function __fish_complete_proc --description 'Complete by list of running processes' # Our function runs ps, followed by a massive list of commands passed to sed set -l ps_cmd set -l sed_cmds if test (uname) = Linux # comm and ucomm return a truncated name, so parse it from the command line field, # which means we have to trim off the arguments. # Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to escape spaces - so we can't distinguish # between the command name, and the first argument. Still, processes with spaces # in the name seem more common on OS X than on Linux, so prefer to parse out the # command line rather than using the stat data. # If the command line is unavailable, you get the stat data in brackets - so # parse out brackets too. set ps_opt -A -o command # Erase everything after the first space set -a sed_cmds 's/ .*//' # Erases weird stuff Linux gives like kworker/0:0 set -a sed_cmds 's|/[0-9]:[0-9]]$||g' # Retain the last path component only set -a sed_cmds 's|.*/||g' # Strip off square brackets. Cute, huh? set -a sed_cmds 's/[][]//g' # Erase things that are just numbers set -a sed_cmds 's/^[0-9]*$//' else # OS X, BSD. Preserve leading spaces. set ps_opt axc -o comm # Delete parenthesized (zombie) processes set -a sed_cmds '/(.*)/d' end # Append sed command to delete first line (the header) set -a sed_cmds '1d' # Append sed commands to delete leading dashes and trailing spaces # In principle, commands may have trailing spaces, but ps emits space padding on OS X set -a sed_cmds 's/^-//' 's/ *$//' # Run ps, pipe it through our massive set of sed commands, then sort and unique ps $ps_opt | sed '-e '$sed_cmds | sort -u end