Associates your favourite long filesystem paths with short names and makes it easy for you to go to them.
Add a path:
~$ goto-tool add project /my/very/long/path/to/my/project
Entry 'project' added, points to '/my/very/long/path/to/my/project'.
~$
Go to the path:
~$ goto project
/my/very/long/path/to/my/project$ ls
...
Go to a directory relative to the path:
~$ goto project subdir/anotherSubdir
/my/very/long/path/to/my/project/subdir/anotherSubdir$ ls
...
Removing entries:
~$ goto-tool rm project
Entry 'project' removed.
~$ goto project
Entry 'project' not found.
Listing entries:
~$ goto-tool list
ubin: /usr/bin
Using goto directories with other commands:
~$ ls "$(goget project)"
... contents of project directory ...
~$ gorun vim project foo/bar.c
... editing file foo/bar.c in projects directory ...
Clone this repository into a folder of your choosing, e.g.
cd ~/.local/
git clone https://github.com/githubnemo/goto-tool.git
Then proceed and configure your shell as described below.
Add the following line at the end of your configuration file,
for example ~/.bashrc
, to include the goto.bash
file in your configuration:
source ~/.local/goto-tool/goto.bash
That's all. Now you're able to use the goto
command as shown in the
Examples section.
If you want tab completion for the goto
and the goto-tools
command,
include the goto.completion
file in your ~/.bashrc
or ~/.bash_completion
on debian/ubuntu like this:
source ~/.local/goto-tool/goto.completion
Note: you need bash_completion
for tab completion to work.
Ubuntu/Debian users have it already.
For Mac OS X, you can find a detailled installation guide here.
Add the following line at the end of your configuration file,
for example ~/.zshrc
, to include the goto.bash
file in your configuration:
source ~/.local/goto/goto.bash
To add tab completion support, you may want to add the zsh_completions
directory to the fpath
in your .zshrc
. For example:
fpath=(~/.local/goto-tool/zsh_completions $fpath)
There is not much that can go wrong. The only thing that
may bug you is that there does not seem to be a way to use
goget
comfortably in your shell. The reason for this is
that whitespaces don't mix well with subshell commands.
This won't work:
$ goto-tool add foo '/foo/bar baz/'
$ ls $(goget foo)
This works:
$ ls "$(goget foo)"
In most cases it is quicker to use gorun
to achieve the same:
$ gorun ls foo