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Re: dirstack history: loving zsh, crashing zsh...




Hi Francisco:

I wrote a cheezy little function that lets me do this:
I type cd?, and it lists the 20 last visited directories. Then if I type cd10, it goes to the one listed on line 10.

This is the command-line version of a shell-gui experiment for OS X that Wataru Kagawa and I have been fiddling with, but what you see below works on any platform. I wanted a shared directory stack for all terminal sessions.

Example:

% cd?
1 /Users/wgscott
2 /sw/share/xtal/ccp4-6.0/examples/unix/runnable
3 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0/src
4 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0/src/sfcheck_
5 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0
6 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0
7 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0/examples/unix
8 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0/examples/unix/runnable
9 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6/gfortran_appleC-ccp4-6.0/ccp4-6.0/bin
10 /Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6
11 /sw/fink/dists/unstable/main/finkinfo/shells
12 /Users/wgscott/Xray/mpr_feb24_2006/mpr3/wgs_process
13 /Users/wgscott/Xray/mpr_feb24_2006/mpr3
14 /Users/wgscott/Xray/mpr_feb24_2006
15 /Users/wgscott/Xray
16 /sw/fink/dists/unstable/main/finkinfo/sci
17 /Users/wgscott/Library/sb/Mail
18 /Users/wgscott/Library/sb
19 /sw/src/fink.build/ccp4-gfortran-6.0-1002/ccp4-6.0/x-windows
20 /sw/src/fink.build/ccp4-gfortran-6.0-1002/ccp4-6.0/src

% cd10
/Users/wgscott/src/ccp4-6
%

More info here:

http://www.chemistry.ucsc.edu/~wgscott/mystuff/gdirs.html



On Thu, 2 Mar 2006, Francisco Borges wrote:

Hello!

Having to navigate through lot's of nasty dir names, I googled for "zsh
dirstack history", found some guy using ruby to do it (!) hello?! and a
old email from zsh-users [1] that showed a simple way to do it
[1]: <http://www.zsh.org/mla/users/1999/msg00629.html>

I changed a few things, and ended with

if [[ -f ~/.zdirs ]] && [[ ${#dirstack[*]} -eq 0 ]]; then
   dirstack=( $(< ~/.zdirs) )
   popd > /dev/null
fi
precmd() {
   dirs -l >! ~/.zdirs # added -l
}

So far so good. Except that I didn't want to change automatically to the
last dir, and zsh's popd didn't seem to allow a way out. So I tried

% typeset -U dirstack

and the shell crashed. (I kid you not!)

This will not happen all the time or with any array. But it does happen
(and I can show you how!), all you need is bunch of identical items on
the top of the dirstack (which you'll get if turn that popd off for a
while).

~ % zsh -f
loki% echo $ZSH_VERSION
4.3.1
loki% dirstack=( $(< ~/.zdirs) )
loki% dirs -vp
0       ~
1       ~
2       ~
3       ~
4       ~
5       ~
6       ~/Desktop
7       /home
8       ~/sys/Firefox/firefox
9       ~/sys/Firefox
10      ~/roskva/outros/images
11      ~/roskva/outros/images/o
12      ~/outros/imagens
13      ~/outros/agenda
14      ~/thesis/EXP/newpar
15      ~/thesis/EXP
loki% typeset -U dirstack
zsh: segmentation fault  zsh -f

Sometimes the shell does not crash (for instance if there aren't a lot
of repeated items in the beginning) and sometimes it will just say:
"free(): invalid pointer 0xb7fdf388!"

[...]

OR you guys are now going to say: "Don't you know you're not supposed to
use typeset with dirstack!!"

Cheers!
Francisco.




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