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stdlib.sh
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stdlib.sh
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#!/usr/bin/env bash
#
# These are the commands available in an .envrc context
#
# ShellCheck exceptions:
#
# SC1090: Can't follow non-constant source. Use a directive to specify location.
# SC1091: Not following: (file missing)
# SC1117: Backslash is literal in "\n". Prefer explicit escaping: "\\n".
# SC2059: Don't use variables in the printf format string. Use printf "..%s.." "$foo".
shopt -s gnu_errfmt
shopt -s nullglob
shopt -s extglob
# NOTE: don't touch the RHS, it gets replaced at runtime
direnv="$(command -v direnv)"
# Config, change in the direnvrc
DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT="${DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT-direnv: %s}"
# Where direnv configuration should be stored
direnv_config_dir="${DIRENV_CONFIG:-${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/direnv}"
# This variable can be used by programs to detect when they are running inside
# of a .envrc evaluation context. It is ignored by the direnv diffing
# algorithm and so it won't be re-exported.
export DIRENV_IN_ENVRC=1
__env_strictness() {
local mode tmpfile old_shell_options
local -i res
tmpfile="$(mktemp)"
res=0
mode="$1"
shift
set +o | grep 'pipefail\|nounset\|errexit' >"$tmpfile"
old_shell_options=$(<"$tmpfile")
rm -f "$tmpfile"
case "$mode" in
strict)
set -o errexit -o nounset -o pipefail
;;
unstrict)
set +o errexit +o nounset +o pipefail
;;
*)
log_error "Unknown strictness mode '${mode}'."
exit 1
;;
esac
if (($#)); then
"${@}"
res=$?
eval "$old_shell_options"
fi
# Force failure if the inner script has failed and the mode is strict
if [[ $mode = strict && $res -gt 0 ]]; then
exit 1
fi
return $res
}
# Usage: strict_env [<command> ...]
#
# Turns on shell execution strictness. This will force the .envrc
# evaluation context to exit immediately if:
#
# - any command in a pipeline returns a non-zero exit status that is
# not otherwise handled as part of `if`, `while`, or `until` tests,
# return value negation (`!`), or part of a boolean (`&&` or `||`)
# chain.
# - any variable that has not explicitly been set or declared (with
# either `declare` or `local`) is referenced.
#
# If followed by a command-line, the strictness applies for the duration
# of the command.
#
# Example:
#
# strict_env
# has curl
#
# strict_env has curl
strict_env() {
__env_strictness strict "$@"
}
# Usage: unstrict_env [<command> ...]
#
# Turns off shell execution strictness. If followed by a command-line, the
# strictness applies for the duration of the command.
#
# Example:
#
# unstrict_env
# has curl
#
# unstrict_env has curl
unstrict_env() {
if (($#)); then
__env_strictness unstrict "$@"
else
set +o errexit +o nounset +o pipefail
fi
}
# Usage: direnv_layout_dir
#
# Prints the folder path that direnv should use to store layout content.
# This needs to be a function as $PWD might change during source_env/up.
#
# The output defaults to $PWD/.direnv.
direnv_layout_dir() {
echo "${direnv_layout_dir:-$PWD/.direnv}"
}
# Usage: log_status [<message> ...]
#
# Logs a status message. Acts like echo,
# but wraps output in the standard direnv log format
# (controlled by $DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT), and directs it
# to stderr rather than stdout.
#
# Example:
#
# log_status "Loading ..."
#
log_status() {
if [[ -n $DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT ]]; then
local msg=$* color_normal=''
if [[ -t 2 ]]; then
color_normal="\e[m"
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2059,SC1117
printf "${color_normal}${DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT}\n" "$msg" >&2
fi
}
# Usage: log_error [<message> ...]
#
# Logs an error message. Acts like echo,
# but wraps output in the standard direnv log format
# (controlled by $DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT), and directs it
# to stderr rather than stdout.
#
# Example:
#
# log_error "Unable to find specified directory!"
log_error() {
if [[ -n $DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT ]]; then
local msg=$* color_normal='' color_error=''
if [[ -t 2 ]]; then
color_normal="\e[m"
color_error="\e[38;5;1m"
fi
# shellcheck disable=SC2059,SC1117
printf "${color_error}${DIRENV_LOG_FORMAT}${color_normal}\n" "$msg" >&2
fi
}
# Usage: has <command>
#
# Returns 0 if the <command> is available. Returns 1 otherwise. It can be a
# binary in the PATH or a shell function.
#
# Example:
#
# if has curl; then
# echo "Yes we do"
# fi
#
has() {
type "$1" &>/dev/null
}
# Usage: join_args [args...]
#
# Joins all the passed arguments into a single string that can be evaluated by bash
#
# This is useful when one has to serialize an array of arguments back into a string
join_args() {
printf '%q ' "$@"
}
# Usage: expand_path <rel_path> [<relative_to>]
#
# Outputs the absolute path of <rel_path> relative to <relative_to> or the
# current directory.
#
# Example:
#
# cd /usr/local/games
# expand_path ../foo
# # output: /usr/local/foo
#
expand_path() {
local REPLY
realpath.absolute "${2+"$2"}" "${1+"$1"}"
echo "$REPLY"
}
# --- vendored from https://github.com/bashup/realpaths
realpath.dirname() {
REPLY=.
! [[ $1 =~ /+[^/]+/*$|^//$ ]] || REPLY="${1%"${BASH_REMATCH[0]}"}"
REPLY=${REPLY:-/}
}
realpath.basename() {
REPLY=/
! [[ $1 =~ /*([^/]+)/*$ ]] || REPLY="${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
}
realpath.absolute() {
REPLY=$PWD
local eg=extglob
! shopt -q $eg || eg=
${eg:+shopt -s $eg}
while (($#)); do case $1 in
// | //[^/]*)
REPLY=//
set -- "${1:2}" "${@:2}"
;;
/*)
REPLY=/
set -- "${1##+(/)}" "${@:2}"
;;
*/*) set -- "${1%%/*}" "${1##"${1%%/*}"+(/)}" "${@:2}" ;;
'' | .) shift ;;
..)
realpath.dirname "$REPLY"
shift
;;
*)
REPLY="${REPLY%/}/$1"
shift
;;
esac done
${eg:+shopt -u $eg}
}
# ---
# Usage: dotenv [<dotenv>]
#
# Loads a ".env" file into the current environment
#
dotenv() {
local path=${1:-}
if [[ -z $path ]]; then
path=$PWD/.env
elif [[ -d $path ]]; then
path=$path/.env
fi
watch_file "$path"
if ! [[ -f $path ]]; then
log_error ".env at $path not found"
return 1
fi
eval "$("$direnv" dotenv bash "$@")"
}
# Usage: dotenv_if_exists [<filename>]
#
# Loads a ".env" file into the current environment, but only if it exists.
#
dotenv_if_exists() {
local path=${1:-}
if [[ -z $path ]]; then
path=$PWD/.env
elif [[ -d $path ]]; then
path=$path/.env
fi
watch_file "$path"
if ! [[ -f $path ]]; then
return
fi
eval "$("$direnv" dotenv bash "$@")"
}
# Usage: user_rel_path <abs_path>
#
# Transforms an absolute path <abs_path> into a user-relative path if
# possible.
#
# Example:
#
# echo $HOME
# # output: /home/user
# user_rel_path /home/user/my/project
# # output: ~/my/project
# user_rel_path /usr/local/lib
# # output: /usr/local/lib
#
user_rel_path() {
local abs_path=${1#-}
if [[ -z $abs_path ]]; then return; fi
if [[ -n $HOME ]]; then
local rel_path=${abs_path#"$HOME"}
if [[ $rel_path != "$abs_path" ]]; then
abs_path=~$rel_path
fi
fi
echo "$abs_path"
}
# Usage: find_up <filename>
#
# Outputs the path of <filename> when searched from the current directory up to
# /. Returns 1 if the file has not been found.
#
# Example:
#
# cd /usr/local/my
# mkdir -p project/foo
# touch bar
# cd project/foo
# find_up bar
# # output: /usr/local/my/bar
#
find_up() {
(
while true; do
if [[ -f $1 ]]; then
echo "$PWD/$1"
return 0
fi
if [[ $PWD == / ]] || [[ $PWD == // ]]; then
return 1
fi
cd ..
done
)
}
# Usage: source_env <file_or_dir_path>
#
# Loads another ".envrc" either by specifying its path or filename.
#
# NOTE: the other ".envrc" is not checked by the security framework.
source_env() {
local rcpath=${1/#\~/$HOME}
if has cygpath; then
rcpath=$(cygpath -u "$rcpath")
fi
local REPLY
if [[ -d $rcpath ]]; then
rcpath=$rcpath/.envrc
fi
if [[ ! -e $rcpath ]]; then
log_status "referenced $rcpath does not exist"
return 1
fi
realpath.dirname "$rcpath"
local rcpath_dir=$REPLY
realpath.basename "$rcpath"
local rcpath_base=$REPLY
local rcfile
rcfile=$(user_rel_path "$rcpath")
watch_file "$rcpath"
pushd "$(pwd 2>/dev/null)" >/dev/null || return 1
pushd "$rcpath_dir" >/dev/null || return 1
if [[ -f ./$rcpath_base ]]; then
log_status "loading $(user_rel_path "$(expand_path "$rcpath_base")")"
# shellcheck disable=SC1090
. "./$rcpath_base"
else
log_status "referenced $rcfile does not exist"
fi
popd >/dev/null || return 1
popd >/dev/null || return 1
}
# Usage: source_env_if_exists <filename>
#
# Loads another ".envrc", but only if it exists.
#
# NOTE: contrary to source_env, this only works when passing a path to a file,
# not a directory.
#
# Example:
#
# source_env_if_exists .envrc.private
#
source_env_if_exists() {
watch_file "$1"
if [[ -f "$1" ]]; then source_env "$1"; fi
}
# Usage: env_vars_required <varname> [<varname> ...]
#
# Logs error for every variable not present in the environment or having an empty value.
# Typically this is used in combination with source_env and source_env_if_exists.
#
# Example:
#
# # expect .envrc.private to provide tokens
# source_env .envrc.private
# # check presence of tokens
# env_vars_required GITHUB_TOKEN OTHER_TOKEN
#
env_vars_required() {
local environment
local -i ret
environment=$(env)
ret=0
for var in "$@"; do
if [[ "$environment" != *"$var="* || -z ${!var:-} ]]; then
log_error "env var $var is required but missing/empty"
ret=1
fi
done
return "$ret"
}
# Usage: watch_file <filename> [<filename> ...]
#
# Adds each <filename> to the list of files that direnv will watch for changes -
# useful when the contents of a file influence how variables are set -
# especially in direnvrc
#
watch_file() {
eval "$("$direnv" watch bash "$@")"
}
# Usage: watch_dir <dir>
#
# Adds <dir> to the list of dirs that direnv will recursively watch for changes
watch_dir() {
eval "$("$direnv" watch-dir bash "$1")"
}
# Usage: _source_up [<filename>] [true|false]
#
# Private helper function for source_up and source_up_if_exists. The second
# parameter determines if it's an error for the file we're searching for to
# not exist.
_source_up() {
local envrc file=${1:-.envrc}
local ok_if_not_exist=${2}
envrc=$(cd .. && (find_up "$file" || true))
if [[ -n $envrc ]]; then
source_env "$envrc"
elif $ok_if_not_exist; then
return 0
else
log_error "No ancestor $file found"
return 1
fi
}
# Usage: source_up [<filename>]
#
# Loads another ".envrc" if found with the find_up command. Returns 1 if no
# file is found.
#
# NOTE: the other ".envrc" is not checked by the security framework.
source_up() {
_source_up "${1:-}" false
}
# Usage: source_up_if_exists [<filename>]
#
# Loads another ".envrc" if found with the find_up command. If one is not
# found, nothing happens.
#
# NOTE: the other ".envrc" is not checked by the security framework.
source_up_if_exists() {
_source_up "${1:-}" true
}
# Usage: fetchurl <url> [<integrity-hash>]
#
# Fetches a URL and outputs a file with its content. If the <integrity-hash>
# is given it will also validate the content of the file before returning it.
fetchurl() {
"$direnv" fetchurl "$@"
}
# Usage: source_url <url> <integrity-hash>
#
# Fetches a URL and evaluates its content.
source_url() {
local url=$1 integrity_hash=${2:-} path
if [[ -z $url ]]; then
log_error "source_url: <url> argument missing"
return 1
fi
if [[ -z $integrity_hash ]]; then
log_error "source_url: <integrity-hash> argument missing. Use \`direnv fetchurl $url\` to find out the hash."
return 1
fi
log_status "loading $url ($integrity_hash)"
path=$(fetchurl "$url" "$integrity_hash")
# shellcheck disable=SC1090
source "$path"
}
# Usage: direnv_load <command-generating-dump-output>
# e.g: direnv_load opam-env exec -- "$direnv" dump
#
# Applies the environment generated by running <argv> as a
# command. This is useful for adopting the environment of a child
# process - cause that process to run "direnv dump" and then wrap
# the results with direnv_load.
#
# shellcheck disable=SC1090
direnv_load() {
# Backup watches in case of `nix-shell --pure`
local prev_watches=$DIRENV_WATCHES
local temp_dir output_file script_file exit_code old_direnv_dump_file_path
# Prepare a temporary place for dumps and such.
temp_dir=$(mktemp -dt direnv.XXXXXX) || {
log_error "Could not create temporary directory."
return 1
}
output_file="$temp_dir/output"
script_file="$temp_dir/script"
old_direnv_dump_file_path=${DIRENV_DUMP_FILE_PATH:-}
# Chain the following commands explicitly so that we can capture the exit code
# of the whole chain. Crucially this ensures that we don't return early (via
# `set -e`, for example) and hence always remove the temporary directory.
touch "$output_file" &&
DIRENV_DUMP_FILE_PATH="$output_file" "$@" &&
{
test -s "$output_file" || {
log_error "Environment not dumped; did you invoke 'direnv dump'?"
false
}
} &&
"$direnv" apply_dump "$output_file" >"$script_file" &&
source "$script_file" ||
exit_code=$?
# Scrub temporary directory
rm -rf "$temp_dir"
# Restore watches if the dump wiped them
if [[ -z "${DIRENV_WATCHES:-}" ]]; then
export DIRENV_WATCHES=$prev_watches
fi
# Restore DIRENV_DUMP_FILE_PATH if needed
if [[ -n "$old_direnv_dump_file_path" ]]; then
export DIRENV_DUMP_FILE_PATH=$old_direnv_dump_file_path
else
unset DIRENV_DUMP_FILE_PATH
fi
# Exit accordingly
return ${exit_code:-0}
}
# Usage: direnv_apply_dump <file>
#
# Loads the output of `direnv dump` that was stored in a file.
direnv_apply_dump() {
local path=$1
eval "$("$direnv" apply_dump "$path")"
}
# Usage: PATH_add <path> [<path> ...]
#
# Prepends the expanded <path> to the PATH environment variable, in order.
# It prevents a common mistake where PATH is replaced by only the new <path>,
# or where a trailing colon is left in PATH, resulting in the current directory
# being considered in the PATH. Supports adding multiple directories at once.
#
# Example:
#
# pwd
# # output: /my/project
# PATH_add bin
# echo $PATH
# # output: /my/project/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
# PATH_add bam boum
# echo $PATH
# # output: /my/project/bam:/my/project/boum:/my/project/bin:/usr/bin:/bin
#
PATH_add() {
path_add PATH "$@"
}
# Usage: path_add <varname> <path> [<path> ...]
#
# Works like PATH_add except that it's for an arbitrary <varname>.
path_add() {
local path i var_name="$1"
# split existing paths into an array
declare -a path_array
IFS=: read -ra path_array <<<"${!1-}"
shift
# prepend the passed paths in the right order
for ((i = $#; i > 0; i--)); do
path_array=("$(expand_path "${!i}")" ${path_array[@]+"${path_array[@]}"})
done
# join back all the paths
path=$(
IFS=:
echo "${path_array[*]}"
)
# and finally export back the result to the original variable
export "$var_name=$path"
}
# Usage: MANPATH_add <path>
#
# Prepends a path to the MANPATH environment variable while making sure that
# `man` can still lookup the system manual pages.
#
# If MANPATH is not empty, man will only look in MANPATH.
# So if we set MANPATH=$path, man will only look in $path.
# Instead, prepend to `man -w` (which outputs man's default paths).
#
MANPATH_add() {
local old_paths="${MANPATH:-$(man -w)}"
local dir
dir=$(expand_path "$1")
export "MANPATH=$dir:$old_paths"
}
# Usage: PATH_rm <pattern> [<pattern> ...]
# Removes directories that match any of the given shell patterns from
# the PATH environment variable. Order of the remaining directories is
# preserved in the resulting PATH.
#
# Bash pattern syntax:
# https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Pattern-Matching.html
#
# Example:
#
# echo $PATH
# # output: /dontremove/me:/remove/me:/usr/local/bin/:...
# PATH_rm '/remove/*'
# echo $PATH
# # output: /dontremove/me:/usr/local/bin/:...
#
PATH_rm() {
path_rm PATH "$@"
}
# Usage: path_rm <varname> <pattern> [<pattern> ...]
#
# Works like PATH_rm except that it's for an arbitrary <varname>.
path_rm() {
local path i discard var_name="$1"
# split existing paths into an array
declare -a path_array
IFS=: read -ra path_array <<<"${!1}"
shift
patterns=("$@")
results=()
# iterate over path entries, discard entries that match any of the patterns
# shellcheck disable=SC2068
for path in ${path_array[@]+"${path_array[@]}"}; do
discard=false
# shellcheck disable=SC2068
for pattern in ${patterns[@]+"${patterns[@]}"}; do
if [[ "$path" == +($pattern) ]]; then
discard=true
break
fi
done
if ! $discard; then
results+=("$path")
fi
done
# join the result paths
result=$(
IFS=:
echo "${results[*]}"
)
# and finally export back the result to the original variable
export "$var_name=$result"
}
# Usage: load_prefix <prefix_path>
#
# Expands some common path variables for the given <prefix_path> prefix. This is
# useful if you installed something in the <prefix_path> using
# $(./configure --prefix=<prefix_path> && make install) and want to use it in
# the project.
#
# Variables set:
#
# CPATH
# LD_LIBRARY_PATH
# LIBRARY_PATH
# MANPATH
# PATH
# PKG_CONFIG_PATH
#
# Example:
#
# ./configure --prefix=$HOME/rubies/ruby-1.9.3
# make && make install
# # Then in the .envrc
# load_prefix ~/rubies/ruby-1.9.3
#
load_prefix() {
local REPLY
realpath.absolute "$1"
MANPATH_add "$REPLY/man"
MANPATH_add "$REPLY/share/man"
path_add CPATH "$REPLY/include"
path_add LD_LIBRARY_PATH "$REPLY/lib"
path_add LIBRARY_PATH "$REPLY/lib"
path_add PATH "$REPLY/bin"
path_add PKG_CONFIG_PATH "$REPLY/lib/pkgconfig"
}
# Usage: semver_search <directory> <folder_prefix> <partial_version>
#
# Search a directory for the highest version number in SemVer format (X.Y.Z).
#
# Examples:
#
# $ tree .
# .
# |-- dir
# |-- program-1.4.0
# |-- program-1.4.1
# |-- program-1.5.0
# $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1.4.0"
# 1.4.0
# $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1.4"
# 1.4.1
# $ semver_search "dir" "program-" "1"
# 1.5.0
#
semver_search() {
local version_dir=${1:-}
local prefix=${2:-}
local partial_version=${3:-}
# Look for matching versions in $version_dir path
# Strip possible "/" suffix from $version_dir, then use that to
# strip $version_dir/$prefix prefix from line.
# Sort by version: split by "." then reverse numeric sort for each piece of the version string
# The first one is the highest
find "$version_dir" -maxdepth 1 -mindepth 1 -type d -name "${prefix}${partial_version}*" |
while IFS= read -r line; do echo "${line#"${version_dir%/}"/"${prefix}"}"; done |
sort -t . -k 1,1rn -k 2,2rn -k 3,3rn |
head -1
}
# Usage: layout <type>
#
# A semantic dispatch used to describe common project layouts.
#
layout() {
local funcname="layout_$1"
shift
"$funcname" "$@"
local layout_dir
layout_dir=$(direnv_layout_dir)
if [[ -d "$layout_dir" && ! -f "$layout_dir/CACHEDIR.TAG" ]]; then
echo 'Signature: 8a477f597d28d172789f06886806bc55
# This file is a cache directory tag created by direnv.
# For information about cache directory tags, see:
# http://www.brynosaurus.com/cachedir/' >"$layout_dir/CACHEDIR.TAG"
fi
}
# Usage: layout go
#
# Adds "$(direnv_layout_dir)/go" to the GOPATH environment variable.
# Furthermore "$(direnv_layout_dir)/go/bin" is set as the value for the GOBIN environment variable and added to the PATH environment variable.
layout_go() {
path_add GOPATH "$(direnv_layout_dir)/go"
bindir="$(direnv_layout_dir)/go/bin"
PATH_add "$bindir"
export GOBIN="$bindir"
}
# Usage: layout node
#
# Adds "$PWD/node_modules/.bin" to the PATH environment variable.
layout_node() {
PATH_add node_modules/.bin
}
# Usage: layout perl
#
# Setup environment variables required by perl's local::lib
# See http://search.cpan.org/dist/local-lib/lib/local/lib.pm for more details
#
layout_perl() {
local libdir
libdir=$(direnv_layout_dir)/perl5
export LOCAL_LIB_DIR=$libdir
export PERL_MB_OPT="--install_base '$libdir'"
export PERL_MM_OPT="INSTALL_BASE=$libdir"
path_add PERL5LIB "$libdir/lib/perl5"
path_add PERL_LOCAL_LIB_ROOT "$libdir"
PATH_add "$libdir/bin"
}
# Usage: layout php
#
# Adds "$PWD/vendor/bin" to the PATH environment variable
layout_php() {
PATH_add vendor/bin
}
# Usage: layout python <python_exe>
#
# Creates and loads a virtual environment.
# You can specify the path of the virtual environment through VIRTUAL_ENV
# environment variable, otherwise it will be set to
# "$direnv_layout_dir/python-$python_version".
# For python older then 3.3 this requires virtualenv to be installed.
#
# It's possible to specify the python executable if you want to use different
# versions of python.
#
layout_python() {
local old_env
local python=${1:-python}
[[ $# -gt 0 ]] && shift
old_env=$(direnv_layout_dir)/virtualenv
unset PYTHONHOME
if [[ -d $old_env && $python == python ]]; then
VIRTUAL_ENV=$old_env
else
local python_version ve
# shellcheck disable=SC2046
read -r python_version ve <<<$($python -c "import importlib.util as u, platform as p;ve='venv' if u.find_spec('venv') else ('virtualenv' if u.find_spec('virtualenv') else '');print('.'.join(p.python_version_tuple()[:2])+' '+ve)")
if [[ -z $python_version ]]; then
log_error "Could not find python's version"
return 1
fi
if [[ -n "${VIRTUAL_ENV:-}" ]]; then
local REPLY
realpath.absolute "$VIRTUAL_ENV"
VIRTUAL_ENV=$REPLY
else
VIRTUAL_ENV=$(direnv_layout_dir)/python-$python_version
fi
case $ve in
"venv")
if [[ ! -d $VIRTUAL_ENV ]]; then
$python -m venv "$@" "$VIRTUAL_ENV"
fi
;;
"virtualenv")
if [[ ! -d $VIRTUAL_ENV ]]; then
$python -m virtualenv "$@" "$VIRTUAL_ENV"
fi
;;
*)
log_error "Error: neither venv nor virtualenv are available."
return 1
;;
esac
fi
export VIRTUAL_ENV
PATH_add "$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin"
}
# Usage: layout python2
#
# A shortcut for $(layout python python2)
#
layout_python2() {
layout_python python2 "$@"
}
# Usage: layout python3
#
# A shortcut for $(layout python python3)
#
layout_python3() {
layout_python python3 "$@"
}
# Usage: layout anaconda <env_spec> [<conda_exe>]
#
# Activates anaconda for the provided environment.
# The <env_spec> can be one of the following:
# 1. Name of an environment
# 2. Prefix path to an environment
# 3. Path to a yml-formatted file specifying the environment
#
# Environment creation will use environment.yml, if
# available, when a name or prefix is provided. Otherwise,
# an empty environment will be created.
#
# <conda_exe> is optional and will default to the one
# found in the system environment.
#
layout_anaconda() {
local env_spec=$1
local env_name
local env_loc
local env_config
local conda
local REPLY
if [[ $# -gt 1 ]]; then
conda=${2}
else
conda=$(command -v conda)
fi
realpath.dirname "$conda"
PATH_add "$REPLY"
if [[ "${env_spec##*.}" == "yml" ]]; then
env_config=$env_spec
elif [[ "${env_spec%%/*}" == "." ]]; then
# "./foo" relative prefix
realpath.absolute "$env_spec"
env_loc="$REPLY"
elif [[ ! "$env_spec" == "${env_spec#/}" ]]; then
# "/foo" absolute prefix
env_loc="$env_spec"
elif [[ -n "$env_spec" ]]; then
# "name" specified
env_name="$env_spec"
else
# Need at least one
env_config=environment.yml
fi
# If only config, it needs a name field
if [[ -n "$env_config" ]]; then
if [[ -e "$env_config" ]]; then
env_name="$(grep -- '^name:' "$env_config")"
env_name="${env_name/#name:*([[:space:]])/}"
if [[ -z "$env_name" ]]; then
log_error "Unable to find 'name' in '$env_config'"
return 1
fi
else
log_error "Unable to find config '$env_config'"
return 1
fi
fi
# Try to find location based on name
if [[ -z "$env_loc" ]]; then
# Update location if already created
env_loc=$("$conda" env list | grep -- '^'"$env_name"'\s')
env_loc="${env_loc##* }"
fi
# Check for environment existence
if [[ ! -d "$env_loc" ]]; then
# Create if necessary
if [[ -z "$env_config" ]] && [[ -n "$env_name" ]]; then
if [[ -e environment.yml ]]; then
"$conda" env create --file environment.yml --name "$env_name"
else
"$conda" create -y --name "$env_name"
fi
elif [[ -n "$env_config" ]]; then
"$conda" env create --file "$env_config"
elif [[ -n "$env_loc" ]]; then
if [[ -e environment.yml ]]; then
"$conda" env create --file environment.yml --prefix "$env_loc"
else
"$conda" create -y --prefix "$env_loc"
fi
fi
if [[ -z "$env_loc" ]]; then
# Update location if already created
env_loc=$("$conda" env list | grep -- '^'"$env_name"'\s')
env_loc="${env_loc##* }"
fi
fi
eval "$("$conda" shell.bash activate "$env_loc")"
}