mirror of
https://github.com/Llewellynvdm/exa.git
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04e2d4c692
This commit removes the env_logger dependency, replacing it with a simple implementation. Doing so removes like ten other transitive dependencies that no longer need to be included in the build. It also gains the ability to enable trace-level logging. The users crate, which contains such logging statements as of the version I published a few days ago, has been upgraded to celebrate. Also, change the log imports to globs. I'm only interested that a file doing logging, not what level it's logging at.
65 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
65 lines
3.0 KiB
Bash
# This file gets executed when a user starts a `bash` shell, usually because
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# they’ve just started a new Vagrant session with `vagrant ssh`. It configures
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# some (but not all) of the commands that you can use.
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# Display the installed versions of tools.
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# help banner
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bash /vagrant/devtools/dev-versions.sh
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# Configure the Cool Prompt™ (not actually trademarked).
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# The Cool Prompt tells you whether you’re in debug or strict mode, whether
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# you have colours configured, and whether your last command failed.
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function nonzero_return() { RETVAL=$?; [ $RETVAL -ne 0 ] && echo "$RETVAL "; }
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function debug_mode() { [ "$EXA_DEBUG" == "trace" ] && echo -n "trace-"; [ -n "$EXA_DEBUG" ] && echo "debug "; }
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function strict_mode() { [ -n "$EXA_STRICT" ] && echo "strict "; }
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function lsc_mode() { [ -n "$LS_COLORS" ] && echo "lsc "; }
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function exac_mode() { [ -n "$EXA_COLORS" ] && echo "exac "; }
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export PS1="\[\e[1;36m\]\h \[\e[32m\]\w \[\e[31m\]\`nonzero_return\`\[\e[35m\]\`debug_mode\`\[\e[32m\]\`lsc_mode\`\[\e[1;32m\]\`exac_mode\`\[\e[33m\]\`strict_mode\`\[\e[36m\]\\$\[\e[0m\] "
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# The ‘debug’ function lets you switch debug mode on and off.
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# Turn it on if you need to see exa’s debugging logs.
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function debug () {
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case "$1" in
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""|"on") export EXA_DEBUG=1 ;;
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"off") export EXA_DEBUG= ;;
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"trace") export EXA_DEBUG=trace ;;
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"status") [ -n "$EXA_DEBUG" ] && echo "debug on" || echo "debug off" ;;
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*) echo "Usage: debug on|off|trace|status"; return 1 ;;
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esac;
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}
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# The ‘strict’ function lets you switch strict mode on and off.
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# Turn it on if you’d like exa’s command-line arguments checked.
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function strict () {
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case "$1" in "on") export EXA_STRICT=1 ;;
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"off") export EXA_STRICT= ;;
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"") [ -n "$EXA_STRICT" ] && echo "strict on" || echo "strict off" ;;
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*) echo "Usage: strict on|off"; return 1 ;;
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esac;
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}
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# The ‘colors’ function sets or unsets the ‘LS_COLORS’ and ‘EXA_COLORS’
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# environment variables. There’s also a ‘hacker’ theme which turns everything
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# green, which is usually used for checking that all colour codes work, and
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# for looking cool while you phreak some mainframes or whatever.
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function colors () {
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case "$1" in
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"ls")
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export LS_COLORS="di=34:ln=35:so=32:pi=33:ex=31:bd=34;46:cd=34;43:su=30;41:sg=30;46:tw=30;42:ow=30;43"
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export EXA_COLORS="" ;;
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"hacker")
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export LS_COLORS="di=32:ex=32:fi=32:pi=32:so=32:bd=32:cd=32:ln=32:or=32:mi=32"
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export EXA_COLORS="ur=32:uw=32:ux=32:ue=32:gr=32:gw=32:gx=32:tr=32:tw=32:tx=32:su=32:sf=32:xa=32:sn=32:sb=32:df=32:ds=32:uu=32:un=32:gu=32:gn=32:lc=32:lm=32:ga=32:gm=32:gd=32:gv=32:gt=32:xx=32:da=32:in=32:bl=32:hd=32:lp=32:cc=32:" ;;
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"off")
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export LS_COLORS=
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export EXA_COLORS= ;;
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"")
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[ -n "$LS_COLORS" ] && echo "LS_COLORS=$LS_COLORS" || echo "ls-colors off"
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[ -n "$EXA_COLORS" ] && echo "EXA_COLORS=$EXA_COLORS" || echo "exa-colors off" ;;
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*) echo "Usage: ls-colors ls|hacker|off"; return 1 ;;
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esac;
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}
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