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ZSH-z

MIT License ZSH version 4.3.11 and higher GitHub stars

ZSH-z demo

ZSH-z is a command line tool that allows you to jump quickly to directories that you have visited frequently in the past, or recently -- but most often a combination of the two (a concept known as "frecency"). It works by keeping track of when you go to directories and how much time you spend in them. It is then in the position to guess where you want to go when you type a partial string, e.g. z src might take you to ~/src/zsh. z zsh might also get you there, and z c/z might prove to be even more specific -- it all depends on your habits and how much time you have been using ZSH-z to build up a database. After using ZSH-z for a little while, you will get to where you want to be by typing considerably less than you would need if you were using cd.

ZSH-z is a native ZSH port of rupa/z, a tool written for bash and ZSH that uses embedded awk scripts to do the heavy lifting. It has been quite possibly my most used command line tool for a couple of years. I decided to translate it, awk parts and all, into pure ZSH script, to see if by eliminating calls to external tools (awk, sort, date, sed, mv, rm, and chown) and reducing forking through subshells I could make it faster. Initial testing has been satisfying: ZSH-z is highly responsive, and the main database maintenance routine (triggered by precmd_functions) is considerably more efficient on Linux, BSD, and Solaris installations, and even more so on MSYS2 and Cygwin, which are notoriously slow at forking.

ZSH-z is a drop-in replacement for rupa/z and will, by default, use the same database (~/.z), so you can go on using rupa/z if you launch bash. That said, there are a few improvements (see below), including the new default behavior of sorting your tab completions by frecency rather than just letting ZSH sort the raw results alphabetically (a behavior which can be restored if you like it -- see below).

Table of Contents

Installation

General observations

This script can be installed simply by downloading it and sourcing it from your .zshrc:

source /path/to/zsh-z.plugin.zsh

For tab completion to work, you will want to have loaded compinit. The frameworks handle this themselves. If you are not using a framework, put

autoload -U compinit && compinit

in your .zshrc somewhere below where you source zsh-z.plugin.zsh.

If you add

zstyle ':completion:*' menu select

to your .zshrc, your completion menus will look very nice. This zstyle invocation should work with any of the frameworks below as well.

For antigen users

Add the line

antigen bundle agkozak/zsh-z

to your .zshrc, somewhere above the line that says antigen apply.

For oh-my-zsh users

Execute the following command:

git clone https://github.com/agkozak/zsh-z $ZSH_CUSTOM/plugins/zsh-z

and add zsh-z to the line of your .zshrc that specifies plugins=(), e.g. plugins=( git zsh-z ).

For prezto users

Execute the following command:

git clone https://github.com/agkozak/zsh-z.git ~/.zprezto-contrib/zsh-z

Then edit your ~/.zpreztorc file. Make sure the line that says

zstyle ':prezto:load' pmodule-dirs $HOME/.zprezto-contrib

is uncommented. Then find the section that specifies which modules are to be loaded; it should look something like this:

zstyle ':prezto:load' pmodule \
    'environment' \
    'terminal' \
    'editor' \
    'history' \
    'directory' \
    'spectrum' \
    'utility' \
    'completion' \
    'prompt'

Add a backslash to the end of the last line add 'zsh-z' to the list, e.g.

zstyle ':prezto:load' pmodule \
    'environment' \
    'terminal' \
    'editor' \
    'history' \
    'directory' \
    'spectrum' \
    'utility' \
    'completion' \
    'prompt' \
    'zsh-z'

Then relaunch zsh.

For zgen users

Add the line

zgen load agkozak/zsh-z

somewhere above the line that says zgen save. Then run

zgen reset
zsh

to refresh your init script.

For Zinit (formerly zplugin) users

Add the line

zinit load agkozak/zsh-z

to your .zshrc.

zsh-z supports zinit's unload feature; just run zinit unload agkozak/zshz to restore the shell to its state before zsh-z was loaded.

For zplug users

Add the line

zplug "agkozak/zsh-z"

somewhere above the line that says zplug load. Then run

zplug install
zplug load

to install zsh-z.

Command Line Options

  • -c Only match subdirectories of the current directory
  • -e Echo the best match without going to it
  • -h Display help
  • -l List all matches without going to them
  • -r Match by rank (i.e. how much time you spend in directories)
  • -t Time -- match by how recently you have been to directories
  • -x Remove the current directory from the database

Settings

ZSH-z has environment variables (they all begin with ZSHZ_) that change its behavior if you set them; you can also keep your old ones if you have been using rupa/z (they begin with _Z_).

  • ZSHZ_CMD changes the command name (default: z)
  • ZSHZ_COMPLETION can be 'frecent' (default) or 'legacy', depending on whether you want your completion results sorted according to frecency or simply sorted alphabetically
  • ZSHZ_DATA changes the database file (default: ~/.z)
  • ZSHZ_EXCLUDE_DIRS is an array of directories to keep out of the database (default: empty)
  • ZSHZ_MAX_SCORE is the maximum combined score the database entries can have before they begin to age and potentially drop out of the database (default: 9000)
  • ZSHZ_NO_RESOLVE_SYMLINKS prevents symlink resolution (default: 0)
  • ZSHZ_OWNER allows usage when in sudo -s mode (default: empty)

Improvements and Fixes

  • z -x works, with the help of chpwd_functions.
  • ZSH-z works on Solaris.
  • ZSH-z uses the "new" zshcompsys completion system instead of the old compctl one.
  • There is no error message when the database file has not yet been created.
  • There is support for special characters (e.g. [) in directory names.
  • If z -l only returns one match, a common root is not printed.
  • Exit status codes increasingly make sense.
  • Completions work with options -c, -r, and -t.

Known Bugs

  • It is possible to run a completion on a string with spaces in it, e.g. z us bi<TAB> might take you to /usr/local/bin. This works, but as things stand, after the completion the command line reads z us /usr/local/bin. I am working on eliminating this glitch.

About

Jump quickly to directories that you have visited "frecently." A native ZSH port of z.sh.

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