yage
bffd64051c
===================================================================== Finally decided to port personal scripts into a standalone library. --- Release Notes ------------------------ - added support for python, zsh, and zx scripts - added support for "interactive" scripts which drop the user to a REPL - added support for passing arguments to commands - added support for python/node virtualenv management through scwrypts - added contributing and usage docs - updated zsh plugin to write commands to history - licensed under GPLv3 --- New Scripts -------------------------- zsh/scwrypts ) - configure - environment/copy - environment/delete - environment/edit - environment/synchronize - logs/clear - logs/view zsh ) - aws/ecr/login - aws/efs/mount - aws/efs/unmount - aws/route53/backup - aws/s3/media-sync/pull - aws/s3/media-sync/push python ) - redis/interactive |
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.. | ||
aws | ||
scwrypts | ||
utils | ||
common.zsh | ||
hello-world | ||
README.md |
ZSH Scwrypts
Since they emulate direct user interaction, shell scripts are often the straightforward choice for task automation.
Basic Utilities
One of my biggest pet-peeves with scripting is when every line of a (insert-language-here) program is escaped to shell. This kind of program, which doesn't use language features, should be a shell script. While there are definitely unavoidable limitations to shell scripting, we can minimize a variety of problems with a modern shell and shared utilities library.
Loaded by common.zsh
, the utils/
library provides:
- common function wrappers to unify flags and context
- lazy dependency and environment variable validation
- consistent (and pretty) user input / output