git-commit-vandalism/contrib/git-jump/git-jump
Beat Bolli 007d06aa57 contrib/git-jump: allow to configure the grep command
Add the configuration option "jump.grepCmd" that allows to configure the
command that is used to search in grep mode. This allows the users of
git-jump to use ag(1) or ack(1) as search engines.

Signed-off-by: Beat Bolli <dev+git@drbeat.li>
Reviewed-by: Jeff King <peff@peff.net>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
2017-11-21 11:00:27 +09:00

79 lines
1.6 KiB
Bash
Executable File

#!/bin/sh
usage() {
cat <<\EOF
usage: git jump <mode> [<args>]
Jump to interesting elements in an editor.
The <mode> parameter is one of:
diff: elements are diff hunks. Arguments are given to diff.
merge: elements are merge conflicts. Arguments are ignored.
grep: elements are grep hits. Arguments are given to git grep or, if
configured, to the command in `jump.grepCmd`.
ws: elements are whitespace errors. Arguments are given to diff --check.
EOF
}
open_editor() {
editor=`git var GIT_EDITOR`
eval "$editor -q \$1"
}
mode_diff() {
git diff --no-prefix --relative "$@" |
perl -ne '
if (m{^\+\+\+ (.*)}) { $file = $1; next }
defined($file) or next;
if (m/^@@ .*?\+(\d+)/) { $line = $1; next }
defined($line) or next;
if (/^ /) { $line++; next }
if (/^[-+]\s*(.*)/) {
print "$file:$line: $1\n";
$line = undef;
}
'
}
mode_merge() {
git ls-files -u |
perl -pe 's/^.*?\t//' |
sort -u |
while IFS= read fn; do
grep -Hn '^<<<<<<<' "$fn"
done
}
# Grep -n generates nice quickfix-looking lines by itself,
# but let's clean up extra whitespace, so they look better if the
# editor shows them to us in the status bar.
mode_grep() {
cmd=$(git config jump.grepCmd)
test -n "$cmd" || cmd="git grep -n"
$cmd "$@" |
perl -pe '
s/[ \t]+/ /g;
s/^ *//;
'
}
mode_ws() {
git diff --check "$@"
}
if test $# -lt 1; then
usage >&2
exit 1
fi
mode=$1; shift
trap 'rm -f "$tmp"' 0 1 2 3 15
tmp=`mktemp -t git-jump.XXXXXX` || exit 1
type "mode_$mode" >/dev/null 2>&1 || { usage >&2; exit 1; }
"mode_$mode" "$@" >"$tmp"
test -s "$tmp" || exit 0
open_editor "$tmp"