zim
zsh-snap
zim | zsh-snap | |
---|---|---|
2 | 7 | |
84 | 1,238 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 4.7 | |
about 1 year ago | 18 days ago | |
Go | Shell | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
zim
- Zim caching build system for monorepos
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Ask HN: How do you keep track of releases/deployments of dozens micro-services?
+1 to this. In our case we say "deploy all" but use Zim[1] to automatically determine which services have associated changes. This keeps the overall deploy quick.
This is comparable to CloudFormation or Terraform in terms of determining whether something is up-to-date, but more general purpose.
[1] https://github.com/fugue/zim/
zsh-snap
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Oh-my-zsh without oh-my-zsh?
Personally I use https://github.com/marlonrichert/zsh-snap as my plugin manager. You can just reference this baseline template that the author of the plugin manager has made if you want a sample config:
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Current state of plugin managers
If you want something a bit different and interesting with a focus on cool features like instant-prompt, zcomet and zsh-snap
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Why does zsh start so slowly?
You can use a plugin manager like https://github.com/marlonrichert/zsh-snap to cache the output of these commands. Using something like the packages version number as the cache key will ensure that it gets regenerated only once per package update as opposed to every shell launch.
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What is the best plugin manager in your opinion?
Author of Antidote here. I want to start by saying u/MrMarlon did a great job with znap, and it's a solid choice. zcomet and zgenom are also great. For modern Zsh plugin managers that are actively developed, I'd say these are my top 4 picks.
- Good resources to learn zsh?
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zsh plugin managers ... a review ...
# Download Znap, if it's not there yet. [[ -f ~/Git/zsh-snap/znap.zsh ]] || git clone https://github.com/marlonrichert/zsh-snap.git ~/Git/zsh-snap source ~/Git/zsh-snap/znap.zsh # Start Znap znap prompt sindresorhus/pure # Go to prompt in just 15 to 40 ms! # Finish the rest of your .zshrc in the background. znap source zsh-users/zsh-autosuggestions znap source zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting znap source marlonrichert/zsh-autocomplete # Cache any script you like from the interwebs: znap eval iterm2 'curl -fsSL https://iterm2.com/shell_integration/zsh'
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How good are Manjaro's default settings for zsh?
If you haven’t actually used Zinit yet, have a look at Znap instead. It’s just as fast, but has a much simpler syntax that is very close to native Zsh.
What are some alternatives?
backstage - Backstage is an open platform for building developer portals
oh-my-zsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 1700+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes nearly 300 optional plugins (rails, git, OSX, hub, capistrano, brew, ant, php, python, etc), over 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. [Moved to: https://github.com/ohmyzsh/ohmyzsh]
orc - Model driven orchestration framework for continuous deployment
zinit - Flexible and fast Zsh plugin manager with clean fpath, reports, completion management, Turbo, annexes, services, packages.
reliza-cli - CLI to interact with Reliza Hub
zgenom - A lightweight and fast plugin manager for ZSH
riff-raff - The Guardian's deployment platform
antigen - The plugin manager for zsh.
crane - ⬆ A GitLab CI ready image to upgrade services in Rancher
zpm - Zpm— Zsh Plugin Manager
sauron - Sauron, the all seeing eye! It is a service to generate automated reports and track migrations, changes and dependency versions for backend services also report on known CVE and security issues.
zsh-autocomplete - 🤖 Real-time type-ahead completion for Zsh. Asynchronous find-as-you-type autocompletion.