* feat(stats): add linux sysadmin commands to common_subcommands
I've been using atuin on my Linux box for some time now and I have
noticed that a few commands that are used rather often are not in the
list of common_subcommands.
This change adds these commands to the list.
* feat(stats): I forgot 'apt'
* Normalize formatting
This makes the commented bits unifed and makes lists multiline and
always adds the trailing comma.
* Add nix to default config
Since we are big fans of it ;)
Add 'I' binding to vim-normal mode (a la 'A' introduced in #1697) to
jump into vim-insert mode at the beginning of the search input.
Also add '/' and '?' bindings to vim-normal mode to clear the search
input and jump into vim-insert mode. This mimics the UX in e.g. `set -o
vi` (bash) or `bindkey -v` (zsh) mode when you are using 'k' and 'j' to
browse history lines and can type '/' or '?' to start a new search. (In
a perfect world it would target the search in the forward or backward
range starting at your current position in the history, but this is a
reasonable first step.)
* fix(client): no panic on empty inspector
* fix: clippy warning
Although I am not that happy with this clippy rule.
I am old school and we learned to put the most likely path first.
Back then compiler optimizations were not too great and cache prediction
was better handled this way.
* Update atuin/src/command/client/search/interactive.rs
---------
Co-authored-by: Ellie Huxtable <ellie@elliehuxtable.com>
* fix(import/zsh-histdb): import exit_status and session
* fix(import/zsh-histdb): avoid session id conflict
* fix(import/zsh-histdb): follow the format conventions of session and hostname
* fix(import/zsh-histdb): duration unit is nanosecond
* feat(client): add config option keys.scroll_exits
If the config option is set the `false`, using the up/down key won't
exit the TUI when scrolled past the first/last entry.
Example:
```
[keys]
scroll_exits = false
```
The default is `true`, which is the current behavior.
* Update atuin/src/command/client/search/interactive.rs
Co-authored-by: Koichi Murase <myoga.murase@gmail.com>
* refactor: add option to config.toml
---------
Co-authored-by: Koichi Murase <myoga.murase@gmail.com>
* add xonsh to `atuin import auto`
* respect $HISTFILE in xonsh importers
* disable up-arrow binding in xonsh when completion menu is active
* include xonsh logic in the same conditional as other shells
* format and fix clippy lints
* feat: support syncing aliases
This is definitely not yet finished, but works for zsh right now.
TODO:
1. Support other shells
2. Cache the alias generation, so we don't have to do a bunch of work at
shell init time
* correct imports
* fix clippy errors
* fix tests
* add the other shells
* support xonsh
* add delete
* update rust, then make clippy happy once more
* omfg fmt too
Fixes https://github.com/atuinsh/atuin/issues/1719
[C-m] is usually identical to [RET] in the terminal protocol, and some
users use [C-m] in place of [RET]. However, kitty's extended keyboard
protocol enables differentiating them so that [C-m] does not function
as does without the extended keyboard protocol.
For the compatibility with terminals without extended keyboard
protocols, we anyway cannot assign a distinct feature to [C-m], so we
can safely add the explicit binding of InputAction::Accept to [C-m].
* add importers for xonsh JSON files and SQLite db
* rustfmt xonsh importers
* remove env-dependent tests from xonsh importers
* pass xonsh_data_dir into path resolver instead of looking up in env
* review: run format
* review: fix clippy errors
---------
Co-authored-by: Ellie Huxtable <ellie@elliehuxtable.com>
Instead of lots of small sqlite transaction, do one monster one.
A single tx with 100s of 1000s of rows should be fine on all systems
A very unscientific test shows this to be roughly 10x faster
The current 'i' binding to switch to insert mode is entirely unintuitive
since what I almost always want to do is append to the current query.
The fact that the cursor extends past the current input (which vim
doesn't do with default settings) adds to the problem. The 'a' key is
what I would reach for, but 'A' makes a lot of sense too so I added
that.
The 'h' and 'l' bindings for moving the cursor also help makes things
a bit more usable.
Low-end devices like RISC-V SBCs are sometimes too slow to initialize SQLite in 0.1s. Option to specify a higher value allows check to pass on such devices with relaxed restrictions.
The `Stdout::new` function first enters an alternate
screen then later enables enhanced keyboard mode.
In `Drop`, we need to do this in the opposite order:
disable enhanced keyboard mode then exit alternate mode.
Fixes#1693
Replace lots of logging with some progress bars. This looks much nicer
I'd like to move it out of the atuin-client crate and into the atuin
crate. But first, I want to decouple a lot of the record moving, so it
can wait until that's done.
* Allow specifying a timezone in history search/list
* Fix clippy complaints
* Add a bit more comment on supporting named timezones
* Add rudimentary tests
* Ditch local timezone test
* Timezone configuration support
* Set default timezone to `local`
* `--tz` -> `--timezone`
`--tz` is kept as a visible alias
* fix(bash/preexec): support termcap-based tput
The current uses of tput specify the terminfo entry names. However,
there are different implementations of the tput command. There are
two ways to specify the terminal capability: terminfo and termcap
names. Although recent implementations of tput (such as ncurses in
Linux) accepts the terminfo name, some accept both the terminfo and
termcap names, and some old implementations (such as in FreeBSD) only
accept the termcap names.
In this patch, we first attempt the terminfo name and then the termcap
name if the terminfo name fails.
Note: When both fail due to e.g. non-existent tput, we end up with
outputting nothing. This does not cause a serious problem because it
just does not clear the previous prompts.
* perf(bash/preexec): cache the results of tput
With the current implementation, we spwan 10 processes of the tput
command at most every time we perform `enter_accept`. In this patch,
to reduce the delay, we separate the related code into a function and
cache the results of the tput commands.
When the previous prompt is longer than the prompt calculated by the
current PS1, some extra characters from the previous prompt remains in
the terminal display. In this patch, we erase the content of the
previous prompt before outputting our new prompt.