fisher/man/man7/fisher-plugins.md
2016-01-02 06:12:40 +09:00

4.1 KiB

fisher-plugins(7) -- Creating Fisherman Plugins

DESCRIPTION

This document describes how to create Fisherman plugins. This includes stand-alone utilities, prompts, extension commands and configuration plugins.

There is no technical distinction between any of the terms aforementioned, but there is a conceptual difference.

DEFINITIONS

  • Standalone Utilities: Plugins that define one or more functions, meant to be used at the command line.

  • Prompts / Themes: Plugins that modify the appearance of the fish prompt by defining a fish_prompt and / or fish_right_prompt functions.

  • Extension Commands: Plugins that extend Fisherman default commands. An extension plugin must define one or more functions like fisher_<my_command>. For specific information about commands, see fisher help commands and then return to this guide.

  • Configuration Plugins: Plugins that include one or more my_plugin.config.fish files. Files that follow this convention are evaluated at the start of the session.

The following tree is that of a plugin that displays the characteristics of all the plugins described above.

my_plugin
|-- fisher_my_plugin.fish
|-- my_plugin.fish
|-- fish_prompt.fish
|-- fish_right_prompt.fish
|-- my_plugin.config.fish
|-- functions/
|   |-- my_plugin_helper.fish
|-- completions/
|   |-- my_plugin.fish
|-- man/
    |-- man1/
        |-- my_plugin.1

Plugins may list any number of dependencies to other plugins using a fishfile, see fisher help fishfile.

Plugins may also define completions using complete(1) and provide documentation in the form of man(1) pages.

EXAMPLE

This section walks you through creating wtc, a stand-alone plugin based in github.com/ngerakines/commitment random commit message generator.

  • Navigate to your preferred workspace and create the plugin's directory and Git repository:

    mkdir -p my/workspace/wtc; and cd my/workspace/wtc
    git init
    git remote add origin https://github.com/owner/wtc

  • Add the implementation.

    cat > wtc.fish

function wtc -d "Generate a random commit message"
    switch "$argv"
        case -h --help
            printf "usage: wtc [--help]\n\n"
            printf "  -h --help  Show usage help\n"
            return
    end
    curl -s whatthecommit.com/index.txt
end
^C
  • Add completions. wtc is simple enough that you could get away without __fish_parse_usage, but more complex utilities, or utilities whose CLI evolves over time, can benefit using automatic completion generation. Note that in order to use __fish_parse_usage, your command must provide a --help option that prints usage information to standard output.

    mkdir completions
    cat > completions/wtc.fish

set -l IFS ";"
wtc --help | __fish_parse_usage | while read -l info long short
    complete -c wtc -s "$short" -l "$long" -d "$info"
end
^C
  • Add basic documentation. Fisherman uses standard manual pages for displaying help information. There are utilities that can help you generate man pages from other text formats, such as Markdown. One example is ronn(1). For this example, type will do:

    mkdir -p man/man1
    cat > man/man1/wtc.1

    .TH man 1 "Today" "1.0" "wtc man page"
    .SH NAME
    wtc \- Generate a random commit message
    .SH SYNOPSIS
    wtc [--help]
    .SH OPTIONS
    -h, --help: Display help information.
    .SH SEE ALSO
    https://github.com/ngerakines/commitment
    ^C
    
  • Commit changes and push to remote repository.

    git add --all
    git commit -m "What the commit? 1.0"
    git push origin master

  • Install with Fisherman. If you would like to submit your package for registration install the submit plugin or send a pull request to the main index repository in https://github.com/fisherman/index. See fisher(7)#{Index} for details.

    fisher install github/owner/wtc
    wtc
    (\ /)
    (O.o)
    (> <) Bunny approves these changes.

SEE ALSO

man(1)
complete(1)
fisher help commands
fisher help fishfile
fisher(7)#{Index}