# Support the usual (i.e., bash compatible) `umask` UI. This reports or modifies the magic global # `umask` variable which is monitored by the fish process. # This table is indexed by the base umask value to be modified. Each digit represents the new umask # value when the permissions to add are applied to the base umask value. set __fish_umask_add_table 0101010 2002200 2103210 4440000 4541010 6442200 6543210 function __fish_umask_add set -l mask_digit $argv[1] set -l to_add $argv[2] set -l mask_table 0000000 if test $mask_digit -gt 0 set mask_table $__fish_umask_add_table[$mask_digit] end set -l new_vals (string split '' $mask_table) echo $new_vals[$to_add] end # This table is indexed by the base umask value to be modified. Each digit represents the new umask # value when the permissions to remove are applied to the base umask value. set __fish_umask_remove_table 1335577 3236767 3337777 5674567 5775577 7676767 7777777 function __fish_umask_remove set -l mask_digit $argv[1] set -l to_remove $argv[2] set -l mask_table 1234567 if test $mask_digit -gt 0 set mask_table $__fish_umask_remove_table[$mask_digit] end set -l new_vals (string split '' $mask_table) echo $new_vals[$to_remove] end # This returns the mask corresponding to allowing the permissions to allow. In other words it # returns the inverse of the mask passed in. set __fish_umask_set_table 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 function __fish_umask_set set -l to_set $argv[1] if test $to_set -eq 0 echo 7 return end echo $__fish_umask_set_table[$to_set] end # Given a umask string, possibly in symbolic mode, return an octal value with leading zeros. # This function expects to be called with a single value. function __fish_umask_parse # Test if already a valid octal mask. If so pad it with zeros and return it. # Note that umask values are always base 8 so they don't require a leading zero. if string match -qr '^0?[0-7]{1,3}$' -- $argv string sub -s -4 0000$argv return 0 end # Test if argument is a valid symbolic mask. Note that the basic pattern allows one illegal # pattern: who and perms without a mode such as "urw". We test for that below after using the # pattern to split the rights then testing for that invalid combination. set -l basic_pattern '([ugoa]*)([=+-]?)([rwx]*)' if not string match -qr "^$basic_pattern(,$basic_pattern)*\$" -- $argv printf (_ "%s: Invalid mask '%s'\n") umask $argv >&2 return 1 end # Split umask into individual digits. We erase the first one because it should always be zero. set -l res (string split '' $umask) set -e res[1] for rights in (string split , $argv) set -l match (string match -r "^$basic_pattern\$" $rights) set -l scope $match[2] set -l mode $match[3] set -l perms $match[4] if test -n "$scope" -a -z "$mode" printf (_ "%s: Invalid mask '%s'\n") umask $argv >&2 return 1 end if test -z "$scope" set scope a end if test -z "$mode" set mode = end set -l scopes_to_modify string match -q '*u*' $scope and set scopes_to_modify 1 string match -q '*g*' $scope and set -a scopes_to_modify 2 string match -q '*o*' $scope and set -a scopes_to_modify 3 string match -q '*a*' $scope and set scopes_to_modify 1 2 3 set -l val 0 if string match -q '*r*' $perms set val 4 end if string match -q '*w*' $perms set val (math $val + 2) end if string match -q '*x*' $perms set val (math $val + 1) end for j in $scopes_to_modify switch $mode case '=' set res[$j] (__fish_umask_set $val) case '+' set res[$j] (__fish_umask_add $res[$j] $val) case - set res[$j] (__fish_umask_remove $res[$j] $val) end end end echo 0$res[1]$res[2]$res[3] return 0 end function __fish_umask_print_symbolic set -l val set -l res "" set -l letter a u g o for i in 2 3 4 set res $res,$letter[$i]= set val (echo $umask|cut -c $i) if contains $val 0 1 2 3 set res {$res}r end if contains $val 0 1 4 5 set res {$res}w end if contains $val 0 2 4 6 set res {$res}x end end echo (string split -m 1 '' -- $res)[2] end function umask --description "Set default file permission mask" set -l options h/help p/as-command S/symbolic argparse -n umask $options -- $argv or return if set -q _flag_help __fish_print_help umask return 0 end switch (count $argv) case 0 set -q umask or set -g umask 113 if set -q _flag_as_command echo umask $umask else if set -q _flag_symbolic __fish_umask_print_symbolic $umask else echo $umask end case 1 if set -l parsed (__fish_umask_parse $argv) set -g umask $parsed return 0 end return 1 case '*' printf (_ '%s: Too many arguments\n') umask >&2 return 1 end end