shx or “shell-extras” extends comint-mode in Emacs (e.g. M-x shell
).
It’s compatible with any underlying REPL (zsh, bash, psql, ipython, etc.).
It parses the output stream in a few useful ways:
- Display graphics and plots in the shell with a simple markup
language (e.g.
<view image.png>
) - Add event-driven and timed behaviors to any shell session
- Open any filename or URL by arrowing up to it and pressing
RET
(shx will even try to guess the correct directory) - Yank any line to the prompt by arrowing up to it and pressing
C-RET
- Check the time a command was run by mousing over its prompt
shx makes it easy to add new shell commands written in elisp. Some are already built in:
:clear
clears the buffer (likeclear
orCommand-K
on macOS):e filename.txt
opens a file for editing:ssh user@host:port
starts a remote shell session using tramp:view image_file.png
embeds an image in the shell:plotline data_file.txt
embeds a line plot- etc.
It also extends shell-mode
’s syntax highlighting, recenters and highlights
content for better viewing when you run commands like comint-previous-prompt
and comint-kill-input
, and improves compatibility with evil-mode by
anticipating when to switch to insert mode.
Use M-x shx RET
to start a new shell session with shx-mode
enabled.
This version is tested with Emacs 26.1. Check out the release log.
M-x package-install RET shx RET
to install shx
from MELPA.
guix install emacs-shx
to install shx
from GNU Guix.
Add the following to your .emacs
:
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/path/to/shx/") ; add shx.el's directory to the load-path
(require 'shx) ; load shell-extras
Type M-x shx RET
. Try out the following commands:
:e ~/.bashrc
to edit your.bashrc
(for example):man ls
to display the man page forls
:help
to a start a completing read for othershx
commands
If you like shx-mode, you can enable it everywhere:
(shx-global-mode 1) ; toggle shx-mode on globally
Now shx will run automatically in any comint-mode
buffer. If you don’t want
shx to run in every comint-mode buffer, you can use M-x shx-mode
on a
case-by-case basis, or just add hooks to the mode in question, for example:
(add-hook 'inferior-python-mode-hook #'shx-mode)
Use M-x customize-group RET shx RET
to see shx’s many customization options.
Here’s an example customization using setq
:
(setq
;; resync the shell's default-directory with Emacs on "z" commands:
shx-directory-tracker-regexp "^z "
;; vastly improve display performance by breaking up long output lines
shx-max-output 1024
;; prevent input longer than macOS's typeahead buffer from going through
shx-max-input 1024
;; prefer inlined images and plots to have a height of 250 pixels
shx-img-height 250
;; don't show any incidental hint messages about how to use shx
shx-show-hints nil
;; flash the previous comint prompt for a full second when using C-c C-p
shx-flash-prompt-time 1.0
;; use `#' to prefix shx commands instead of the default `:'
shx-leader "#")
Key binding | Description |
---|---|
C-RET | If the cursor is not on the prompt, paste the current line to the input |
RET | If the cursor is on a filename or a URL, try to open it |
SPC | If the prompt is : , send SPC straight through to the process |
q | If the prompt is : , send q straight through to the process |
Note the prompt will be :
when reading through the output of less
or a man
page
if you run the following:
(setenv "LESS" "--dumb --prompt=s")
shx’s markup can enhance basic command-line applications and drive other events.
If the output ever contains <view mountains.png>
on a line by itself, then a
scaled rendering of mountains.png
will be inlined within the text in the
shell. This works because view
is a shx command. shx will execute any
(safe) shx command that appears with the following syntax:
<command arg1 arg2 ...>
where command
is a shx command and arg1 ... argn
is a space-separated
list of arguments. Arguments don’t need to be surrounded by quotes – the
command will figure out how to parse them.
You can use this markup to create a barplot (:plotbar
) after collecting some
stats, or generate an :alert
when a task is finished, and so forth.
shx’s ‘extra’ commands are invoked by typing a :
followed by the command’s
name. (You can change the :
prefix by customizing the shx-leader
variable.) These commands are written in elisp and so can access all of
Emacs’ facilities. Type :help
to see a complete listing of shx commands.
One command I use frequently is the :edit
(shorthand :e
) command:
# edit the .emacs file:
:edit ~/.emacs
# use tramp to edit .emacs on a remote host through ssh:
:e /ssh:remote-host.com:~/.emacs
# use tramp to edit .bashrc on a running docker container:
:e /docker:02fbc948e009:~/.bashrc
# edit a local file as root
:sedit /etc/passwd
Thanks to CeleritasCelery it’s also possible to use environment variables in the argument list:
:e $HOME/.emacs.d
(To see an environment variable’s value, use (getenv "<var>")
.)
The :ssh
and :docker
commands are popular for opening “remote” shells:
# open a shell on a remote host:
:ssh user@remote-host.com
# connect to a running docker container
:docker 8a8335d63ff3
# reopen the shell on the localhost:
:ssh
Jordan Besly points out that you can customize the default interpreter for each “remote” using connection-profile-set-local-variables.
I also use the :kept
and :keep
commands frequently:
# write a complicated command:
wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/get-pip.py && python get-pip.py
# save the last command:
:keep
# search for commands having to do with pip:
:kept pip
Because these commands are written in elisp, shx gives M-x shell
a lot of
the same advantages as eshell
. You can even evaluate elisp code directly in
the buffer (see :help eval
).
Command | Description |
---|---|
:alert | Reveal the buffer with an alert. Useful for markup |
:clear | Clear the buffer |
:date | Show the date (even when the process is blocked) |
:diff file1 file2 | Launch an Emacs diff between two files |
:edit file | Edit a file. Shortcut: :e <file> |
:eval (elisp-sexp) | Evaluate some elisp code. Example: :eval (pwd) |
:find <filename> | Run a fuzzy-find for <filename> |
:goto-url <url> | Completing-read for a URL |
:header New header | Change the current header-line-format |
:kept regexp | Show a list of your ‘kept’ commands matching regexp |
:keep | Add the previous command to the list of kept commands |
:man topic | Invoke the Emacs man page browser on a topic |
:ssh <host> | Restart the shell on the specified host |
There are more than this – type :help
for a listing of all user commands.
Command | Description |
---|---|
:view image_file.jpg | Display an image |
:plotbar data_file.txt | Display a bar plot |
:plotline data_file.txt | Display a line plot |
:plotmatrix data_file.txt | Display a heatmap |
:plotscatter data_file.txt | Display a scatter plot |
:plot3d data_file.txt | Display a 3D plot |
These are for displaying inline graphics and plots in the shell buffer. You
can control how much vertical space an inline image occupies by customizing
the shx-img-height
variable.
Note convert
(i.e. ImageMagick) and gnuplot
need to be installed. If
the binaries are installed but these commands aren’t working, customize the
shx-path-to-convert
and shx-path-to-gnuplot
variables to point to the
binaries. Also note these graphical commands aren’t yet compatible with
shells launched on remote hosts (e.g. over ssh or in a Docker container).
Command | Description |
---|---|
:delay <sec> <command> | Run a shell command after a specific delay |
:pulse <sec> <command> | Repeat a shell command forever with a given delay |
:repeat <count> <sec> <command> | Repeat a shell command <count> times |
:stop <num> | Cancel a repeating or delayed command |
Use these to delay, pulse, or repeat a command a specific number of times. Unfortunately these only support your typical shell commands, and not shx’s extra (colon-prefixed) commands. So this possible:
# Run the 'pwd' command 10 seconds from now:
:delay 10 pwd
But this is not possible:
# Run the 'pwd' shx command 10 seconds from now (DOES NOT WORK)
:delay 10 :pwd
New shx commands are written by defining single-argument elisp functions
named shx-cmd-COMMAND-NAME
, where COMMAND-NAME
is what the user would
type to invoke it.
If you evaluate the following (or add it to your .emacs
),
(defun shx-cmd-rename (name)
"(SAFE) Rename the current buffer to NAME."
(if (not (ignore-errors (rename-buffer name)))
(shx-insert 'error "Can't rename buffer.")
(shx-insert "Renaming buffer to " name "\n")
(shx--hint "Emacs won't save buffers starting with *")))
then each shx buffer will immediately have access to the :rename
command.
When it’s invoked, shx will also display a hint about buffer names.
Note the importance of defining a docstring. This documents the
command so that typing :help rename
will give the user information on what
the command does. Further, since the docstring begins with (SAFE)
,
it becomes part of shx’s markup language. So in this case if:
<rename A new name for the buffer>
appears on a line by itself in the output, the buffer will try to automatically rename itself.
A command similar to this one is built into shx:
(defun shx-cmd-diff (files)
"(SAFE) Launch an Emacs `ediff' between FILES."
(setq files (shx-tokenize files))
(if (not (eq (length files) 2))
(shx-insert 'error "diff <file1> <file2>\n")
(shx-insert "invoking ediff...\n")
(shx--asynch-funcall #'ediff (mapcar #'expand-file-name files))))
Note that files
is supplied as a string, but it’s immediately parsed
into a list of strings using shx-tokenize
. Helpfully, this function is
able to parse various styles of quoting and escaping, for example
(shx-tokenize "'file one' file\\ two")
evaluates to
("file one" "file two")
.
If you execute the following,
(defun shx-cmd-browse (url)
"Browse the supplied URL."
(shx-insert "Browsing " 'font-lock-keyword-face url)
(browse-url url))
then each shx buffer will have access to the :browse
command.
Note the docstring does not specify that this command is SAFE
.
This means <browse url>
will not become part of shx’s markup. That
makes sense in this case, since you wouldn’t want to give a process the
power to open arbitrary URLs without prompting.
If you’re here, these might be interesting:
- Shell & Comint Secrets: History commands
- PComplete: Context-Sensitive Completion in Emacs
- 10 tools to power up your command line
- Creating dynamic bash prompts
- The Keep Utility inspired the
kept
andkeep
commands - “Terminals Are Sexy” (portal)
- Command-Line Lint, another project I maintain
- oh my zsh, a community-driven zsh configuration
- bash-it, a community driven bash configuration
And if running a dumb
terminal in Emacs isn’t for you, here are some
alternatives:
- The Tao of tmux, re: working in the terminal with tmux
- zsh-syntax-highlighting
- Shell configuration tips from Vitaly Belman
- Shell integration for iTerm2 on macOS
- BitBar adds program output to menus on macOS