#!/bin/bash # note by jpokorny: # original http://www.twistedmatrix.com/users/glyph/preexec.bash.txt # preexec.bash -- Bash support for ZSH-like 'preexec' and 'precmd' functions. # The 'preexec' function is executed before each interactive command is # executed, with the interactive command as its argument. The 'precmd' # function is executed before each prompt is displayed. # To use, in order: # 1. source this file # 2. define 'preexec' and/or 'precmd' functions (AFTER sourcing this file), # 3. as near as possible to the end of your shell setup, run 'preexec_install' # to kick everything off. # Note: this module requires 2 bash features which you must not otherwise be # using: the "DEBUG" trap, and the "PROMPT_COMMAND" variable. preexec_install # will override these and if you override one or the other this _will_ break. # This is known to support bash3, as well as *mostly* support bash2.05b. It # has been tested with the default shells on MacOS X 10.4 "Tiger", Ubuntu 5.10 # "Breezy Badger", Ubuntu 6.06 "Dapper Drake", and Ubuntu 6.10 "Edgy Eft". # Copy screen-run variables from the remote host, if they're available. if [[ "$SCREEN_RUN_HOST" == "" ]] then SCREEN_RUN_HOST="$LC_SCREEN_RUN_HOST" SCREEN_RUN_USER="$LC_SCREEN_RUN_USER" fi # This variable describes whether we are currently in "interactive mode"; # i.e. whether this shell has just executed a prompt and is waiting for user # input. It documents whether the current command invoked by the trace hook is # run interactively by the user; it's set immediately after the prompt hook, # and unset as soon as the trace hook is run. preexec_interactive_mode="" # Default do-nothing implementation of preexec. function preexec () { true } # Default do-nothing implementation of precmd. function precmd () { true } # This function is installed as the PROMPT_COMMAND; it is invoked before each # interactive prompt display. It sets a variable to indicate that the prompt # was just displayed, to allow the DEBUG trap, below, to know that the next # command is likely interactive. function preexec_invoke_cmd () { precmd preexec_interactive_mode="yes" } # This function is installed as the DEBUG trap. It is invoked before each # interactive prompt display. Its purpose is to inspect the current # environment to attempt to detect if the current command is being invoked # interactively, and invoke 'preexec' if so. function preexec_invoke_exec () { if [[ -n "$COMP_LINE" ]] then # We're in the middle of a completer. This obviously can't be # an interactively issued command. return fi if [[ -z "$preexec_interactive_mode" ]] then # We're doing something related to displaying the prompt. Let the # prompt set the title instead of me. return else # If we're in a subshell, then the prompt won't be re-displayed to put # us back into interactive mode, so let's not set the variable back. # In other words, if you have a subshell like # (sleep 1; sleep 2) # You want to see the 'sleep 2' as a set_command_title as well. if [[ 0 -eq "$BASH_SUBSHELL" ]] then preexec_interactive_mode="" fi fi if [[ "preexec_invoke_cmd" == "$BASH_COMMAND" ]] then # Sadly, there's no cleaner way to detect two prompts being displayed # one after another. This makes it important that PROMPT_COMMAND # remain set _exactly_ as below in preexec_install. Let's switch back # out of interactive mode and not trace any of the commands run in # precmd. # Given their buggy interaction between BASH_COMMAND and debug traps, # versions of bash prior to 3.1 can't detect this at all. preexec_interactive_mode="" return fi # In more recent versions of bash, this could be set via the "BASH_COMMAND" # variable, but using history here is better in some ways: for example, "ps # auxf | less" will show up with both sides of the pipe if we use history, # but only as "ps auxf" if not. local this_command=`history 1 | sed -e "s/^[ ]*[0-9]*[ ]*//g"`; # If none of the previous checks have earlied out of this function, then # the command is in fact interactive and we should invoke the user's # preexec hook with the running command as an argument. preexec "$this_command" } # Execute this to set up preexec and precmd execution. function preexec_install () { # *BOTH* of these options need to be set for the DEBUG trap to be invoked # in ( ) subshells. This smells like a bug in bash to me. The null stderr # redirections are to quiet errors on bash2.05 (i.e. OSX's default shell) # where the options can't be set, and it's impossible to inherit the trap # into subshells. set -o functrace > /dev/null 2>&1 shopt -s extdebug > /dev/null 2>&1 # Finally, install the actual traps. PROMPT_COMMAND="${PROMPT_COMMAND};preexec_invoke_cmd" trap 'preexec_invoke_exec' DEBUG } # Since this is the reason that 99% of everybody is going to bother with a # pre-exec hook anyway, we'll include it in this module. # Change the title of the xterm. function preexec_xterm_title () { local title="$1" echo -ne "\033]0;$title\007" > /dev/stderr } function preexec_screen_title () { local title="$1" echo -ne "\033k$1\033\\" > /dev/stderr } # Abbreviate the "user@host" string as much as possible to preserve space in # screen titles. Elide the host if the host is the same, elide the user if the # user is the same. function preexec_screen_user_at_host () { local RESULT="" if [[ "$SCREEN_RUN_HOST" == "$SCREEN_HOST" ]] then return else if [[ "$SCREEN_RUN_USER" == "$USER" ]] then echo -n "@${SCREEN_HOST}" else echo -n "${USER}@${SCREEN_HOST}" fi fi } function preexec_xterm_title_install () { # These functions are defined here because they only make sense with the # preexec_install below. function precmd () { preexec_xterm_title "${TERM} - ${USER}@${SCREEN_HOST} `dirs -0` $PROMPTCHAR" if [[ "${TERM}" == screen ]] then preexec_screen_title "`preexec_screen_user_at_host`${PROMPTCHAR}" fi } function preexec () { # xterm seems to treat backslashes funny; they terminate the escape # sequence or something. I'm not sure why, but if we don't escape them # by doubling them (like so) then running an interactive command with a # backslash in it will result in a messed-up terminal and half a # terminal title echoed onto the command line. thiscmd="$(echo "$1" | sed -e 's/\\/\\\\/g' | head -n 1)" preexec_xterm_title "${TERM} - $thiscmd {`dirs -0`} (${USER}@${SCREEN_HOST})" if [[ "${TERM}" == screen ]] then local cutit="$1" local cmdtitle=`echo "$cutit" | cut -d " " -f 1` if [[ "$cmdtitle" == "exec" ]] then local cmdtitle=`echo "$cutit" | cut -d " " -f 2` fi if [[ "$cmdtitle" == "screen" ]] then # Since stacked screens are quite common, it would be nice to # just display them as '$$'. local cmdtitle="${PROMPTCHAR}" else local cmdtitle=":$cmdtitle" fi preexec_screen_title "`preexec_screen_user_at_host`${PROMPTCHAR}$cmdtitle" fi } preexec_install }