daudin
is a UNIX command-line shell based on Python.
The aim is to provide an interactive shell that is as convenient to use as the regular shell (in particular providing pipelines) but which has Python as its programming language.
Contents: Installation · Usage · Examples · Pipelines · Changing directory · Command substitution · Readline · Init file · Prompts · More on usage · Exiting · Command interpretation · Pipeline execution · Shell execution · Debugging · Version · Background · TODO.
$ pip install daudin
Run daudin
and enter commands interactively.
Should run fine on a recent version of Python 3 (I am using 3.7.3).
The following examples all assume you have already run daudin
(which
prints the >>>
prompt).
Like a regular shell, you have direct access to UNIX tools:
>>> ls -l
total 44
-rw-r--r-- 1 terry terry 635 Oct 12 17:34 Makefile
-rw-rw-r-- 1 terry terry 16619 Oct 12 23:05 README.md
-rwxrwxr-x 1 terry terry 1261 Oct 12 22:42 daudin
drwxrwxr-x 3 terry terry 4096 Oct 12 22:51 daudinlib
-rw-rw-r-- 1 terry terry 2309 Oct 12 23:05 example-functions.py
-rw-r--r-- 1 terry terry 1546 Oct 12 17:43 setup.py
drwxrwxr-x 3 terry terry 4096 Oct 12 22:48 test
>>> ls | wc -l
7
>>> echo hello there > /tmp/xxx
>>> cat /tmp/xxx
hello there
(If regular shell commands are slow to execute, it's probably because your
regular shell is slow to start. Change the default underlying shell used by
daudin
to something faster, as described below.)
But in fact it's Python all the way down:
>>> from math import pi
>>> pi
3.141592653589793
>>> def area(r):
... return r ** 2 * pi
...
>>> area(2.0)
12.566370614359172
Shell pipelines are super cool. As you've seen above daudin
, has
pipelines that look just like the shell. But there are a few added extras.
You can mix Python and the shell in a daudin
pipeline:
>>> import this | grep 'better than'
Beautiful is better than ugly.
Explicit is better than implicit.
Simple is better than complex.
Complex is better than complicated.
Flat is better than nested.
Sparse is better than dense.
Now is better than never.
Although never is often better than *right* now.
In Python commands in a daudin
pipeline, the current pipeline value is
kept in a variable named _
, which may be of any type:
>>> -6 | abs(_) | _ * 7
42
>>> 'hello' | _.title()
Hello
UNIX commands produce lists of strings in _
:
>>> ls | for name in _:
... prefix = name.split('.')[0]
... print(len(prefix), prefix.upper())
...
8 MAKEFILE
6 README
6 DAUDIN
9 DAUDINLIB
17 EXAMPLE-FUNCTIONS
5 SETUP
4 TEST
That means you should use _[0]
if you want to act on just the first line
of UNIX command output:
>>> def triple(x):
... return int(x) * 3
...
>>> echo a b c | wc -w | triple(_[0])
9
Here's the same thing, but with cat
reading from the terminal:
>>> def triple(x):
... return int(x) * 3
...
>>> cat | wc -w | triple(_[0])
a b c
^D
9
You can really mix things up (UNIX, Python, UNIX, Python):
>>> seq 0 9 | map(lambda x: 2 ** int(x), _) | sum(_)
1023
>>> seq 0 9 | list(map(lambda x: 2 ** int(x), _)) | tee /tmp/powers-of-two | sum(map(int, _))
1023
>>> cat /tmp/powers-of-two
1
2
4
8
16
32
64
128
256
512
You can hit ENTER in the middle of a pipeline without disrupting it. So this:
>>> echo a b c | wc -w
3
is equivalent to this
>>> echo a b c |
>>> wc -w
3
And if you forget to end a pipeline command-line with a |
you can just
put one at the start of the next line to continue the pipeline:
>>> echo a b c
a b c
>>> | wc -w
3
If you need to write a helper function in the middle of the pipeline before continuing processing, you can do it:
>>> def triple(x):
... # Doesn't use int() to convert its argument.
... return x * 3
...
>>> echo a b c | wc -w
3
>>> f = lambda line: int(line[0])
>>> | f(_) | triple(_)
9
Similarly, you can change directories in the middle of a pipeline (see Changing directory below).
You can put comments into the middle of a pipeline
>>> ls -1
Makefile
README.md
daudin
daudinlib
setup.py
test
>>> # The pipeline is still alive!
>>> _
['Makefile', 'README.md', 'daudin', 'daudinlib', 'setup.py', 'test']
>>> | wc -l
6
You can also pipe the output of a multi-line Python command directly into a following command:
>>> ls | for name in _:
... prefix = name.split('.')[0]
... print(len(prefix), prefix.upper()) | | sort
17 EXAMPLE-FUNCTIONS
4 TEST
5 SETUP
6 DAUDIN
6 README
7 LICENSE
8 MAKEFILE
9 CHANGELOG
9 DAUDINLIB
There are two |
symbols before the sort
above because an empty command
is necessary to terminate the compound Python command.
The output above should have been numerically sorted. The pipeline can be
immediately continued using a leading |
:
>>> | sort -n
4 TEST
5 SETUP
6 DAUDIN
6 README
7 LICENSE
8 MAKEFILE
9 CHANGELOG
9 DAUDINLIB
17 EXAMPLE-FUNCTIONS
Here's another example where two |
symbols can be used to terminate the
Python command in order to continue the pipeline on a single line:
>>> ls | for i in _: print(i[:3]) | | wc -l
11
The above could instead be piped into the
sus
function I have in my ~/.daudin.py
file (see Init
file for details on this). The sus
Python function does the
equivalent of the shell sort | uniq -c | sort -nr
trick for finding the
most common inputs:
>>> ls | for i in _: print(i[:3]) | | sus()
3 dau
1 CHA
1 LIC
1 Mak
1 REA
1 dis
1 exa
1 set
1 tes
Just to repeat: the ||
provides an empty command (the zero-length string
between the pipe symbols) to terminate the Python for
block. The space
between the two pipe symbols is optional.
If you run a command that alters the pipeline content and you want to
restore it to its former value, you can undo with %u
.
There is only a single undo at the moment. This could obviously be improved, and a redo command could be added.
You can of course always save the current pipeline value into a Python variable:
>>> echo a b c
>>> a = _
Changing directory has to be handled a little specially because although a
cd
command can be handed off to a shell, the change of directory in that
shell will have no effect on your current process. That's why cd
has to
be a special "built-in" command in regular shells.
In daudin
you can change dir using regular Python:
>>> import os
>>> os.chdir('/tmp')
>>> pwd
/tmp
but that's far too laborious for interactive use. So there's a cd
function provided for you:
>>> cd('/tmp')
>>> pwd
/tmp
To ease this, at the price of a litle ugliness, there's also a "built-in"
special command called %cd
:
>>> %cd /tmp
>>> pwd
/tmp
Changing directory does not affect the current pipeline value. So you can change directory in the middle of a pipeline:
>>> mkdir /tmp/a /tmp/b
>>> %cd /tmp/a
>>> touch x y z
>>> ls | %cd /tmp/b | for i in _:
... with open(i + '.txt', 'w') as fp:
... print('I am file', i, file=fp)
>>> pwd
/tmp/b
>>> cat x.txt
I am file x
In regular shells there is a way to have part of a command line executed in a sub-shell and the output of that sub-shell replaces that part of the original command.
For example, suppose you want to get the value of date
into a variable.
In the bash shell you
could do this:
$ d=$(date)
$ echo $d
Sat Oct 5 22:36:24 CEST 2019
In daudin
there is a sh
function that you can use to pass commands to a
sub-shell. So, equivalently:
>>> d = sh('date')
>>> d
Sat Oct 5 22:36:24 CEST 2019
If you then wanted to extract the month from the date
output, in the
shell you could do this:
# Working from the d variable set above:
$ month=$(echo $d | cut -f2 -d' ')
# Or you could call date again:
$ month=$(date | cut -f2 -d' ')
$ echo $month
Oct
Same thing in daudin
:
# Working from the d variable set above:
>>> month = d.split()[1]
# Calling date again:
>>> month = sh('date').split()[1]
>>> month
Oct
You could also have the shell do all the work via sh()
but to do that
you'll need to use \|
in the to ensure that daudin
doesn't incorrectly
split the shell command into two pieces:
>>> month = sh('date \| cut -f2 -d" "')
daudin
uses the GNU
readline library to make
it easy to edit and re-enter commands. The history is stored in
~/.daudin_history
.
daudin
provides file and directory name completion, as well as Python
completion (the latter using
rlcompleter).
daudin
will initially read and execute code in a ~/.daudin.py
file, if
any. This is a good place to put convenience functions you write that you
want readily accessible. The file
example-functions.py has some functions that give a
flavor of how you can add functionality to daudin
. I have all these in my
~/.daudin.py
file.
Use the --noInit
argument when invoking daudin
to disable loading the
init file.
Use the special %r
(reload) command to re-read your init file.
There are --ps1
and --ps2
options that can be given on the command line
to daudin
. You can also set sys.ps1
or sys.ps2
while running:
>>> sys.ps1 = '% '
% 3 + 4
7
You can also set sys.ps1
or sys.ps2
to be a function that returns a
string. In the example-functions.py file mentioned
above, you can see sys.ps1
assigned to a simple function returning a
string containing the basename of the current working directory (or ~
if
you are in your home directory) plus the name of the current git
branch
(if any). The string also contains escape sequences to color the prompt.
This is all extremely simplistic and for now is just an example. It would
make sense to port a more sophisticated prompt package from a shell to
Python and incorporate that.
As you've seen, you can simply invoke daudin
with no arguments and it
will start an interactive read-eval-print loop, reading from standard
input.
You can also write scripts and run them by giving the script filename(s) on the command line:
$ cat daudin-script
#!/usr/bin/env daudin
def triple(x):
return int(x) * 3
echo a b c d | wc -w | triple(_[0])
$ daudin daudin-script
12
You can provide several script filenames on the command line and they will
be run in turn. If you give a filename of -
it will cause daudin
to
read from standard input. Note that if you provide filenames, input piped
into daudin
will be ignored (to read standard input, use a -
as just
mentioned).
Finally, you can pipe commands into daudin
:
$ echo 33 + 34 | daudin
77
daudin
understands the following command-line options (run daudin --help
to see this):
usage: daudin [-h] [--ps1 PS1] [--ps2 PS2] [--shell SHELL] [--noInit]
[--noPtys] [--debug] [--tracebacks]
[FILE [FILE ...]]
A Python shell.
positional arguments:
FILE A file of commands to run non-interactively. Use "-" to
indicate reading from standard input.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--ps1 PS1 The primary shell prompt. Note that this value will be
ignored if the user's init file (if any) sets sys.ps1.
--ps2 PS2 The secondary shell prompt. Note that this value will be
ignored if the user's init file (if any) sets sys.ps2.
--shell SHELL The shell executable (and its initial argument(s)) that
should be used to execute UNIX commands. Default is
"$DAUDIN_SHELL" if DAUDIN_SHELL is set in your environment,
else "$SHELL -c" if SHELL is set in your environment, else
"/bin/sh -c".
--noInit Do not load the ~/.daudin.py start-up file.
--noPtys Do not run any shell commands in pseudo-ttys.
--debug Start in debug mode.
--tracebacks Print exception tracebacks (implies --debug).
Just use control-d as you would in any other shell. Or you can call a
Python builtin function exit()
or quit()
, or use sys.exit()
(all of
which can be given an int
exit status).
daudin
first tries to run a command with
eval. If that
succeeds, the result becomes _
for the next command. If eval
fails,
code.compile_command
is used to try to compile the command. If a full command is found, it is
given to exec to
execute. If a partial command (e.g., the beginning of a function
definition or a dictionary or list etc.) is found, a secondary prompt
(sys.ps2
) is printed. If a command cannot be compiled or executed,
execution is attempted via the shell (/bin/sh
) using
subprocess. The
current _
is provided to the shell on standard input. The output of the
shell command, if any, is converted to a Python list
of strings (though
daudin
initially prints this as a single string for the user). The list
of strings becomes the next _
. If the shell command produces no output,
_
is set to []
for the next command (a value of None
could be used
instead, but it's more consistent to have all shell commands return a list
of strings, even if empty).
If a command returns a value (or if None
is returned but the command
prints something) that value becomes the new pipeline value:
>>> 4
4
>>> _
4
>>> [3, 6, 9]
[3, 6, 9]
>>> print('hello')
hello
>>> echo hello too
hello too
# This echo command actually returns a list of one string, and that is the
# value that _ is set to. But, as mentioned above, when daudin first
# prints the output from the shell command the lines are joined with '\n'.
>>> _
['hello too']
Although the above works well almost all the time, it is not perfect. In
particular it is possible that you enter a valid Python expression but that
eval
and exec
cannot run it (e.g., len(None)
). In that case the
command is fed to the shell, which results in an error similar to
>>> len(None)
/bin/sh: 1: Syntax error: word unexpected (expecting ")")
You can turn on debugging via the special %d
command (see below for more detail) to dig into what happened:
>>> %d
>>> len(None)
Processing 'len(None)'.
Not in pipeline.
Trying eval 'len(None)'.
Could not eval: object of type 'NoneType' has no len().
Trying to compile 'len(None)'.
Command compiled OK.
Could not exec: object of type 'NoneType' has no len().
Trying shell 'len(None)' with stdin None.
In _shPty, stdin is None
/bin/sh: 1: Syntax error: word unexpected (expecting ")")
Shell returned '/bin/sh: 1: Syntax error: word unexpected (expecting ")")\n'
When a Python command is run, it has access to the following:
cd
- a function for changing directory.sh
- a function for running a shell command.self
- the instance ofdaudinlib.pipeline.Pipeline
. This allows full access to the internals of the runningdaudin
shell. So you can do things likeself.debug = True
, and anything else you can think of.
In addition, the variables or functions you define or import
in your
~/.daudin.py
are also present.
By default, daudin
will use your SHELL
environment variable (with a
-c
argument) as the shell to execute non-Python commands with. You can
specify another shell on the command line via the --shell
argument, e.g.,
$ daudin --shell '/bin/bash -c'
or by setting an environment variable, DAUDIN_SHELL
to a value such as
/bin/bash -c
. If you normally use a shell with slow start-up, and invoke
daudin
from that shell, you will certainly want to use one of these
options to set the shell that daudin
uses, otherwise shell commands
executed by daudin
will all be slow.
You can also change the shell in use during a daudin
session:
>>> self.shell = ['/bin/bash', '-c']
>>> echo $BASH_VERSION
5.0.3(1)-release
>>> echo testing-{1,2,3}
testing-1 testing-2 testing-3
>>> for i in testing-{1,2,3}; do echo $i; done
testing-1
testing-2
testing-3
>>> self.shell = ['/bin/zsh', '-c']
>>> echo $ZSH_VERSION
5.5.1
>>> echo {2015..2019}
2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
>>> foreach i (testing-{1,2,3}); do echo $i; done
testing-1
testing-2
testing-3
>>> self.shell = ['/usr/local/bin/fish', '-c']
>>> # Slow!!
>>> echo $FISH_VERSION
3.0.0
>>> echo testing-{1,2,3}
testing-1 testing-2 testing-3
>>> self.shell = ['/bin/sh', '-c']
>>> echo testing-{1,2,3}
testing-{1,2,3}
Note that this shell is only used by daudin
when it encounters shell
commands on a command line, not when you use the built-in sh
command.
When using sh
, you can provide whatever arguments you like, either as a
string or a list of strings, to be passed to subprocess.run
(or
subprocess.Pipe
in the case of a pseudotty - see below).
When a shell command is the final command on a line, it is run in a
pseudotty. So commands that
check to see if they're running with standard output connected to a
terminal will think they are. In that case, a command like git status
or
ls --color=auto
will produce colored output that will be correctly
displayed.
You can turn on debugging output using the special %d
command, or set
self.debug
to a true value:
>>> self.debug = 1
>>> 4
Processing '4'.
Trying eval '4'.
Eval returned 4.
4
or run self.toggleDebug()
.
For more information you can enable printing of tracebacks via the %t
special command.
There are --debug
and --tracebacks
command-line options that can be
given on daudin
invocation to immediately enable debugging and traceback
printing.
All special %
commands have been described above, but here's list of them
in one place for reference:
%cd
- change directory.%d
- toggle debug output.%r
- reload init file.%t
- toggle traceback output (also turns on debugging output).%u
- undo the last change to the_
pipeline variable.
It's worth pointing out that none of these special commands is actually
needed. They're just syntactic sugar to make some actions easier. Their
effects can all be achieved using regular Python inside daudin
(usually
via self
), if you know what you're doing.
To get the daudin
version:
>>> import daudinlib
>>> daudinlib.__version__
0.0.7
Daudin is the surname of François Marie Daudin, a prolific French zoologist who in 1826 gave the name "Python", to a genus in the Pythonidae family. Pythonidae in turn is a member of the wonderfully named superfamily, Pythonoidea.
I wrote daudin
on the evening of Oct 4, 2019 following a discussion about
shells with Derek Smith
after he overheard me talking to a student. I was saying how awesome the
shell is (really meaning its pipelines and the power you get from it
falling back onto external programs in $PATH
when it encounters a
non-keyword).
Derek said he thinks the shell and having to use one in the first place really sucks. He asked two questions, illustrating his strong objections:
-
First, he asked why we have to program the shell in this archaic painful language when we use a completely different language to get our "real" work done. Why can't it all just be one language?
I told him how I love pipelines and how natural they are. They are completely unlike what we normally do as programmers and that we somehow got used to. In "normal" programming you need to either a) nest functions inside-out (innermost is executed first) in a typical language, or b) use prefix syntax and nested inside-out functions as in Lisp, or c) perhaps worst of all, push all your arguments onto a stack and then use postix, as in a Reverse Polish Notation (RPN) calculator or other stack-based language.
Unlike in those other environments, in a shell pipeline you indicate what you want to get done in the "natural" (for many people) left-to-right order. You give arguments in a natural place. The shell takes care of making the data flow through the pipeline behind the scenes, hooking up standard input and output between successive commands.
I mentioned an experimental new shell (nushell) to Derek, that Nelson Minar had recently pointed me to. I told Derek how
nushell
lets structured data flow along the pipeline. -
He gave an outraged snort and asked his second deadly question: but why structured data? Why can't a number, a string, a list, an object, a function (or even "structured data"), flow along the pipeline? Derek is a Lisp programmer, and has been for decades. He's never seen a reason to move to any other programming environment. If you know about Lisp and its typical programming environment (not to mention the Lisp Machine) you can easily appreciate why.
I recently wrote a Python RPN calculator that lets you put anything onto the stack and operate on it, so I've been thinking about very general and syntactically easy use of Python like this, but in the context of a stack, not the shell. I also wrote pystdin to allow you to easily process standard input in Python, without having to do so much typing.
With Derek's two provocative questions burning brightly in my mind, I started thinking about how to write a shell that was all Python, with the elegance of shell pipelines (both conceptually and syntactically), and that would allow anything to flow along the pipeline. And, for bonus points, make it easy to use and seamlessly tie in to all the UNIX commands a regular shell provides access to.
Once I had the basic idea of what to write, the code was pretty
straightforward to put together due to Python's strong support for parsing,
compiling, evaluating, and execing Python code and the nice
subprocess
library. The rest was just glue and a REPL loop. An initial working
version was about 280 lines of code and could be written in one evening.
The code is still quite ugly and brittle (only a few tests and various
exceptions are either not handled as well as they could be or may even
cause daudin
to exit). But it works fine as an initial proof of concept.
I find it interesting to note that it feels like daudin
generalizes my
RPN calculator and pystdin
(both mentioned above).
I'm going to try using daudin
for real and see what kinds of additional
helper functions I end up adding and how things go in general. It's easy
to imagine some things, like a smart cd
command (I've written quite a few
shell cd
commands over the years, including a client-server one :-)). The
prompt could be a function. Many things could be done with history. Etc.
Thanks for reading, and thanks Derek & Nelson.
Terry Jones (@terrycojones)
terry@jon.es
Here are some concrete things I'd like to (possibly) add
- Just have one sub-shell and send commands to it instead of forking a new
one for each command. That would allow persistent shell variables.
cd
commands could be run simultaneously in both shells. - Add some way to deal with standard error?
- Some of what might also be wanted in a pipeline with
_
can be done with tee. - Make it so code can return
IGNORE
to explicitly preserve the pipeline. - Guess at auto-indent level for incomplete commands.
- Add a specially-named function that (if defined) is used to produce the prompt.
- Add a specially-named function that (if defined) run after each command (or command-line).
- Add variable export.