This a an addon that adds several nice command line utitlites I use across all projects, making it easier/nicer to work inside the container with some initial defaults.
You can always install the latest code:
For DDEV v1.23.5 or above run
ddev add-on get https://github.com/hanoii/ddev-pimp-my-shell/tarball/main
For earlier versions of DDEV run
ddev get https://github.com/hanoii/ddev-pimp-my-shell/tarball/main
Contributed and maintained by @hanoii
- https://github.com/ahoy-cli/ahoy
- https://github.com/skywind3000/z.lua (working on both bash and fish)
- https://github.com/junegunn/fzf
- https://github.com/junegunn/fzf-git.sh
- https://starship.rs/
- https://github.com/charmbracelet/gum
- https://github.com/fish-shell/fish-shell / https://fishshell.com/
- https://chrisbuilds.github.io/terminaltexteffects/
- https://bun.sh/
- https://github.com/eza-community/eza/
- https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit/
- https://github.com/noborus/ov
- https://go.dev
- https://github.com/skx/sysbox
- https://github.com/dbohdan/recur
- https://www.rust-lang.org/
- https://github.com/samwho/spacer
- Some useful scripts
While you can enable Xdebug by following the DDEV's guide, I work a lot inside the container.
I found that you can use DDEV's own enable_xdebug
and disable_xdebug
inside
the container but I wanted a shortcut to that so this add-on
ships a small script that simply toggles
Xdebug state by running xdebug
inside the container.
Both for bash and fish, this add-on changes the window terminal with a better default if working inside the container:
- Adds the DDEV project name
- shows that is a DDEV project
- includes the current $PWD shortenning it.
- shows the currently running command
i.e. for this add-on sleep 10 - ddev-pimp-my-shell/ddev: /v/w/html
It aliases ls
and ll
to use eza
instead of ls.
It bundles autocomplete for both bash and fish.
If you want to use a Nerd font, there
are many ways you can achieve that. I am personally editing my global
~/.ddev/global_config.yaml
on the host and adding a STARSHIP_CONFIG
environment variable pointing to an alternative config file which I also added
to ~/.ddev/homeadditions/.config
on the host with the content of this add-on's
starship.toml
and merging it with the
output of ([directory]
is in both):
starship preset nerd-font-symbols
For tide, it uses the default configuration, if you want to have your own on all
of your DDEV projects you can create/edit
~/.ddev/homeadditions/.config/fish/conf.d/mytide.fish
on the host with
something like the following:
# Doing it as a fish_prompt event to make sure it is shown the first time it's
# run. Not sure if this is the best workaround, but otherwise the first `ddev fish`
# would show no prompt.
function mytide --on-event fish_prompt
if not test -f ~/.config/fish/conf.d/.mytide && tide --version > /dev/null
tide configure --auto --style=Classic --prompt_colors='True color' --classic_prompt_color=Light --show_time=No --classic_prompt_separators=Angled --powerline_prompt_heads=Sharp --powerline_prompt_tails=Flat --powerline_prompt_style='One line' --prompt_spacing=Compact --icons='Many icons' --transient=Yes
touch ~/.config/fish/conf.d/.mytide
end
endkkk
It adds a config.yml diabling the startup popups.
Other than adding itself to the path and installing some packages I am unsetting
GOARCH
and GOOS
for both ddev ssh
and ddev fish
so that are not in
conflict with the container OS as
they are added by DDEV from the host.
I generally have import scripts that I ship either from other add-ons or
specific to projects and those scripts usually download the database from within
the container. Rather than downloading the database and then running
ddev import-db --file=
I wanted to provide a way so that either way runs all
of my post-import-db commands both with the ddev import command as well as from
any helper script from within the project.
So the way this works is that you can run
/var/www/html/.ddev/pimp-my-shell/hooks/post-import-db.sh
from any script that
will be run in the container and it will take care of running all scripts on
.ddev/pimp-my-shell/post-import-db.d/
.
This also allows for other add-ons to add scripts to this directory so that they will be run.
Example on how I am using it: