This was originally posted to my blog with some photo examples included.
This is a collection of bash aliases/functions and git aliases that make my life a little easier and save me keystrokes. Hopefully you find something useful in here, let me know what tips you have!
Bash
Aliases and functions for bash (although technically I use zsh). Some are mine, and some were collected from the internet. Credit is provided where relevant.
For organizational purposes, I have my aliases in .zshrc
and most of the functions in a separate file callked .zsh_functions
that is included near the top of my .zshrc
. Some functions are in separate bash files that are available in my path, and I am in the process of moving most functions into there to lower the amount of functions zsh has to load into memory at start.
Current IP
Get your current external IP address.
alias ip=`dig +short myip.opendns.com @resolver1.opendns.com`
Usage: ip
Credit: Linux Training Academy
Make Directory and Go There
Pretty straightforward, this makes a new directory and does a cd into it, saving a command and saving retyping.
mkc () {
mkdir -p "$@" && cd "$@"
}
Usage: mkc [Directory Name]
Git
Git Checkout Search
This function opens an fzf
fuzzy-search prompt for your git branches, allowing you to find the branch you want with fuzzy search. Since the zsh
alias for git checkout
is gco
, adding the s
for "search" made sense to me.
Note: this requires fzf
to be installed and in your path.
gcos () {
git fetch
local branches branch
branches=$(git branch -a) &&
branch=$(echo "$branches" | fzf +s +m -e) &&
git checkout $(echo "$branch" | sed "s:.* remotes/origin/::" | sed "s:.* ::")
}
Usage: Type gcos
, hit enter, and then start typing your branch name
Credit: Christoffer Skeppstedt's post on Coderwall
Done with Branch
On projects using Pull Requests/Merge Requests heavily, I found myself constantly clearing out old branches after they were finished. This git alias will checkout master
and delete the branch you were just using, but only if it has been merged somewhere. So if it's been pushed to a remote branch or merged to another local branch, it will be removed.
# in .gitconfig
[alias]
done = "!f() { git checkout master && git branch -d @{-1}; }; f"
Usage: Type git done
, hit enter, and be transported to master while your old branch is annhilated (from your machine only)
Push New Branch
On those same projects, there end up being many branches made locally that need to be pushed to a remote. This bash alias pushes your current branch to origin
, creating a branch with the same name as your local branch. (I used gpu
because gp
is the zsh alias for git push
. So I think "git push upload" in my head.)
alias gpu='git push -u origin $(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)'
Usage: gpu
Pretty Git Log Tree
Display the git log in a tree format.
alias gl='git log --all --graph --decorate --oneline --simplify-by-decoration'
Usage: gl
Credit: someone on Twitter several years ago.
Kubernetes
Execute Commands in Pods
For some of my work, I will have a Kubernetes cluster with debug pods for developers to connect to. I was getting annoyed by having to use kubectl get pods
to find the current pod name when I knew that some part would always be consistent (e.g. maybe the word "debug" is present).
This function is used like so:
kube_exec [STRING IN POD NAME] [CONTAINER IN POD] [COMMAND]
So for example, if we have a Kubernetes pod called app-debug-pod-12345
with a container inside called rails
, the command kube_exec debug rails bash
will start a bash
session in the rails
container running in the first pod that is found containing the string debug
.
kube_exec () {
exec_pod=`kubectl get pods --field-selector 'status.phase!=Failed' | grep ${1} | cut -d" " -f 1 | head -1`
echo "Executing ${2} in ${exec_pod} at `kubectl config view -o=jsonpath='{.current-context}'`"
echo ""
kubectl exec $exec_pod -c $2 -it $3
unset exec_pod
}
Usage: kube_exec [POD NAME] [CONTAINER] [COMMAND]
Top comments (5)
Hi! Instead of creating an alias to go in the directory you just created, I suggest using !$ to recall the last argument. Although it does not save a command, it avoids retyping.
Example:
$ mkdir my_directory
$ cd !$
Btw, nice article. Thank you for the tips!
Thank you! I knew there was a way to use the previous arg, but I couldn't remember it when I was writing (I guess I could've looked it up ๐ ). So thanks for the tip!
I do still like that
mkc
is shorter than evenmkdir
because I'm just that lazy.Isn't @ the arg received? $_ is the previous arg if I'm not mistaken
This is awesome! Especially love the git branch checkout with fzf....SOOOO good!
Right? I was trying to remember a full branch name, but they all started with ticket numbers. Good luck remembering that. So I tried to do a fuzzy tab complete like zsh does with directories. When that didn't work, I immediately thought "wait, don't I have fzf or something?" Bingo