\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename ../../info/eshell.info @settitle Eshell: The Emacs Shell @include docstyle.texi @defindex cm @synindex vr fn @c %**end of header @copying This manual is for Eshell, the Emacs shell. Copyright @copyright{} 1999--2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.'' @end quotation @end copying @dircategory Emacs misc features @direntry * Eshell: (eshell). A command shell implemented in Emacs Lisp. @end direntry @titlepage @sp 4 @c The title is printed in a large font. @center @titlefont{User's Guide} @sp 1 @center @titlefont{to} @sp 1 @center @titlefont{Eshell: The Emacs Shell} @ignore @sp 2 @center release 2.4 @c -release- @end ignore @sp 3 @center John Wiegley & Aidan Gauland @c -date- @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll @insertcopying @end titlepage @contents @c ================================================================ @c The real text starts here @c ================================================================ @ifnottex @node Top @top Eshell Eshell is a shell-like command interpreter implemented in Emacs Lisp. It invokes no external processes except for those requested by the user. It is intended to be an alternative to the IELM (@pxref{Lisp Interaction, Emacs Lisp Interaction, , emacs, The Emacs Editor}) REPL for Emacs @emph{and} with an interface similar to command shells such as @command{bash}, @command{zsh}, @command{rc}, or @command{4dos}. @c This manual is updated to release 2.4 of Eshell. @insertcopying @end ifnottex @menu * Introduction:: A brief introduction to the Emacs Shell. * Commands:: * Expansion:: * Input/Output:: * Extension modules:: * Bugs and ideas:: Known problems, and future ideas. * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation. * Concept Index:: * Function and Variable Index:: * Command Index:: @ignore * Key Index:: @end ignore @end menu @node Introduction @chapter Introduction @section What is Eshell? @cindex what is Eshell? @cindex Eshell, what it is Eshell is a @dfn{command shell} written in Emacs Lisp. Everything it does, it uses Emacs's facilities to do. This means that Eshell is as portable as Emacs itself. It also means that cooperation with Lisp code is natural and seamless. What is a command shell? To properly understand the role of a shell, it's necessary to visualize what a computer does for you. Basically, a computer is a tool; in order to use that tool, you must tell it what to do---or give it ``commands.'' These commands take many forms, such as clicking with a mouse on certain parts of the screen. But that is only one form of command input. By far the most versatile way to express what you want the computer to do is by using an abbreviated language called @dfn{script}. In script, instead of telling the computer, ``list my files, please'', one writes a standard abbreviated command word---@samp{ls}. Typing @samp{ls} in a command shell is a script way of telling the computer to list your files.@footnote{This is comparable to viewing the contents of a folder using a graphical display.} The real flexibility of this approach is apparent only when you realize that there are many, many different ways to list files. Perhaps you want them sorted by name, sorted by date, in reverse order, or grouped by type. Most graphical browsers have simple ways to express this. But what about showing only a few files, or only files that meet a certain criteria? In very complex and specific situations, the request becomes too difficult to express using a mouse or pointing device. It is just these kinds of requests that are easily solved using a command shell. For example, what if you want to list every Word file on your hard drive, larger than 100 kilobytes in size, and which hasn't been looked at in over six months? That is a good candidate list for deletion, when you go to clean up your hard drive. But have you ever tried asking your computer for such a list? There is no way to do it! At least, not without using a command shell. The role of a command shell is to give you more control over what your computer does for you. Not everyone needs this amount of control, and it does come at a cost: Learning the necessary script commands to express what you want done. A complicated query, such as the example above, takes time to learn. But if you find yourself using your computer frequently enough, it is more than worthwhile in the long run. Any tool you use often deserves the time spent learning to master it. @footnote{For the understandably curious, here is what that command looks like: But don't let it fool you; once you know what's going on, it's easier than it looks: @code{ls -lt **/*.doc(Lk+50aM+5)}.} @menu * Contributors to Eshell:: People who have helped out! @end menu @node Contributors to Eshell @section Contributors to Eshell @cindex contributors @cindex authors Contributions to Eshell are welcome. I have limited time to work on this project, but I will gladly add any code you contribute to me to this package. The following persons have made contributions to Eshell. @itemize @bullet @item John Wiegley is the original author of Eshell. @item Eli Zaretskii made it possible for Eshell to run without requiring asynchronous subprocess support. This is important for MS-DOS, which does not have such support. @item Miles Bader contributed many fixes during the port to Emacs 21. @item Stefan Monnier fixed the things which bothered him, which of course made things better for all. @item Gerd Moellmann also helped to contribute bug fixes during the initial integration with Emacs 21. @item Alex Schroeder contributed code for interactively querying the user before overwriting files. @end itemize Apart from these, a lot of people have sent suggestions, ideas, requests, bug reports and encouragement. Thanks a lot! Without you there would be no new releases of Eshell. @node Commands @chapter Commands In a command shell, everything is done by invoking commands. This chapter covers command invocations in Eshell, including the command history and invoking commands in a script file. @menu * Invocation:: * Arguments:: * Built-ins:: * Variables:: * Aliases:: * History:: * Completion:: * for loop:: * Scripts:: @end menu @node Invocation @section Invocation Unlike regular system shells, Eshell never invokes kernel functions directly, such as @code{exec(3)}. Instead, it uses the Lisp functions available in the Emacs Lisp library. It does this by transforming the input line into a callable Lisp form.@footnote{To see the Lisp form that will be invoked, type: @samp{eshell-parse-command "echo hello"}} The command can be either an Elisp function or an external command. Eshell looks first for an alias (@pxref{Aliases}) with the same name as the command, then a built-in (@pxref{Built-ins}) or a function with the same name; if there is no match, it then tries to execute it as an external command. The semicolon (@code{;}) can be used to separate multiple command invocations on a single line. A command invocation followed by an ampersand (@code{&}) will be run in the background. Eshell has no job control, so you can not suspend or background the current process, or bring a background process into the foreground. That said, background processes invoked from Eshell can be controlled the same way as any other background process in Emacs. @node Arguments @section Arguments Command arguments are passed to the functions as either strings or numbers, depending on what the parser thinks they look like. If you need to use a function that takes some other data type, you will need to call it in an Elisp expression (which can also be used with @ref{Expansion, expansions}). As with other shells, you can escape special characters and spaces with the backslash (@code{\}) and apostrophes (@code{''}) and double quotes (@code{""}). This is needed especially for file names with special characters like pipe (@code{|}), which could be part of remote file names. @node Built-ins @section Built-in commands Several commands are built-in in Eshell. In order to call the external variant of a built-in command @code{foo}, you could call @code{*foo}. Usually, this should not be necessary. You can check what will be applied by the @code{which} command: @example ~ $ which ls eshell/ls is a compiled Lisp function in `em-ls.el' ~ $ which *ls /bin/ls @end example If you want to discard a given built-in command, you could declare an alias (@pxref{Aliases}). Example: @example ~ $ which sudo eshell/sudo is a compiled Lisp function in `em-tramp.el'. ~ $ alias sudo '*sudo $*' ~ $ which sudo sudo is an alias, defined as "*sudo $*" @end example @vindex eshell-prefer-lisp-functions If you would prefer to use the built-in commands instead of the external commands, set @code{eshell-prefer-lisp-functions} to @code{t}. Some of the built-in commands have different behavior from their external counterparts, and some have no external counterpart. Most of these will print a usage message when given the @code{--help} option. In some cases, a built-in command's behavior can be configured via user settings, some of which are mentioned below. For example, certain commands have two user settings to allow them to overwrite files without warning and to ensure that they always prompt before overwriting files. If both settings are non-@code{nil}, the commands always prompt. If both settings are @code{nil} (the default), the commands signal an error. Several commands observe the value of @code{eshell-default-target-is-dot}. If non-@code{nil}, then the default target for the commands @command{cp}, @command{mv}, and @command{ln} is the current directory. A few commands are wrappers for more niche Emacs features, and can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module. @xref{Extension modules}. @table @code @item . @cmindex . Source an Eshell file in the current environment. This is not to be confused with the command @command{source}, which sources a file in a subshell environment. @item addpath @cmindex addpath Adds a given path or set of paths to the PATH environment variable, or, with no arguments, prints the current paths in this variable. @item alias @cmindex alias Define an alias (@pxref{Aliases}). This adds it to the aliases file. @item basename @cmindex basename Return a file name without its directory. @item cat @cmindex cat Concatenate file contents into standard output. If in a pipeline, or if the file is not a regular file, directory, or symlink, then this command reverts to the system's definition of @command{cat}. @item cd @cmindex cd This command changes the current working directory. Usually, it is invoked as @kbd{cd @var{dir}} where @file{@var{dir}} is the new working directory. But @command{cd} knows about a few special arguments: @itemize @minus{} @item When it receives no argument at all, it changes to the home directory. @item Giving the command @kbd{cd -} changes back to the previous working directory (this is the same as @kbd{cd $-}). @item The command @kbd{cd =} shows the directory stack. Each line is numbered. @item With @kbd{cd =foo}, Eshell searches the directory stack for a directory matching the regular expression @samp{foo}, and changes to that directory. @item With @kbd{cd -42}, you can access the directory stack slots by number. @item If @code{eshell-cd-shows-directory} is non-@code{nil}, @command{cd} will report the directory it changes to. If @code{eshell-list-files-after-cd} is non-@code{nil}, then @command{ls} is called with any remaining arguments after changing directories. @end itemize @item clear @cmindex clear Scrolls the contents of the Eshell window out of sight, leaving a blank window. If provided with an optional non-@code{nil} argument, the scrollback contents are cleared instead. @item clear-scrollback @cmindex clear-scrollback Clear the scrollback contents of the Eshell window. Unlike the command @command{clear}, this command deletes content in the Eshell buffer. @item cp @cmindex cp Copy a file to a new location or copy multiple files to the same directory. If @code{eshell-cp-overwrite-files} is non-@code{nil}, then @command{cp} will overwrite files without warning. If @code{eshell-cp-interactive-query} is non-@code{nil}, then @command{cp} will ask before overwriting anything. @item date @cmindex date Print the current local time as a human-readable string. This command is similar to, but slightly different from, the GNU Coreutils @command{date} command. @item define @cmindex define Define a variable alias. @xref{Variable Aliases, , , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. @item diff @cmindex diff Compare files using Emacs's internal @code{diff} (not to be confused with @code{ediff}). @xref{Comparing Files, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If @code{eshell-plain-diff-behavior} is non-@code{nil}, then this command does not use Emacs's internal @code{diff}. This is the same as using @samp{alias diff '*diff $*'}. @item dirname @cmindex dirname Return the directory component of a file name. @item dirs @cmindex dirs Prints the directory stack. Directories can be added or removed from the stack using the commands @command{pushd} and @command{popd}, respectively. @item du @cmindex du Summarize disk usage for each file. @item echo @cmindex echo Echoes its input. By default, this prints in a Lisp-friendly fashion (so that the value is useful to a Lisp command using the result of @command{echo} as an argument). If a single argument is passed, @command{echo} prints that; if multiple arguments are passed, it prints a list of all the arguments; otherwise, it prints the empty string. If @code{eshell-plain-echo-behavior} is non-@code{nil}, @command{echo} will try to behave more like a plain shell's @command{echo}, printing each argument as a string, separated by a space. @item env @cmindex env Prints the current environment variables. Unlike in Bash, this command does not yet support running commands with a modified environment. @item exit @cmindex exit Exit Eshell and save the history. By default, this command kills the Eshell buffer, but if @code{eshell-kill-on-exit} is @code{nil}, then the buffer is merely buried instead. @item export @cmindex export Set environment variables using input like Bash's @command{export}, as in @samp{export @var{var1}=@var{val1} @var{var2}=@var{val2} @dots{}}. @item expr @cmindex expr An implementation of @command{expr} using the Calc package. @xref{Top,,, calc, The GNU Emacs Calculator}. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item grep @cmindex grep @itemx agrep @cmindex agrep @itemx egrep @cmindex egrep @itemx fgrep @cmindex fgrep @itemx glimpse @cmindex glimpse The @command{grep} commands are compatible with GNU @command{grep}, but use Emacs's internal @code{grep} instead. @xref{Grep Searching, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If @code{eshell-plain-grep-behavior} is non-@code{nil}, then these commands do not use Emacs's internal @code{grep}. This is the same as using @samp{alias grep '*grep $*'}, though this setting applies to all of the built-in commands for which you would need to create a separate alias. @item history @cmindex history Prints Eshell's input history. With a numeric argument @var{N}, this command prints the @var{N} most recent items in the history. @item info @cmindex info Browse the available Info documentation. This command is the same as the external @command{info} command, but uses Emacs's internal Info reader. @xref{Misc Help, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. @item intersection @cmindex intersection A wrapper around the function @code{cl-intersection} (@pxref{Lists as Sets,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item jobs @cmindex jobs List subprocesses of the Emacs process, if any, using the function @code{list-processes}. @item kill @cmindex kill Kill processes. Takes a PID or a process object and an optional signal specifier which can either be a number or a signal name. @item listify @cmindex listify Eshell version of @code{list}. Allows you to create a list using Eshell syntax, rather than Elisp syntax. For example, @samp{listify foo bar} and @code{("foo" "bar")} both evaluate to @code{("foo" "bar")}. @item ln @cmindex ln Create links to files. If @code{eshell-ln-overwrite-files} is non-@code{nil}, @command{ln} will overwrite files without warning. If @code{eshell-ln-interactive-query} is non-@code{nil}, then @command{ln} will ask before overwriting files. @item locate @cmindex locate Alias to Emacs's @code{locate} function, which simply runs the external @command{locate} command and parses the results. @xref{Dired and Find, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. If @code{eshell-plain-locate-behavior} is non-@code{nil}, then Emacs's internal @code{locate} is not used. This is the same as using @samp{alias locate '*locate $*'}. @item ls @cmindex ls Lists the contents of directories. If @code{eshell-ls-use-colors} is non-@code{nil}, the contents of a directory is color-coded according to file type and status. These colors and the regexps used to identify their corresponding files can be customized via @w{@kbd{M-x customize-group @key{RET} eshell-ls @key{RET}}}. The user option @code{eshell-ls-date-format} determines how the date is displayed when using the @option{-l} option. The date is produced using the function @code{format-time-string} (@pxref{Time Parsing,,, elisp, GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}). The user option @code{eshell-ls-initial-args} contains a list of arguments to include with any call to @command{ls}. For example, you can include the option @option{-h} to always use a more human-readable format. The user option @code{eshell-ls-default-blocksize} determines the default blocksize used when displaying file sizes with the option @option{-s}. @item make @cmindex make Run @command{make} through @code{compile} when run asynchronously (e.g., @samp{make &}). @xref{Compilation, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. Otherwise call the external @command{make} command. @item man @cmindex man Display Man pages using the Emacs @code{man} command. @xref{Man Page, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. @item mismatch @cmindex mismatch A wrapper around the function @code{cl-mismatch} (@pxref{Searching Sequences,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item mkdir @cmindex mkdir Make new directories. @item mv @cmindex mv Move or rename files. If @code{eshell-mv-overwrite-files} is non-@code{nil}, @command{mv} will overwrite files without warning. If @code{eshell-mv-interactive-query} is non-@code{nil}, @command{mv} will prompt before overwriting anything. @item occur @cmindex occur Alias to Emacs's @code{occur}. @xref{Other Repeating Search, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}. @item popd @cmindex popd Pop a directory from the directory stack and switch to a another place in the stack. @item printnl @cmindex printnl Print the arguments separated by newlines. @item pushd @cmindex pushd Push the current directory onto the directory stack, then change to another directory. If @code{eshell-pushd-dunique} is non-@code{nil}, then only unique directories will be added to the stack. If @code{eshell-pushd-dextract} is non-@code{nil}, then @samp{pushd +@var{n}} will pop the @var{n}th directory to the top of the stack. @item pwd @cmindex pwd Prints the current working directory. @item rm @cmindex rm Removes files, buffers, processes, or Emacs Lisp symbols, depending on the argument. If @code{eshell-rm-interactive-query} is non-@code{nil}, @command{rm} will prompt before removing anything. If @code{eshell-rm-removes-directories} is non-@code{nil}, then @command{rm} can also remove directories. Otherwise, @command{rmdir} is required. @item rmdir @cmindex rmdir Removes directories if they are empty. @item set-difference @cmindex set-difference A wrapper around the function @code{cl-set-difference} (@pxref{Lists as Sets,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item set-exclusive-or @cmindex set-exclusive-or A wrapper around the function @code{cl-set-exclusive-or} (@pxref{Lists as Sets,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item setq @cmindex setq Set variable values, using the function @code{setq} like a command. @xref{Setting Variables,,, elisp, GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. @item source @cmindex source Source an Eshell file in a subshell environment. This is not to be confused with the command @command{.}, which sources a file in the current environment. @item su @cmindex su @itemx sudo @cmindex sudo Uses TRAMP's @command{su} or @command{sudo} method @pxref{Inline methods, , , tramp} to run a command via @command{su} or @command{sudo}. These commands are in the eshell-tramp module, which is disabled by default. @item substitute @cmindex substitute A wrapper around the function @code{cl-substitute} (@pxref{Sequence Functions,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item time @cmindex time Show the time elapsed during a command's execution. @item umask @cmindex umask Set or view the default file permissions for newly created files and directories. @item union @cmindex union A wrapper around the function @code{cl-union} (@pxref{Lists as Sets,,, cl, GNU Emacs Common Lisp Emulation}). This command can be used for comparing lists of strings. This command can be loaded as part of the eshell-xtra module, which is disabled by default. @item unset @cmindex unset Unset an environment variable. @item wait @cmindex wait Wait until a process has successfully completed. @item which @cmindex which Identify a command and its location. @item whoami @cmindex whoami Print the current user. This Eshell version of @command{whoami} supports Tramp. @end table @subsection Defining new built-in commands While Eshell can run Lisp functions directly as commands, it may be more convenient to provide a special built-in command for Eshell. Built-in commands are just ordinary Lisp functions designed to be called from Eshell. When defining an Eshell-specific version of an existing function, you can give that function a name starting with @code{eshell/} so that Eshell knows to use it. @defmac eshell-eval-using-options name macro-args options body@dots{} This macro processes a list of @var{macro-args} for the command @var{name} using a set of command line @var{options}. If the arguments are parsed successfully, it will store the resulting values in local symbols and execute @var{body}; any remaining arguments will be available in the locally let-bound variable @code{args}. The return value is the value of the last form in @var{body}. If an unknown option was passed in @var{macro-args} and an external command was specified (see below), this macro will start a process for that command and throw the tag @code{eshell-external} with the new process as its value. @var{options} should be a list beginning with one or more elements of the following form, with each element representing a particular command-line switch: @example (@var{short} @var{long} @var{value} @var{symbol} @var{help-string}) @end example @table @var @item short This element, if non-nil, should be a character to be used as a short switch, like @code{-@var{short}}. At least one of this element and @var{long} must be non-nil. @item long This element, if non-nil, should be a string to be used as a long switch, like @code{--@var{long}}. @item value This element is the value associated with the option. It can be either: @table @asis @item @code{t} The option needs a value to be specified after the switch. @item @code{nil} The option is given the value @code{t}. @item anything else The option is given the specified value. @end table @item symbol This element is the Lisp symbol that will be bound to @var{value}. If @var{symbol} is @code{nil}, specifying this switch will instead call @code{eshell-show-usage}, and so is appropriate for an option like @code{--help}. @item help-string This element is a documentation string for the option, which will be displayed when @code{eshell-show-usage} is invoked. @end table After the list of command-line switch elements, @var{options} can include additional keyword arguments to control how @code{eshell-eval-using-options} behaves. Some of these take arguments, while others don't. The recognized keywords are: @table @code @item :external @var{string} Specify @var{string} as an external command to run if there are unknown switches in @var{macro-args}. @item :usage @var{string} Set @var{string} as the initial part of the command's documentation string. It appears before the options are listed. @item :post-usage @var{string} Set @var{string} to be the (optional) trailing part of the command's documentation string. It appears after the list of options, but before the final part of the documentation about the associated external command, if there is one. @item :show-usage If present, then show the usage message if the command is called with no arguments. @item :preserve-args Normally, @code{eshell-eval-using-options} flattens the list of arguments in @var{macro-args} and converts each to a string. If this keyword is present, avoid doing that, instead preserving the original arguments. This is useful for commands which want to accept arbitrary Lisp objects. @item :parse-leading-options-only If present, do not parse dash or switch arguments after the first positional argument. Instead, treat them as positional arguments themselves. @end table For example, you could handle a subset of the options for the @code{ls} command like this: @example (eshell-eval-using-options "ls" macro-args '((?a nil nil show-all "show all files") (?I "ignore" t ignore-pattern "ignore files matching pattern") (nil "help" nil nil "show this help message") :external "ls" :usage "[OPTION]... [FILE]... List information about FILEs (the current directory by default).") ;; List the files in ARGS somehow... ) @end example @end defmac @subsection Built-in variables Eshell knows a few built-in variables: @table @code @item $+ @vindex $+ This variable always contains the current working directory. @item $- @vindex $- This variable always contains the previous working directory (the current working directory from before the last @code{cd} command). @item $_ @vindex $_ It refers to the last argument of the last command. @item $$ @vindex $$ This is the result of the last command. In case of an external command, it is @code{t} or @code{nil}. @item $? @vindex $? This variable contains the exit code of the last command (0 or 1 for Lisp functions, based on successful completion). @end table @xref{Aliases}, for the built-in variables @samp{$*}, @samp{$1}, @samp{$2}, @dots{}, in alias definitions. @node Variables @section Variables Since Eshell is just an Emacs REPL@footnote{Read-Eval-Print Loop}, it does not have its own scope, and simply stores variables the same you would in an Elisp program. Eshell provides a command version of @code{setq} for convenience. @node Aliases @section Aliases @vindex $* Aliases are commands that expand to a longer input line. For example, @command{ll} is a common alias for @code{ls -l}, and would be defined with the command invocation @kbd{alias ll 'ls -l $*'}; with this defined, running @samp{ll foo} in Eshell will actually run @samp{ls -l foo}. Aliases defined (or deleted) by the @command{alias} command are automatically written to the file named by @code{eshell-aliases-file}, which you can also edit directly (although you will have to manually reload it). @vindex $1, $2, @dots{} Note that unlike aliases in Bash, arguments must be handled explicitly. Typically the alias definition would end in @samp{$*} to pass all arguments along. More selective use of arguments via @samp{$1}, @samp{$2}, etc., is also possible. For example, @kbd{alias mcd 'mkdir $1 && cd $1'} would cause @kbd{mcd foo} to create and switch to a directory called @samp{foo}. @node History @section History @cmindex history The @samp{history} command shows all commands kept in the history ring as numbered list. If the history ring contains @code{eshell-history-size} commands, those numbers change after every command invocation, therefore the @samp{history} command shall be applied before using the expansion mechanism with history numbers. The n-th entry of the history ring can be applied with the @samp{!n} command. If @code{n} is negative, the entry is counted from the end of the history ring. @cindex event designators @findex eshell-expand-history-references When history event designators are enabled (by adding @code{eshell-expand-history-references} to @code{eshell-expand-input-functions}), @samp{!foo} expands to the last command beginning with @code{foo}, and @samp{!?foo} to the last command containing @code{foo}. The n-th argument of the last command beginning with @code{foo} is accessible by @code{!foo:n}. The history ring is loaded from a file at the start of every session, and written back to the file at the end of every session. The file path is specified in @code{eshell-history-file-name}. Unlike other shells, such as Bash, Eshell can not be configured to keep a history ring of a different size than that of the history file. Since the default buffer navigation and searching key-bindings are still present in the Eshell buffer, the commands for history navigation and searching are bound to different keys: @table @kbd @item M-r @itemx M-s History I-search. @item M-p @itemx M-n Previous and next history line. If there is anything on the input line when you run these commands, they will instead jump to the previous or next line that begins with that string. @end table @node Completion @section Completion Eshell uses the pcomplete package for programmable completion, similar to that of other command shells. Argument completion differs depending on the preceding command: for example, possible completions for @command{rmdir} are only directories, while @command{rm} completions can be directories @emph{and} files. Eshell provides predefined completions for the built-in functions and some common external commands, and you can define your own for any command. Eshell completion also works for lisp forms and glob patterns. If the point is on a lisp form, then @key{TAB} will behave similarly to completion in @code{elisp-mode} and @code{lisp-interaction-mode}. For glob patterns, the pattern will be removed from the input line, and replaced by the completion. If you want to see the entire list of possible completions (e.g. when it's below the @code{completion-cycle-threshold}), press @kbd{M-?}. @subsection pcomplete Pcomplete, short for programmable completion, is the completion library originally written for Eshell, but usable for command completion@footnote{Command completion, as opposed to code completion, which is beyond the scope of pcomplete.} in other modes. Completions are defined as functions (with @code{defun}) named @code{pcomplete/COMMAND}, where @code{COMMAND} is the name of the command for which this function provides completions; you can also name the function @code{pcomplete/MAJOR-MODE/COMMAND} to define completions for a specific major mode. @node for loop @section @code{for} loop Because Eshell commands can not (easily) be combined with lisp forms, Eshell provides a command-oriented @command{for}-loop for convenience. The syntax is as follows: @example @code{for VAR in TOKENS @{ command invocation(s) @}} @end example where @samp{TOKENS} is a space-separated sequence of values of @var{VAR} for each iteration. This can even be the output of a command if @samp{TOKENS} is replaced with @samp{@{ command invocation @}}. @node Scripts @section Scripts @cmindex source @fnindex eshell-source-file You can run Eshell scripts much like scripts for other shells; the main difference is that since Eshell is not a system command, you have to run it from within Emacs. An Eshell script is simply a file containing a sequence of commands, as with almost any other shell script. Scripts are invoked from Eshell with @command{source}, or from anywhere in Emacs with @code{eshell-source-file}. @cmindex . If you wish to load a script into your @emph{current} environment, rather than in a subshell, use the @code{.} command. @node Expansion @chapter Expansion Expansion in a command shell is somewhat like macro expansion in macro parsers (such as @command{cpp} and @command{m4}), but in a command shell, they are less often used for constants, and usually for using variables and string manipulation.@footnote{Eshell has no string-manipulation expansions because the Elisp library already provides many functions for this.} For example, @code{$var} on a line expands to the value of the variable @code{var} when the line is executed. Expansions are usually passed as arguments, but may also be used as commands.@footnote{E.g., entering just @samp{$var} at the prompt is equivalent to entering the value of @code{var} at the prompt.} @menu * Dollars Expansion:: * Globbing:: @end menu @node Dollars Expansion @section Dollars Expansion Eshell has different @code{$} expansion syntax from other shells. There are some similarities, but don't let these lull you into a false sense of familiarity. @table @code @item $@var{var} Expands to the value bound to @var{var}. This is the main way to use variables in command invocations. @item $"@var{var}" @item $'@var{var}' Expands to the value bound to @var{var}. This is useful to disambiguate the variable name when concatenating it with another value, such as @samp{$"@var{var}"-suffix}. @item $(@var{lisp}) Expands to the result of evaluating the S-expression @code{(@var{lisp})}. On its own, this is identical to just @code{(@var{lisp})}, but with the @code{$}, it can be used in a string, such as @samp{/some/path/$(@var{lisp}).txt}. @item $@{@var{command}@} Returns the output of @command{@var{command}}, which can be any valid Eshell command invocation, and may even contain expansions. @item $<@var{command}> As with @samp{$@{@var{command}@}}, evaluates the Eshell command invocation @command{@var{command}}, but writes the output to a temporary file and returns the file name. @item $@var{expr}[@var{i...}] Expands to the @var{i}th element of the result of @var{expr}, an expression in one of the above forms listed here. If multiple indices are supplied, this will return a list containing the elements for each index. If @var{expr}'s value is a string, it will first be split at whitespace to make it a list. If @var{expr}'s value is an alist (@pxref{Association List Type, Association Lists, , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}), this will return the value associated with the key @code{"i"}. Multiple sets of indices can also be specified. For example, if @var{var} is @samp{((1 2) (3 4))}, then @samp{$@var{var}[0][1]} will expand to @code{2}. Raises an error if the result of @var{expr} is not a string or a sequence (@pxref{Sequences Arrays Vectors, Sequences, , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.) @item $@var{expr}[@var{regexp} @var{i...}] As above (when @var{expr} expands to a string), but use @var{regexp} to split the string. @var{regexp} can be any form other than a number. For example, @samp{$@var{var}[: 0]} will return the first element of a colon-delimited string. @item $#@var{expr} Expands to the length of the result of @var{expr}, an expression in one of the above forms. For example, @samp{$#@var{var}} returns the length of the variable @var{var} and @samp{$#@var{var}[0]} returns the length of the first element of @var{var}. Again, raises an error if the result of @var{expr} is not a string or a sequence. @end table @node Globbing @section Globbing Eshell's globbing syntax is very similar to that of Zsh. Users coming from Bash can still use Bash-style globbing, as there are no incompatibilities. Most globbing is pattern-based expansion, but there is also predicate-based expansion. @xref{Filename Generation, , , zsh, The Z Shell Manual}, for full syntax. To customize the syntax and behavior of globbing in Eshell see the Customize@footnote{@xref{Easy Customization, , , emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.} groups ``eshell-glob'' and ``eshell-pred''. @node Input/Output @chapter Input/Output Since Eshell does not communicate with a terminal like most command shells, IO is a little different. @section Visual Commands If you try to run programs from within Eshell that are not line-oriented, such as programs that use ncurses, you will just get garbage output, since the Eshell buffer is not a terminal emulator. Eshell solves this problem by running such programs in Emacs's terminal emulator. Programs that need a terminal to display output properly are referred to in this manual as ``visual commands'', because they are not simply line-oriented. You must tell Eshell which commands are visual, by adding them to @code{eshell-visual-commands}; for commands that are visual for only certain @emph{sub}-commands -- e.g., @samp{git log} but not @samp{git status} -- use @code{eshell-visual-subcommands}; and for commands that are visual only when passed certain options, use @code{eshell-visual-options}. Caution: Some tools such as Git use the pager @samp{less} by default to paginate their output but call it with its @samp{-F} option. This option causes @samp{less} to echo the output instead of paginating it if the output is less than one page long. This causes undesirable behavior if, e.g., @samp{git diff}, is defined as a visual subcommand. It'll work if the output is big enough and fail if it is less than one page long. If that occurs to you, search for configuration options for calling @samp{less} without the @samp{-F} option. For Git, you can do that using @samp{git config --global core.pager 'less -+F'}. @vindex eshell-destroy-buffer-when-process-dies If you want the buffers created by visual programs killed when the program exits, customize the variable @code{eshell-destroy-buffer-when-process-dies} to a non-@code{nil} value; the default is @code{nil}. @section Redirection Redirection is mostly the same in Eshell as it is in other command shells. The output redirection operators @code{>} and @code{>>} as well as pipes are supported, but there is not yet any support for input redirection. Output can also be redirected to buffers, using the @code{>>>} redirection operator, and Elisp functions, using virtual devices. The buffer redirection operator, @code{>>>}, expects a buffer object on the right-hand side, into which it inserts the output of the left-hand side. e.g., @samp{echo hello >>> #} inserts the string @code{"hello"} into the @file{*scratch*} buffer. The convenience shorthand variant @samp{#<@var{buffer-name}>}, as in @samp{#<*scratch*>}, is also accepted. @code{eshell-virtual-targets} is a list of mappings of virtual device names to functions. Eshell comes with two virtual devices: @file{/dev/kill}, which sends the text to the kill ring, and @file{/dev/clip}, which sends text to the clipboard. You can, of course, define your own virtual targets. They are defined by adding a list of the form @samp{("/dev/name" @var{function} @var{mode})} to @code{eshell-virtual-targets}. The first element is the device name; @var{function} may be either a lambda or a function name. If @var{mode} is @code{nil}, then the function is the output function; if it is non-@code{nil}, then the function is passed the redirection mode as a symbol--@code{overwrite} for @code{>}, @code{append} for @code{>>}, or @code{insert} for @code{>>>}--and the function is expected to return the output function. The output function is called once on each line of output until @code{nil} is passed, indicating end of output. @section Running Shell Pipelines Natively When constructing shell pipelines that will move a lot of data, it is a good idea to bypass Eshell's own pipelining support and use the operating system shell's instead. This is especially relevant when executing commands on a remote machine using Eshell's Tramp integration: using the remote shell's pipelining avoids copying the data which will flow through the pipeline to local Emacs buffers and then right back again. Eshell recognises a special syntax to make it easier to convert pipelines so as to bypass Eshell's pipelining. Prefixing at least one @code{|}, @code{<} or @code{>} with an asterisk marks a command as intended for the operating system shell. To make it harder to invoke this functionality accidentally, it is also required that the asterisk be preceded by whitespace or located at the start of input. For example, @example cat *.ogg *| my-cool-decoder >file @end example Executing this command will not copy all the data in the *.ogg files, nor the decoded data, into Emacs buffers, as would normally happen. The command is interpreted as extending up to the next @code{|} character which is not preceded by an unescaped asterisk following whitespace, or the end of the input if there is no such character. Thus, all @code{<} and @code{>} redirections occuring before the next asterisk-unprefixed @code{|} are implicitly prefixed with (whitespace and) asterisks. An exception is that Eshell-specific redirects right at the end of the command are excluded. This allows input like this: @example foo *| baz ># @end example @noindent which is equivalent to input like this: @example sh -c "foo | baz" ># @end example @node Extension modules @chapter Extension modules Eshell provides a facility for defining extension modules so that they can be disabled and enabled without having to unload and reload them, and to provide a common parent Customize group for the modules.@footnote{ERC provides a similar module facility.} An Eshell module is defined the same as any other library but one requirement: the module must define a Customize@footnote{@xref{Customization, , , elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.} group using @code{eshell-defgroup} (in place of @code{defgroup}) with @code{eshell-module} as the parent group.@footnote{If the module has no user-customizable options, then there is no need to define it as an Eshell module.} You also need to load the following as shown: @example (eval-when-compile (require 'cl-lib) (require 'esh-mode) (require 'eshell)) (require 'esh-util) @end example @menu * Writing a module:: * Module testing:: * Directory handling:: * Key rebinding:: * Smart scrolling:: * Terminal emulation:: @end menu @node Writing a module @section Writing a module This section is not yet written. @node Module testing @section Module testing This section is not yet written. @node Directory handling @section Directory handling This section is not yet written. @node Key rebinding @section Key rebinding This section is not yet written. @node Smart scrolling @section Smart scrolling This section is not yet written. @node Terminal emulation @section Terminal emulation This section is not yet written. @node Bugs and ideas @chapter Bugs and ideas @cindex reporting bugs and ideas @cindex bugs, how to report them @cindex author, how to reach @cindex email to the author @cindex FAQ @cindex problems, list of common @cindex known bugs @cindex bugs, known If you find a bug or misfeature, don't hesitate to report it, by using @kbd{M-x report-emacs-bug}. The same applies to feature requests. It is best to discuss one thing at a time. If you find several unrelated bugs, please report them separately. @ignore If you have ideas for improvements, or if you have written some extensions to this package, I would like to hear from you. I hope you find this package useful! @end ignore Below is a list of some known problems with Eshell version 2.4.2, which is the version included with Emacs 22. @table @asis @item Documentation incomplete @item Differentiate between aliases and functions Allow for a Bash-compatible syntax, such as: @example alias arg=blah function arg () @{ blah $* @} @end example @item @samp{for i in 1 2 3 @{ grep -q a b && *echo has it @} | wc -l} outputs result after prompt In fact, piping to a process from a looping construct doesn't work in general. If I change the call to @code{eshell-copy-handles} in @code{eshell-rewrite-for-command} to use @code{eshell-protect}, it seems to work, but the output occurs after the prompt is displayed. The whole structured command thing is too complicated at present. @item Pcomplete sometimes gets stuck You press @key{TAB}, but no completions appear, even though the directory has matching files. This behavior is rare. @item @samp{grep python $} doesn't work, but using @samp{*grep} does This happens because the @code{grep} Lisp function returns immediately, and then the asynchronous @command{grep} process expects to examine the temporary file, which has since been deleted. @item Problem with C-r repeating text If the text @emph{before point} reads "./run", and you type @kbd{C-r r u n}, it will repeat the line for every character typed. @item Backspace doesn't scroll back after continuing (in smart mode) Hitting space during a process invocation, such as @command{make}, will cause it to track the bottom of the output; but backspace no longer scrolls back. @item It's not possible to fully @code{unload-feature} Eshell @item Menu support was removed, but never put back @item Using C-p and C-n with rebind gets into a locked state This happened a few times in Emacs 21, but has been irreproducible since. @item If an interactive process is currently running, @kbd{M-!} doesn't work @item Use a timer instead of @code{sleep-for} when killing child processes @item Piping to a Lisp function is not supported Make it so that the Lisp command on the right of the pipe is repeatedly called with the input strings as arguments. This will require changing @code{eshell-do-pipelines} to handle non-process targets. @item Input redirection is not supported See the above entry. @item Problem running @command{less} without arguments on Windows The result in the Eshell buffer is: @example Spawning child process: invalid argument @end example Also a new @command{less} buffer was created with nothing in it@dots{} (presumably this holds the output of @command{less}). If @command{less.exe} is invoked from the Eshell command line, the expected output is written to the buffer. Note that this happens on NT-Emacs 20.6.1 on Windows 2000. The term.el package and the supplied shell both use the @command{cmdproxy} program for running shells. @item Implement @samp{-r}, @samp{-n} and @samp{-s} switches for @command{cp} @item Make @kbd{M-5 M-x eshell} switch to ``*eshell<5>*'', creating if need be @item @samp{mv @var{dir} @var{file}.tar} does not remove directories This is because the tar option --remove-files doesn't do so. Should it be Eshell's job? @item Bind @code{standard-output} and @code{standard-error} This would be so that if a Lisp function calls @code{print}, everything will happen as it should (albeit slowly). @item When an extension module fails to load, @samp{cd /} gives a Lisp error @item If a globbing pattern returns one match, should it be a list? @item Make sure syntax table is correct in Eshell mode So that @kbd{M-@key{DEL}} acts in a predictable manner, etc. @item Allow all Eshell buffers to share the same history and list-dir @item There is a problem with script commands that output to @file{/dev/null} If a script file, somewhere in the middle, uses @samp{> /dev/null}, output from all subsequent commands is swallowed. @item Split up parsing of text after @samp{$} in @file{esh-var.el} Make it similar to the way that @file{esh-arg.el} is structured. Then add parsing of @samp{$[?\n]}. @item After pressing @kbd{M-@key{RET}}, redisplay before running the next command @item Argument predicates and modifiers should work anywhere in a path @example /usr/local/src/editors/vim $ vi **/CVS(/)/Root(.) Invalid regexp: "Unmatched ( or \\(" @end example With @command{zsh}, the glob above expands to all files named @file{Root} in directories named @file{CVS}. @item Typing @samp{echo $@{locate locate@}/bin@key{TAB}} results in a Lisp error Perhaps it should interpolate all permutations, and make that the globbing result, since otherwise hitting return here will result in ``(list of filenames)/bin'', which is never valuable. Thus, one could @command{cat} only C backup files by using @samp{ls $@{identity *.c@}~}. In that case, having an alias command name @command{glob} for @command{identity} would be useful. @item Once symbolic mode is supported for @command{umask}, implement @command{chmod} in Lisp @item Create @code{eshell-expand-file-name} This would use a data table to transform things such as @samp{~+}, @samp{...}, etc. @item Abstract @file{em-smart.el} into @file{smart-scroll.el} It only really needs: to be hooked onto the output filter and the pre-command hook, and to have the input-end and input-start markers. And to know whether the last output group was ``successful.'' @item Allow for fully persisting the state of Eshell This would include: variables, history, buffer, input, dir stack, etc. @item Implement D as an argument predicate It means that files beginning with a dot should be included in the glob match. @item A comma in a predicate list should mean OR At the moment, this is not supported. @item Error if a glob doesn't expand due to a predicate An error should be generated only if @code{eshell-error-if-no-glob} is non-@code{nil}. @item @samp{(+ @key{RET} @key{SPC} @key{TAB}} does not cause @code{indent-according-to-mode} to occur @item Create @code{eshell-auto-accumulate-list} This is a list of commands for which, if the user presses @kbd{RET}, the text is staged as the next Eshell command, rather than being sent to the current interactive process. @item Display file and line number if an error occurs in a script @item @command{wait} doesn't work with process ids at the moment @item Enable the direct-to-process input code in @file{em-term.el} @item Problem with repeating @samp{echo $@{find /tmp@}} With smart display active, if @kbd{RET} is held down, after a while it can't keep up anymore and starts outputting blank lines. It only happens if an asynchronous process is involved@dots{} I think the problem is that @code{eshell-send-input} is resetting the input target location, so that if the asynchronous process is not done by the time the next @kbd{RET} is received, the input processor thinks that the input is meant for the process; which, when smart display is enabled, will be the text of the last command line! That is a bug in itself. In holding down @kbd{RET} while an asynchronous process is running, there will be a point in between termination of the process, and the running of @code{eshell-post-command-hook}, which would cause @code{eshell-send-input} to call @code{eshell-copy-old-input}, and then process that text as a command to be run after the process. Perhaps there should be a way of killing pending input between the death of the process, and the @code{post-command-hook}. @item Allow for a more aggressive smart display mode Perhaps toggled by a command, that makes each output block a smart display block. @item Create more meta variables @table @samp @item $! The reason for the failure of the last disk command, or the text of the last Lisp error. @item $= A special associate array, which can take references of the form @samp{$=[REGEXP]}. It indexes into the directory ring. @end table @item Eshell scripts can't execute in the background @item Support zsh's ``Parameter Expansion'' syntax, i.e., @samp{$@{@var{name}:-@var{val}@}} @item Write an @command{info} alias that can take arguments So that the user can enter @samp{info chmod}, for example. @item Create a mode @code{eshell-browse} It would treat the Eshell buffer as an outline. Collapsing the outline hides all of the output text. Collapsing again would show only the first command run in each directory @item Allow other revisions of a file to be referenced using @samp{file@{rev@}} This would be expanded by @code{eshell-expand-file-name} (see above). @item Print ``You have new mail'' when the ``Mail'' icon is turned on @item Implement @kbd{M-|} for Eshell @item Implement input redirection If it's a Lisp function, input redirection implies @command{xargs} (in a way@dots{}). If input redirection is added, also update the @code{file-name-quote-list}, and the delimiter list. @item Allow @samp{#<@var{word} @var{arg}>} as a generic syntax With the handling of @emph{word} specified by an @code{eshell-special-alist}. @item In @code{eshell-eval-using-options}, allow a @code{:complete} tag It would be used to provide completion rules for that command. Then the macro will automagically define the completion function. @item For @code{eshell-command-on-region}, apply redirections to the result So that @samp{+ > 'blah} would cause the result of the @code{+} (using input from the current region) to be inserting into the symbol @code{blah}. If an external command is being invoked, the input is sent as standard input, as if a @samp{cat |} had been invoked. If a Lisp command, or an alias, is invoked, then if the line has no newline characters, it is divided by whitespace and passed as arguments to the Lisp function. Otherwise, it is divided at the newline characters. Thus, invoking @code{+} on a series of numbers will add them; @code{min} would display the smallest figure, etc. @item Write @code{eshell-script-mode} as a minor mode It would provide syntax, abbrev, highlighting and indenting support like @code{emacs-lisp-mode} and @code{shell-mode}. @item In the history mechanism, finish the Bash-style support This means @samp{!n}, @samp{!#}, @samp{!:%}, and @samp{!:1-} as separate from @samp{!:1*}. @item Support the -n command line option for @command{history} @item Implement @command{fc} in Lisp @item Specifying a frame as a redirection target should imply the currently active window's buffer @item Implement @samp{>@var{func-or-func-list}} This would allow for an ``output translators'', that take a function to modify output with, and a target. Devise a syntax that works well with pipes, and can accommodate multiple functions (i.e., @samp{>'(upcase regexp-quote)} or @samp{>'upcase}). @item Allow Eshell to read/write to/from standard input and output This would be optional, rather than always using the Eshell buffer. This would allow it to be run from the command line (perhaps). @item Write a @command{help} command It would call subcommands with @option{--help}, or @option{-h} or @option{/?}, as appropriate. @item Implement @command{stty} in Lisp @item Support @command{rc}'s matching operator, e.g., @samp{~ (@var{list}) @var{regexp}} @item Implement @command{bg} and @command{fg} as editors of @code{eshell-process-list} Using @command{bg} on a process that is already in the background does nothing. Specifying redirection targets replaces (or adds) to the list current being used. @item Have @command{jobs} print only the processes for the current shell @item How can Eshell learn if a background process has requested input? @item Support @samp{2>&1} and @samp{>&} and @samp{2>} and @samp{|&} The syntax table for parsing these should be customizable, such that the user could change it to use rc syntax: @samp{>[2=1]}. @item Allow @samp{$_[-1]}, which would indicate the last element of the array @item Make @samp{$x[*]} equal to listing out the full contents of @samp{x} Return them as a list, so that @samp{$_[*]} is all the arguments of the last command. @item Copy ANSI code handling from @file{term.el} into @file{em-term.el} Make it possible for the user to send char-by-char to the underlying process. Ultimately, I should be able to move away from using term.el altogether, since everything but the ANSI code handling is already part of Eshell. Then, things would work correctly on MS-Windows as well (which doesn't have @file{/bin/sh}, although @file{term.el} tries to use it). @item Make the shell spawning commands be visual That is, make (@command{su}, @command{bash}, @command{telnet}, @command{rlogin}, @command{rsh}, etc.)@: be part of @code{eshell-visual-commands}. The only exception is if the shell is being used to invoke a single command. Then, the behavior should be based on what that command is. @item Create a smart viewing command named @command{open} This would search for some way to open its argument (similar to opening a file in the Windows Explorer). @item Alias @command{read} to be the same as @command{open}, only read-only @item Write a @command{tail} command which uses @code{view-file} It would move point to the end of the buffer, and then turns on auto-revert mode in that buffer at frequent intervals---and a @command{head} alias which assumes an upper limit of @code{eshell-maximum-line-length} characters per line. @item Make @command{dgrep} load @code{dired}, mark everything, then invoke @code{dired-do-search} @item Write @file{mesh.c} This would run Emacs with the appropriate arguments to invoke Eshell only. That way, it could be listed as a login shell. @item Use an intangible @code{PS2} string for multi-line input prompts @item Auto-detect when a command is visual, by checking @code{TERMCAP} usage @item The first keypress after @kbd{M-x watson} triggers @code{eshell-send-input} @item Make @kbd{/} electric So that it automatically expands and corrects pathnames. Or make pathname completion for Pcomplete auto-expand @samp{/u/i/std@key{TAB}} to @samp{/usr/include/std@key{TAB}}. @item Write the @command{pushd} stack to disk along with @code{last-dir-ring} @item Add options to @code{eshell/cat} which would allow it to sort and uniq @item Implement @command{wc} in Lisp Add support for counting sentences, paragraphs, pages, etc. @item Once piping is added, implement @command{sort} and @command{uniq} in Lisp @item Implement @command{touch} in Lisp @item Implement @command{comm} in Lisp @item Implement an @command{epatch} command in Lisp This would call @code{ediff-patch-file}, or @code{ediff-patch-buffer}, depending on its argument. @item Have an option such that @samp{ls -l} generates a dired buffer @item Write a version of @command{xargs} based on command rewriting That is, @samp{find X | xargs Y} would be indicated using @samp{Y $@{find X@}}. Maybe @code{eshell-do-pipelines} could be changed to perform this on-thy-fly rewriting. @item Write an alias for @command{less} that brings up a @code{view-mode} buffer Such that the user can press @key{SPC} and @key{DEL}, and then @kbd{q} to return to Eshell. It would be equivalent to: @samp{X > #; view-buffer #}. @item Make @code{eshell-mode} as much a full citizen as @code{shell-mode} Everywhere in Emacs where @code{shell-mode} is specially noticed, add @code{eshell-mode} there. @item Permit the umask to be selectively set on a @command{cp} target @item Problem using @kbd{M-x eshell} after using @code{eshell-command} If the first thing that I do after entering Emacs is to run @code{eshell-command} and invoke @command{ls}, and then use @kbd{M-x eshell}, it doesn't display anything. @item @kbd{M-@key{RET}} during a long command (using smart display) doesn't work Since it keeps the cursor up where the command was invoked. @end table @node GNU Free Documentation License @appendix GNU Free Documentation License @include doclicense.texi @node Concept Index @unnumbered Concept Index @printindex cp @node Function and Variable Index @unnumbered Function and Variable Index @printindex fn @node Command Index @unnumbered Command Index @printindex cm @c There are no @kindex entries in this manual; avoid generating an @c empty menu. @ignore @node Key Index @unnumbered Key Index @printindex ky @end ignore @bye