hishtory
atuin
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hishtory | atuin | |
---|---|---|
19 | 54 | |
2,363 | 17,775 | |
- | 8.6% | |
9.8 | 9.7 | |
1 day ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
hishtory
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Show HN: Inshellisense – IDE style shell autocomplete
If you're more used to ctrl+r, you could try hiSHtory (https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory)
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hiSHtory: Your shell history on steroids: Stored in context, synced to all your machines, and easily queryable
Including the server as part of the release sounds reasonable to me. I'm inclined to keep it as a separate file since most people don't need that feature, so I'd rather not unnecessarily increase the size of the main binary size. I filed https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory/issues/78 to track this.
- hiSHtory
- `hishtory` is a better shell history
- GitHub - ddworken/hishtory: Your shell history: synced, queryable, and in context
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Show HN: HiSHtory: Your shell history in context, synced, and queryable
Ah, thank you commenting on this! This is absolutely unintentional and was the fault of a missing comment in the bash script (that I didn't notice because I generally use zsh). See https://github.com/ddworken/hishtory/commit/72ff95ab8b23c3be... and if you run `hishtory update` it should be all fixed.
atuin
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Ask HN: Any tool for managing large and variable command lines?
I've heard good things about atuin
https://github.com/atuinsh/atuin
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ohmyzsh VS atuin - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 22 Feb 2024
The shell history autocomplete seems to be better than the one that comes with Oh My Zsh.
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Atuin – Magical Shell History
Atuin is lovely, although I found some of its defaults pretty annoying until I changed them:
- It turns out I basically never want fuzzy search through my command history, and certainly not by default. I gave it a try for a couple weeks but it was very frustrating to be searching for a particular command, type in the exact prefix, and have the thing I was looking for hidden among hundreds of irrelevant entries. Solution: search_mode = "fulltext" in Atuin's config.toml
- Having a full screen pop-up appear whenever I hit up was really jarring, especially since I have a habit of hitting up a few times when I'm at the command line thinking of what I need to do next, to sort of refresh my memory on what I was just doing; the popup very effectively destroyed that chain of thought. Solution: eval "$(atuin init bash --disable-up-arrow)" in .bashrc
These are pretty minor issues and it's possible my preferences are just different from most!
Atuin now works really nicely for me. My only outstanding issues are:
- Under mosh the UI ends up corrupting the screen; apparently this is really more of a mosh bug (no alternate screen support) and you can work around it by having tmux/screen running: https://github.com/atuinsh/atuin/issues/1324
- I still don't have a great model in my head of how sync works and find myself occasionally force-syncing across a few systems until I convince myself everything is in the same state.
- It would be nice to have some kind of settings sync so I don't have to make the config changes mentioned above on 10 different systems. Surprisingly I don't see a feature request for this yet so maybe I'll go open one...
Anyway I don't want these issues to stop people from trying Atuin – it's a really nice piece of software. I almost never make changes to the default environment so I consider it a testament to how useful it is that I've added it to all the systems I use regularly!
- Fly through your shell history
- Atuin replaces your existing shell history with a SQLite database
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fish-shell: the user-friendly command-line shell
They recently added sqlite backed history. You can also use atuin[1] for more advanced usecases.
[1]: https://github.com/atuinsh/atuin
- Atuin: Sync and search shell history
- Ask HN: Share a shell script you like
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Returning `Result<()>`
I was studying the Atuin crate, and I noticed the following pattern:
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Kera Desktop: open-source, cross-platform, web-based desktop environment
You might be interested in https://github.com/ellie/atuin
> Atuin replaces your existing shell history with a SQLite database, and records additional context for your commands.
What are some alternatives?
mcfly - Fly through your shell history. Great Scott!
butterfish - A shell with AI superpowers
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
ckp - Store and reuse your history and one liner scripts from anywhere, better than gists
zsh-histdb - A slightly better history for zsh
fzshell - Fuzzy shell completions you didn't know you needed
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
inshellisense - IDE style command line auto complete
zsh-syntax-highlighting - Fish shell like syntax highlighting for Zsh.
zsh-autocomplete - 🤖 Real-time type-ahead completion for Zsh. Asynchronous find-as-you-type autocompletion.
hstr-rs - hstr, but with paging, Unicode, and fuzzy matching