The original suggestion for an unattended install downloads the installation script to a file, then runs that file with the --unattended argument. The install.sh file would be left behind after the suggested command was run.
This change passes the --unattended argument directly into sh. So, it's a nice one-liner like the default installation script, and it doesn't leave a dangling install.sh script.
* 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>
This facilitates testing of changes to the core installation code: you'll be
able to do a roundtrip test of install and uninstall using the working code on
your branch.
Controlled by passing $REPO and $BRANCH environment variables to install.sh.
This changes the behavior to default to the binary found first in $PATH,
then checking it's actually in the shells file (/etc/shells).
If that fails go back to the previous behavior, but actually check that
the path obtained exists in the filesystem.
Co-authored-by: Joel Kuzmarski <leoj3n@gmail.com>
This replaces the currently running process with the new one using `exec`
instead of creating a new process. This way, when the user `exit`s out of
the new shell it will not pop them back into the shell from which ohmyzsh
was installed from.