* A gcloud plugin
This PR addresses issue #6205
This adds support for loading completion for the Google Cloud SDK
command line tools. It searches the known paths for an SDK and loads the
provided completion if it is found. Users can supply a custom location
for the SDK by setting `CLOUDSDK_HOME` in their `zshrc` before loading
oh-my-zsh plugins.
* Canoncial zsh and some safe guards
Based on a PR review from mcornella. All off this has now been tested
on the following variants:
- macOS 10.14.6 - Homebrew
- macOS 10.14.6 - Custom install
- Ubuntu 16.04.6 LTS - apt install
- Ubuntu 18.04.3 LTS - apt install
- Ubuntu 18.04.3 LTS - snap classic install
- CentOS 7 - yum install
WSL 2 changes the output of `uname -r`. For instance,
WSL 1: 4.4.0-18980-Microsoft
WSL 2: 4.19.67-microsoft-standard
Since WSL 2 lowercases the M, we can match for the rest of the string
which remains lowercase throughout both versions. Another option would
be to match for both upper- and lower-case Ms, like that:
$(uname -r) = *[Mm]icrosoft*
Fixed use of nohup in open_command where it was only necessary for
xdg-open (and actually harmful for cmd.exe in WSL 2). The current logic
is simpler and more future-proof.
An error was thrown (`bash: [: =: unary operator expected`) when using the __git_ps1_colorize_gitstring function outside of the one place it's called (line 512), because the "detached" variable was not quoted, and was unset.
An error was thrown (`bash: [: =: unary operator expected`) when using the __git_ps1_colorize_gitstring function outside of the one place it's called (line 512), because the "detached" variable was not quoted, and was unset.
There appears to be a definition issue for some functions/aliases which
result in the following errors when sourcing .zshrc:
```
/home/username/.oh-my-zsh/plugins/debian/debian.plugin.zsh:75: defining function based on alias `abd'
/home/username/.oh-my-zsh/plugins/debian/debian.plugin.zsh:75: parse error near `()'
```
Fixes#7986
The `commands[autojump]` block errs out when autojump is not found, and the rest, which is intended to be used for loading `autojump`, does not get executed.
* Use double quotes to cache value of $apt_pref and $apt_upgr
* Clean up and fix syntax of command checks
* Clean up README and document $apt_pref/$apt_upgr overriding mechanism
* Rename `ag` alias (apt upgrade) to `au`
* Clean up README and fix syntax
Fixes#3686Fixes#4660Closes#5906
Co-authored-by: Noah Vesely <fowlslegs@riseup.net>
* gitfast: use $OSTYPE again
In the last update to upstream this was reverted:
a56eac7a (Use OSTYPE instead of uname whenever possible for better speed. (#5496))
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
* gitfast: simplify plugin
No need to set and unset a variable we use once.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
* gitfast: add script to update from upstream
This would make easier the process of updating, and also not miss our
patches.
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
* gitfast: update to upstream v2.21
Signed-off-by: Felipe Contreras <felipe.contreras@gmail.com>
For the `v` alias to work in its current state, the environment variable
EDITOR must already be defined by the time `source $ZSH/oh-my-zsh.sh`
happens. However, in the included zshrc template, EDITOR is set from
within the "User configuration" section, which begins immediately after
the above line. This means that, unless the user knows to move their
`export EDITOR` statements, EDITOR will be undefined when fasd.plugin.zsh
loads, and therefore the alias will have the value 'f -e ""', preventing
it from functioning.
With this change, `"$EDITOR"` will be evaluated each time the alias is
invoked, instead of just once when the alias is created. This allows for
EDITOR to be set from "User configuration" in the zshrc, and has the
additional flexibility of allowing a user to specify a different EDITOR
for a single session or invocation of the alias.