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:
:clearclears the buffer (likeclearorCommand-Kon macOS):e filename.txtopens a file for editing:ssh user@host:portstarts a remote shell session using tramp:view image_file.pngembeds an image in the shell:plotline data_file.txtembeds 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-extrasType M-x shx RET. Try out the following commands:
:e ~/.bashrcto edit your.bashrc(for example):man lsto display the man page forls:helpto a start a completing read for othershxcommands
If you like shx-mode, you can enable it everywhere:
(shx-global-mode 1) ; toggle shx-mode on globallyNow 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/passwdThanks 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 [email protected]
# connect to a running docker container
:docker 8a8335d63ff3
# reopen the shell on the localhost:
:sshJordan 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 pipBecause 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 pwdBut this is not possible:
# Run the 'pwd' shx command 10 seconds from now (DOES NOT WORK)
:delay 10 :pwdNew 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
keptandkeepcommands - “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