* Deprecate fisher --list in favor of a new command
fisher list. The behavior is roughly the same. See
fisher help list for usage. tl;dr: Use list to query
the local system / cache and search to query the index.
* Teach fisher_plugin_walk about fish_postexec,
fish_command_not_found and fish_preexec event emitters
and erase them during uninstall if they were defined in
a snippet.
* Fisherman now recognizes the following aliases by default:
i for install, u for update, l for list, s for search and
h for help.
* Rewrite documentation to be simpler and more consistent.
* Fisherman can install "functions" now. If you have created
a function interactively, you can run fisher install name
of the function and a directory will be created in
$PWD/name of the function and installed as usual.
* Fisherman now detects if users have modified their fish
prompt using fish_config and if so, uninstalls $fisher_prompt.
* Search results now truncate plugin descriptions based in
the width of the terminal screen.
* Install/Update/Uninstall CLI was retouched.
Looking behind and Ahead
========================
On Jan, 1st, Fisherman 0.1.0 departed from the bay of
"my hard drive" and today 1.0.0 has finally shipped.
Things are still a little rough and knotty, what did
you think? But 1.0.0 means all the basic things are
here.
Internally, we may still push some large changes, more
robust tests; at ~300 there are still areas a bit dry.
On the outside, Fisherman will change little, I hope.
That's a feature. If you want a more colorful CLI,
concurrent updates, or another bit here and there,
we may work something out.
This release means more time to focus on the plugin
ecosystem, but the adventures are far from over.
By using `command` we ensure that we always end up calling the external
binary and don't get caught by user aliasses, functions or other
magic.
Closes#79
=====================
Add user key bindings support.
Recall $fisher_home/functions are always before user
functions in $fish_function_path. This was an early design
decision in order to prevent users from redefining core
functions by mistake or by means other than using plugins
(recommended). In other words, you are free to create a
plugin that modifies a Fisherman core function, but you
can't redefine a Fisherman function privately by saving it
to your user config fish. If you found a bug in a Fisherman
function, instead of creating a private patch send it
upstream. If you created a function that overrides a
Fisherman core feature, create a plugin. This way the
community can benefit from your code whenever you are ready
to publish it.
By default, Fisherman provides no fish_user_key_bindings,
so if the user has already defined their own
fish_user_key_bindings that one will not be affected.
Now, plugins can define their own key bindings inside a
fish_user_key_bindings.fish or key_bindings.fish at the root
of their repository or inside a functions directory. You can
put your key bindings inside a function or not. If you put
it inside a function, the function name must be the same as
the file without the .fish extension.
$fisher_config/bindings.fish When a plugin with key
bindings is installed for the first time or the only
one with bindings is uninstalled, Fisherman will modify
~/.config/functions/fish_user_key_bindings.fish (or create
it for the first time) and add a single line at the top
of the fish_user_key_bindings function to source the new
$fisher_config/bindings.fish. All the key bindings defined
by the enabled/installed plugins are concatenated and saved
to this file.
This mechanism has the following advantages:
Does not slow down shell start. Does not require Fisherman
to provide his own fish_user_key_bindings by default.
Honors any previously existing user key bindings. Allows
plugin to define their own key bindings and coexist
with the user's key bindings. If the user updates his
fish_user_key_bindings, re-running the function does update
the key bindings. Mega Refactoring
The entire source code of Fisherman received a
major revision and refactoring. The validation and
install/uninstall mechanisms were thoroughly revised and and
broken down into smaller functions easier to test as well as
several other sub parts of the system.
Rewrite fisher search and remove features that are mostly
already covered by fisher --list and remove the ability to
generate information about plugins of unknown origin. The
decision to remove this feature was based in performance
concerns and the result of thinking about the usability
and whether it was really worth the speed tradeoff. The
conclusion is I would rather have better performance and if
I need to query a plugins origin I can always use fisher
--list or fisher --list=url or fisher --list=author.
Add $fisher_update_interval to determine if the index should
update or not when a search query is taking place. The
default value is 10 seconds. This means the index will not
be updated if less than 10 seconds have elapsed since the
last action that triggered an update in the first place. See
Improve Install/Uninstall/Update status output. If a plugin
fails to install decrease the total. If any plugins are
skipped because they are already installed in the case of
fisher install or available in the cache, but disabled in
the case of fisher uninstall they are collected into an
array and displayed in a new section n plugin/s skipped (a,
b, c) at the bottom of the report.
Improve test coverage.
Tightly coupled functions were making testing increasingly
difficult. Most of the test effort was basically testing
whether git clone or git pull. New separation of concerns
makes tests run faster and the difficult install/uninstall
algorithms has better coverage now. Other
Now __fisher_list can list plugins from the cache, a
fishfile/bundle and plugins that are installed/enabled or
disabled. This removes __fisher_file and combines it with
__fisher_list. This also removes fisher -f and replaces it
with fisher -l <file> or fisher --list=<file>.
Rename __fisher_parse_help to __fisher_complete and have the
function create the completions automatically. This allows
you to complete your commands with parseable usage help
faster. The original design was fine, but this change
improves auto-complete performance so it was preferred.
Use __fisher_index_update when building file with Make. This
helps prevent an error when using a fish version < 2.2.0.
See #55#50#48.
Add __fisher_index_update to update the index and remove
previously undocumented fisher update --index. This
function is designed to bypass GitHub's server network
cache passing an arbitrary query string to curl like
$fisher_index?RANDOM_NUMBER. This means index updates are
immediately available now.
Add fisher --list=url option to display local plugin url or
path.
Add fisher --list=bare option to display local plugins in
the cache without the * enabled symbol.
Prepend > to the currently enabled theme when using fisher
--list[=cache]. Related #49.
Prepend * to plugin names to indicate they are currently
enabled when using fisher --list[=cache]. See #49.