A package manager for shell scripts and functions.
Basher allows you to quickly install shell packages directly from github (or other sites). Instead of looking for specific install instructions for each package and messing with your path, basher will create a central location for all packages and manage their binaries for you.
Even though it is called basher, it also works with zsh and fish.
You can install Basher in 1 line. This will install Basher, and add it to your .bashrc/.zshrc file - in a way that can automatically be uninstalled later:
curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/basherpm/basher/master/install.sh | bash
Basher requires bash >= 4
, and the realpath
utility from coreutils
. On
osx you can install both with brew:
$ brew install bash coreutils
-
Checkout basher on
~/.basher
$ git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/basherpm/basher.git ~/.basher
-
Initialize basher in your shell initialization
export PATH="$HOME/.basher/bin:$PATH" eval "$(basher init - bash)" # replace `bash` with `zsh` if you use zsh
Fish: Use the following commands instead:
if test -d ~/.basher set basher ~/.basher/bin end set -gx PATH $basher $PATH status --is-interactive; and . (basher init - fish|psub)
Go to the directory where you cloned basher and pull the latest changes:
$ cd ~/.basher
$ git pull
$ basher install sstephenson/bats
This will install bats from https://github.com/sstephenson/bats and add bin/bats
to the PATH.
$ basher install bitbucket.org/user/repo_name
This will install repo_name
from https://bitbucket.org/user/repo_name
If you want to do local development on installed packages and you have ssh
access to the site, use --ssh
to override the protocol:
$ basher install --ssh juanibiapina/gg
If you develop a package locally and want to try it through basher,
use the link
command:
$ basher link directory my_namespace/my_package
The link
command will install the dependencies of the local package.
You can prevent that with the --no-deps
option:
$ basher link --no-deps directory my_namespace/my_package
Basher provides an include
function that allows sourcing files into the
current shell. After installing a package, you can run:
include username/repo lib/file.sh
This will source a file lib/file.sh
under the package username/repo
.
basher commands
- List commandsbasher help <command>
- Display help for a commandbasher uninstall <package>
- Uninstall a packagebasher list
- List installed packagesbasher outdated
- List packages which are not in the latest versionbasher upgrade <package>
- Upgrade a package to the latest version
To change the behavior of basher, you can set the following variables either globally or before each command:
- If
$XDG_DATA_HOME/basher
is a directory, then$BASHER_ROOT
will be set to$XDG_DATA_HOME/basher
instead of the usual$HOME/.basher
. If$XDG_DATA_HOME
is not set or is empty, then it defaults to~/.local/share
. BASHER_FULL_CLONE=true
- Clones the full repo history instead of only the last commit (useful for package development)BASHER_PREFIX
- set the installation and package checkout prefix (default is$BASHER_ROOT/cellar
). Setting this to/usr/local
, for example, will install binaries to/usr/local/bin
, manpages to/usr/local/man
, completions to/usr/local/completions
, and clone packages to/usr/local/packages
. This allows you to manage "global packages", distinct from individual user packages.
Packages are simply repos (username/repo). You may also specify a site (site/username/repo).
Any files inside a bin directory are added to the path. If there is no bin directory, any executable files in the package root are added to the path.
Any manpages (files ended in \.[0-9]
) inside a man
directory are added
to the manpath.
Optionally, a repo might contain a package.sh
file which specifies binaries,
dependencies and completions in the following format:
BINS=folder/file1:folder/file2.sh
DEPS=user1/repo1:user2/repo2
BASH_COMPLETIONS=completions/package
ZSH_COMPLETIONS=completions/_package
BINS specified in this fashion have higher precedence then the inference rules above.
A list of working packages can be found on https://www.basher.it/. There you can also find a badge if you want to include it in your readme: