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This makes it easier to run tests without providing ZDOTDIR. |
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lib | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
autoenv.plugin.zsh | ||
autoenv.zsh | ||
init.zsh | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
Autoenv for Zsh
zsh-autoenv automatically sources (known/whitelisted) .autoenv.zsh
files,
typically used in project root directories.
It handles "enter" and leave" events, nesting, and stashing of variables (overwriting and restoring).
Requirements
- Zsh version 4.3.10 or later.
Features
- Support for enter and leave events, which can use the same file.
By default it uses
.autoenv.zsh
for entering, and.autoenv_leave.zsh
for leaving. - Interactively asks for confirmation / authentication before sourcing an
unknown
.autoenv.zsh
file, and remembers whitelisted files by their hashed content. - Test suite.
- Written in/for Zsh.
Variable stashing
You can use autostash
in your .autoenv.zsh
files to overwrite some
variable, e.g. $PATH
. When leaving the directory, it will be automatically
restored.
% echo 'echo ENTERED; autostash FOO=changed' > project/.autoenv.zsh
% FOO=orig
% cd project
Attempting to load unauthorized env file!
-rw-rw-r-- 1 user user 36 Mai 6 20:38 /tmp/project/.autoenv.zsh
**********************************************
echo ENTERED; autostash FOO=changed
**********************************************
Would you like to authorize it? (type 'yes') yes
ENTERED
project % echo $FOO
changed
% cd ..
% echo $FOO
orig
There is also stash
, unstash
and autounstash
, in case you want to
have more control.
The varstash library has been taken from smartcd, and was optimized for Zsh.
Writing your .autoenv.zsh file
autoenv_source_parent()
zsh-autoenv will stop looking for .autoenv.zsh
files upwards after the first
one has been found, but you can use the function autoenv_source_parent
to
source the next .autoenv.zsh
file upwards the directory tree from there.
The function accepts an optional argument, which allows to stop looking before the file system root is reached:
autoenv_source_parent ../..
Installation
Clone the repository and source it from your ~/.zshrc
file:
% git clone https://github.com/Tarrasch/zsh-autoenv ~/.dotfiles/lib/zsh-autoenv
% echo 'source ~/.dotfiles/lib/zsh-autoenv/autoenv.zsh' >> ~/.zshrc
Using antigen
antigen-bundle Tarrasch/zsh-autoenv
Using zgen
Add the following to your .zshrc
where you are loading your plugins:
zgen load Tarrasch/zsh-autoenv
Using zplug
Add the following to your .zshrc
where you are loading your plugins:
zplug "Tarrasch/zsh-autoenv"
Configuration
You can use the following variables to control zsh-autoenv's behavior.
Add them to your ~/.zshrc
file, before sourcing/loading zsh-autoenv.
AUTOENV_FILE_ENTER
Name of the file to look for when entering directories.
Default: .autoenv.zsh
AUTOENV_FILE_LEAVE
Name of the file to look for when leaving directories.
Requires AUTOENV_HANDLE_LEAVE=1
.
Default: .autoenv_leave.zsh
AUTOENV_LOOK_UPWARDS
Look for zsh-autoenv "enter" files in parent dirs?
Default: 1
AUTOENV_HANDLE_LEAVE
Handle leave events when changing away from a subtree, where an "enter" event was handled?
Default: 1
AUTOENV_DISABLED
(Temporarily) disable zsh-autoenv. This gets looked at in the chpwd handler.
Default: 0
AUTOENV_DEBUG
Set debug level. If enabled (> 0) it will print information to stderr.
- 0: no debug messages
- 1: generic debug logging
- 2: more verbose messages
- messages about adding/removing files on the internal stack
- 3: everything
- sets xtrace option (
set -x
) while sourcing env files
- sets xtrace option (
Default: 0
Usage
zsh-autoenv works automatically once installed.
You can use autoenv-edit
to edit the nearest/current autoenv files.
It will use $AUTOENV_EDITOR
, $EDITOR
, or vim
for editing.
Recipes
Automatically activate Python virtualenvs
Given AUTOENV_FILE_ENTER=.autoenv.zsh
, AUTOENV_FILE_LEAVE=.autoenv.zsh
and
AUTOENV_HANDLE_LEAVE=1
the following script will activate Python virtualenvs
automatically in all subdirectories (.venv
directories get used by
pipenv with
PIPENV_VENV_IN_PROJECT=1
):
# Environment file for all projects.
# - (de)activates Python virtualenvs (.venv) from pipenv
if [[ $autoenv_event == 'enter' ]]; then
autoenv_source_parent
_my_autoenv_venv_chpwd() {
if [[ -z "$_ZSH_ACTIVATED_VIRTUALENV" && -n "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ]]; then
return
fi
setopt localoptions extendedglob
local -a venv
venv=(./(../)#.venv(NY1:a))
if [[ -n "$_ZSH_ACTIVATED_VIRTUALENV" && -n "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ]]; then
if ! (( $#venv )) || [[ "$_ZSH_ACTIVATED_VIRTUALENV" != "$venv[1]" ]]; then
unset _ZSH_ACTIVATED_VIRTUALENV
echo "De-activating virtualenv: ${(D)VIRTUAL_ENV}" >&2
deactivate
fi
fi
if [[ -z "$VIRTUAL_ENV" ]]; then
if (( $#venv )); then
echo "Activating virtualenv: ${(D)venv}" >&2
source $venv[1]/bin/activate
_ZSH_ACTIVATED_VIRTUALENV="$venv[1]"
fi
fi
}
autoload -U add-zsh-hook
add-zsh-hook chpwd _my_autoenv_venv_chpwd
_my_autoenv_venv_chpwd
else
add-zsh-hook -d chpwd _my_autoenv_venv_chpwd
fi
Related projects
- https://github.com/direnv/direnv
- https://github.com/cxreg/smartcd
- https://github.com/kennethreitz/autoenv
History
This started as an optimized version of the bash plugin autoenv but for Zsh, and grew a lot of functionality on top of it (inspired by smartcd).
The code was initially based on @joshuaclayton's dotfiles. In September 2013 @Tarrasch packaged it into a nice antigen-compatible unit with integration tests. Since November 2014, @blueyed took over and added many nice features, mainly inspired by smartcd.