This package provides automatic (tab) completion in BASH and ZSH for Symfony Console Component based applications. With zero configuration, this package allows completion of available command names and the options they provide. User code can define custom completion behaviour for argument and option values.
Example of zero-config use with Composer:
If you don't need any custom completion behaviour, you can simply add the completion command to your application:
-
Install
stecman/symfony-console-completion
using composer by running:$ composer require stecman/symfony-console-completion
-
Add an instance of
CompletionCommand
to your application'sApplication::getDefaultCommands()
method:
protected function getDefaultCommands()
{
//...
$commands[] = new \Stecman\Component\Symfony\Console\BashCompletion\CompletionCommand();
//...
}
- Register completion for your application by running one of the following in a terminal, replacing
[program]
with the command you use to run your application (eg. 'composer'):
# BASH ~4.x, ZSH
source <([program] _completion --generate-hook)
# BASH ~3.x, ZSH
[program] _completion --generate-hook | source /dev/stdin
# BASH (any version)
eval $([program] _completion --generate-hook)
By default this registers completion for the absolute path to you application, which will work if the program on accessible on your PATH. You can specify a program name to complete for instead using the --program
option, which is required if you're using an alias to run the program.
- If you want the completion to apply automatically for all new shell sessions, add the command from step 3 to your shell's profile (eg.
~/.bash_profile
or~/.zshrc
)
Note: The type of shell (ZSH/BASH) is automatically detected using the SHELL
environment variable at run time. In some circumstances, you may need to explicitly specify the shell type with the --shell-type
option.
The --generate-hook
option of CompletionCommand
generates a small shell script that registers a function with your shell's completion system to act as a bridge between the shell and the completion command in your application. When you request completion for your program (by pressing tab with your program name as the first word on the command line), the bridge function is run; passing the current command line contents and cursor position to [program] _completion
, and feeding the resulting output back to the shell.
By default, no completion results will be returned for option and argument values. There are two ways of defining custom completion values for values: extend CompletionCommand
, or implement CompletionAwareInterface
.
CompletionAwareInterface
allows a command to be responsible for completing its own option and argument values. When completion is run with a command name specified (eg. myapp mycommand ...
) and the named command implements this interface, the appropriate interface method is called automatically:
class MyCommand extends Command implements CompletionAwareInterface
{
...
public function completeOptionValues($optionName, CompletionContext $context)
{
if ($optionName == 'some-option') {
return ['myvalue', 'other-value', 'word'];
}
}
public function completeArgumentValues($argumentName, CompletionContext $context)
{
if ($argumentName == 'package') {
return $this->getPackageNamesFromDatabase($context->getCurrentWord());
}
}
}
This method of generating completions doesn't support use of CompletionInterface
implementations at the moment, which make it easy to share completion behaviour between commands. To use this functionality, you'll need write your value completions by extending CompletionCommand
.
Argument and option value completions can also be defined by extending CompletionCommand
and overriding the configureCompletion
method:
class MyCompletionCommand extends CompletionCommand
{
protected function configureCompletion(CompletionHandler $handler)
{
$handler->addHandlers([
// Instances of Completion go here.
// See below for examples.
]);
}
}
The following snippets demonstrate how the Completion
class works with CompletionHandler
, and some possible configurations. The examples are for an application with the signature:
`myapp (walk|run) [-w|--weather=""] direction`
$handler->addHandler(
new Completion(
'walk', // match command name
'direction', // match argument/option name
Completion::TYPE_ARGUMENT, // match definition type (option/argument)
[ // array or callback for results
'north',
'east',
'south',
'west'
]
)
);
This will complete the direction
argument for this:
$ myapp walk [tab]
but not this:
$ myapp run [tab]
$handler->addHandler(
new Completion(
Completion::ALL_COMMANDS,
'direction',
Completion::TYPE_ARGUMENT,
function() {
return range(1, 10);
}
)
);
This will complete the direction
argument for both commands:
$ myapp walk [tab]
$ myapp run [tab]
Option handlers work the same way as argument handlers, except you use Completion::TYPE_OPTION
for the type.
$handler->addHandler(
new Completion(
Completion::ALL_COMMANDS,
'weather',
Completion::TYPE_OPTION,
[
'raining',
'sunny',
'everything is on fire!'
]
)
);
To have a completion run for both options and arguments matching the specified name, you can use the type Completion::ALL_TYPES
. Combining this with Completion::ALL_COMMANDS
and consistent option/argument naming throughout your application, it's easy to share completion behaviour between commands, options and arguments:
$handler->addHandler(
new Completion(
Completion::ALL_COMMANDS,
'pacakge',
Completion::ALL_TYPES,
function() {
// ...
}
)
);
new Completion(
Completion::ALL_COMMANDS,
'ref',
Completion::TYPE_OPTION,
function () {
$raw = shell_exec('git show-ref --abbr');
if (preg_match_all('/refs\/(?:heads|tags)?\/?(.*)/', $raw, $matches)) {
return $matches[1];
}
}
)
This library provides the completion implementation ShellPathCompletion
which defers path completion to the shell's built-in path completion behaviour rather than implementing it in PHP, so that users get the path completion behaviour they expect from their shell.
new Completion\ShellPathCompletion(
Completion::ALL_COMMANDS,
'path',
Completion::TYPE_OPTION
)
- Option shortcuts are not offered as completion options, however requesting completion (ie. pressing tab) on a valid option shortcut will complete.
- Completion is not implemented for the
--option="value"
style of passing a value to an option, however--option value
and--option "value"
work and are functionally identical. - Value completion is always run for options marked as
InputOption::VALUE_OPTIONAL
since there is currently no way to determine the desired behaviour from the command line contents (ie. skip the optional value or complete for it)