package has dependencies, they too will be removed. If any dependencies are still shared by other packages, they will remain installed.

fisher rm rafaelrinaldi/pure

You can remove everything that is currently installed in one sweep using the following pipeline.

fisher ls | fisher rm

Updating packages

Run fisher to update everything you've installed. There is no dedicated update command. Using the command line to add and remove packages is a facade for modifying and committing changes to your fishfile in a single step.

If you are looking for a way to update fisher itself, use the self-update command.

fisher self-update

Other commands

To display usage help use the help command.

fisher help

Last but not least use the version command to display the current version of fisher.

fisher version

Using the fishfile

Whenever you add or remove a package from the command line we'll create a text file in ~/.config/fish/fishfile. This is your fishfile. It lists every package that is currently installed on your system. You should add this file to your dotfiles or version control if you want to reproduce your configuration on a different system.

You can edit this file to add or remove packages and then run fisher to commit your changes. Only packages listed in the file will be installed after fisher returns. If a package is already installed it will be updated. Empty lines and everything after a # (comments) will be ignored.

vi ~/.config/fish/fishfile
rafaelrinaldi/pure
jethrokuan/z@pre27

# my local packages
~/myfish/mypkg
fisher

Package concepts

Packages 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 package is not meant to be shared with others, you can benefit from composition and the ability to depend on other packages.

A package is uniquely identified by the name of its host, owner and root directory. Alas, the lack of private function scope in fish causes all package functions to share the same namespace. A good rule of thumb is to prefix functions intended for private use with the name of your package to reduce the possibility of conflicts.

The structure of a package can be adopted from the fictional project described below. These are the files that fisher looks for when installing or uninstalling a package. Of course, you can elaborate on this to add tests, documentation, and other files, e.g. README and LICENSE files. The name of the root directory can be anything you wish. I recommend using a naming convention such as fish-package-name for easier classification.

fish-fly
├── fishfile
├── functions
│   └── fly.fish
├── completions
│   └── fly.fish
└── conf.d
    └── fly.fish

If your project depends on other packages, 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.

While some packages contain every kind of file, some packages contain 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 only one as in the next example.

fish-fly
└── fly.fish

Creating your own package

The best way to show you how to create your own package 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.

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.

fish-readme
└── readme.fish
function readme --argument owner repo branch
    if test -z "$branch"
        set branch master
    end
    curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/$owner/$repo/$branch/README.md
end

You can install it with the add command followed by the path to the directory. Local packages are symlinked to your $fisher_path so that code changes are instantly reflected during development.

fisher add /absolute/path/to/fish-readme

The next logical step is to share it with others. How do you do that? Fisher is not a package registry. Its function is to fetch fish scripts and put them in place so that your shell can find them. To publish a package put your code online. You can use GitHub, GitLab or BitBucket or anywhere you like.

Now let's install the package again, this time from its new location. Open your ~/.config/fish/fishfile and replace the local version of the package we previously installed with the URL of the remote repository. Save your changes and run fisher. You can leave off the github.com part of the URL when adding or removing packages hosted on GitHub.

Configuration snippets

Configuration snippets consist of any fish files in your ~/.config/fish/conf.d directory. They are evaluated on shell startup and often used to modify the shell environment, create key bindings, etc.

Unlike functions or completions, which can be erased programmatically, we can't undo a fish file that has been sourced without creating a new shell session. For this reason, packages that use configuration snippets provide custom uninstall logic through an uninstall event handler.

Let's walk through an example that uses this feature to add a new key binding. Key bindings (or keyboard shortcuts) are sequences of one or more keys mapped to a fish command, builtin or function. The following package maps the sequence Control-g to opening your fishfile in the vi editor.

fish-fishfile-quick-edit
└── conf.d
    └── fishfile-quick-edit.fish
bind \cg "vi ~/.config/fish/fishfile"

function fishfile-quick-edit_uninstall --event fishfile-quick-edit_uninstall
    bind -e \cg
end

When you uninstall this package, we'll emit a package-name_uninstall event that will call your eponymously named event handler function where the key binding will be erased.

Note

: Custom key bindings on shell startup are only available on fish 3.0 or newer. To make this package compatible with older versions of fish, you need to add custom key bindings via jorgebucaran/fish-custom-key-bindings.

Uninstalling

You wish to know how to uninstall fisher and everything you've installed with it from your system. Or perhaps something went wrong and you want to start over. This will uninstall all the packages, purge the cache and then remove fisher from your fish functions directory.

fisher self-uninstall

License

Fisher is MIT licensed. See the LICENSE for details.