command line aliases to make repeated processes quicker. I’ve used them in the past and on specific programs but never on command line utilities.
like for instance with Debian, I’m repeatedly typing sudo apt-get install, so I aliased it: alias sagi=“sudo apt-get install” and it works pretty good.
Are there any best practices or aliases to avoid when using them? Other than known commands obviously. Are there popular alias lists out there?
alias more=“less -cX”
alias moer=more
alias meor=more
alias meor=more
alias mroe=more
alias More=morealias grpe=grep
alias gerp=grep
alias gpre=grepIn a big fan of the ‘fuck’ package for this. Try it out. Sudo apt install thefuck.
edit: oops got the name wrong; been a while since I installed it. Fuck.
@model_tar_gz @kometes “yay fuck” sounds better I believe
Does it *work*? IRL?
Yes it’s for real. I type fuck, it fixes my prompt, I accept and move on.
The what, now?
googles hastily
Oohhhhh mmmmmyyyyyyy…
deleted by creator
Funny. I never even thought of using thefuck in any remotely production-esque kind of way. Only for its intended use case: to save me a few keystrokes retyping some command I fucked up typing.
Yeah I imagine that was just a simple focus issue, like typing in the wrong tmux pane or sending terminal commands while his editor was focused. I’ve done that plenty of times.
I think it’s a fun and useful package too. If there’s a moral to that story, it’s just to treat others with respect and avoid isolating yourself by discouraging feedback.
Thefuck
just made the anecdote colorful enough to share lol(Sorry for delete btw, realized after I woke up that a few of those coworkers switched to lemmy and I never told anyone I let that bug go)
oh my
Have tou heard of the sl command?
choo chooo
alias g=grep -i
A humble and simple “c” for “clear” in the terminal.
CTRL+L works on most I’ve used
But
c
and ENTER is even quicker. No need to reach out for ^L.This kinda feels like Vim vs Emacs now.
For a few basic things, yes. For a couple of others, I’ve set up a shell function or a script instead.
Obligatory warning before I list a few of my aliases - overriding commands by an alias with the same name can be dangerous, as it can mean that expected behaviour can become destructive behaviour on a foreign system without those aliases. e.g. a common error is aliasing
rm
torm -i
so thatrm
always asks if the user is sure. Until that user is on a different machine without the alias and the files vanish without warning, anyway. Oops.Some of mine are arguably questionable in that regard, but I don’t think any will result in anything particularly destructive if I expect them in the wrong place.
These two override the default
which
command to deliver slightly more useful output, especially when the command is itself an alias (or an alias override).command
is a bash builtin:alias Which='command -V' alias which='command -v'
The obligatory
ls
config override.long-iso
formatting ensures thatls
’s output is consistent, which is tidy, and also useful for further processing. That said, use ofstat
is probably a better choice for that sort of thing.).LC_ALL=C
setting is so that things sort in “ASCIIbetical” order. My locale mixes upper and lowercase filenames and I’m too old-school for that sort of thing.:alias ls='LC_ALL=C ls --color=auto --group-directories-first --time-style=long-iso'
Some versions of
mtr
start in GUI mode.-t
prevents that. And of course, Windows muscle memory dies hard:alias mtr='mtr -t' alias tracert='echo '\''Use mtr, you ninny.'\'''
Hex dump using the ancient and nearly always present
od
command (the incantation is right out of theod
manual):alias odx='od -A x -t x1z -v'
Process control. Give either a PID and the process will do as it’s told. Usually. :
alias pause='kill -TSTP' alias resume='kill -CONT'
How many times do I type the wrong thing? Too many:
alias quit='exit'
Setup for
fortune
. The first one is self-explanatory. The second one shows which of the fortune files the fortune came from (-c
) but does some shenanigans to send that header to STDERR rather than STDOUT. This makes the header vanish whenfortune
is piped into fun things likecowsay
.alias bofh='fortune bofh-excuses' alias fortune='fortune -c | while read -r line ; do [[ ! "$A" ]] && echo $line >&2 || echo $line ; [[ "$line" == "%" ]] && A=1; done'
I have a load of silly text cipher filters as scripts, but this one came for free with the bsdgames package
alias rot='caesar' alias rot13='caesar 13'
And of course, every time I create a new alias (which isn’t very often, I admit), I run this one, which dumps all current aliases into a file that some distros set up by default.
alias save_aliases='alias > ~/.bash_aliases'
Certain aliases related to docker compose, just because it saves 2-3 words which never change.
Oh boy, my time to shine:
mkd
- Create directory and immediatelycd
into itdei
-docker exec -i
dps
-docker ps
mdocker
- Switch to minikube’s docker contextn
-nvim
n.
-nvim .
Node package managers
Exampes use
pnpm
but I have them foryarn
,npm
, andbun
toopi
-pnpm install
pd
-pnpm run dev
fzf stuff
sdh
- Search home directory (directories, recursive)
Meme
fuckyou
-git push --force
nano
-nvim
Misc
createpgdb
- Create a postgres db on the given container with the given nameUsage:
createpgdb "postgres container" "db name"
I have similar ones for
dropdb
andpg_dump
. Here’s the command:f() { local __user; if [ -z $3 ]; then __user=postgres; else __user=$3; fi; docker exec -i $1 createdb -U $__user $2; unset -f f; }; f'
Don’t overlook functions, they’re more versatile.
There’s not enough storage space on the Internet to list all my aliases.
hgrep
history | grep
Because I can never remember what parameters to use for things so my history is a quick reference.
Have you tried fzf and it’s history integration? Ctrl+R and youre fuzzy finding through your history. I don’t know how I lives without it
That sounds fantastic. Thanks!
I use Nala for package management in my Debian systems. I’ve created aliases for ‘apt’ & ‘apt-get’ to use Nala instead.
Also ‘ll’ alias for ‘ls -lah’.
That’s about it though.
I alias most common git commands because they’re so frequent. Like
co
forgit checkout
.alias ll = ‘ls -l’
alias kk = ‘ls -l’
alias jj = ‘ls -l’
Dyslexia sometimes hits hard.
I don’t know about your other questions but here’s my current list of aliases:
g
:git
, also several git aliases in my global gitconfig, so I can type “g s
” forgit status
e.g.y
:yarn
b
:bun
fu
:flatpak update
cu
:checkupdates
lg
:lazygit
n
:nnn
e
:kak
shutup
: anhdparm
incantation to spin down my noisy hard drive.
Also various forms of
ls
, likell
,la
, justl
, etc. (I madels
a function wrappingeza
in fish shell as well. I like eza over standard ls.)no, i make shell scripts for everything in /usr/local/bin/ . i find it more easy to manage and transfer. one liners can become bigger real quick, so i start with a script right away. also, since they have the shell in the hash bang line, they work in multiple shells.
I recently set up an alias since I do some hardware stuff and need to run programs not in my default path as sudo.
’alias sudop=‘sudo env PATH=$PATH’’
And that’s pretty much the extent of my aliasing. I’m interested to see what other people do
Yes, when I type
$installed
Come back with all installed packages with version removed. I use this for a system back up script