What do you advice for shell usage?
- Do you use bash? If not, which one do you use? zsh, fish? Why do you do it?
- Do you write
or
? Do you write fish exclusive scripts?
- Do you have two folders, one for proven commands and one for experimental?
- Do you publish/ share those commands?
- Do you sync the folder between your server and your workstation?
- What should’ve people told you what to do/ use?
- good practice?
- general advice?
- is it bad practice to create a handful of commands like
podup
andpoddown
that replacepodman compose up -d
andpodman compose down
orpodlog
aspodman logs -f --tail 20 $1
orpodenter
forpodman exec -it "$1" /bin/sh
?
Background
I started bookmarking every somewhat useful website. Whenever I search for something for a second time, it’ll popup as the first search result. I often search for the same linux commands as well. When I moved to atomic Fedora, I had to search for rpm-ostree
(POV: it was a horrible command for me, as a new user, to remember) or sudo ostree admin pin 0
. Usually, I bookmark the website and can get back to it. One day, I started putting everything into a .bashrc
file. Sooner rather than later I discovered that I could simply add ~/bin
to my $PATH
variable and put many useful scripts or commands into it.
For the most part I simply used bash. I knew that you could somehow extend it but I never did. Recently, I switched to fish because it has tab completion. It is awesome and I should’ve had completion years ago. This is a game changer for me.
I hated that bash would write the whole path and I was annoyed by it. I added PS1="$ "
to my ~/.bashrc
file. When I need to know the path, I simply type pwd
. Recently, I found starship which has themes and adds another line just for the path. It colorizes the output and highlights whenever I’m in a toolbox/distrobox. It is awesome.
I use bash as my interactive shell. When ~20 years ago or so I encountered “smart” tab completion for the first time, I immediately disabled that and went back to dumb completion, because it caused multi-second freezes when it needed to load stuff from disk. I also saw it refuse to complete filenames because they had the wrong suffix. Maybe I should try to enable that again, see if it works any better now. It probably does go faster now with the SSDs.
I tried OpenBSD at some point, and it came with some version of ksh. Seems about equivalent to bash, but I had to modify some of my .bashrc so it would work on ksh. I would just stick to the default shell, whatever it is, it’s fine.
I try to stick to POSIX shell for scripts. I find that I don’t need bashisms very often, and I’ve used systems without bash on them. Most bash-only syntax has an equivalent that will work on POSIX sh. I do use bash if I really need some bash feature (I recently wanted to
set -o pipefail
, which dash cannot do apparently, and the workaround is really annoying).Do not use
#!/bin/sh
if you’re writing bash-only scripts. This will break on Debian, Ubuntu, BSD, busybox etc. because /bin/sh is not bash on those systems.