# Antigen Antigen is a small set of functions that help you easily manage your shell (zsh) plugins, called bundles. The concept is pretty much the same as bundles in a typical vim+pathogen setup. Antigen is to zsh, what [Vundle][] is to vim. Please note that this is a very new project and can be considered beta at best. That said, I am using antigen full time now on my work machine. Note: Please read the commit comments of the changesets when you pull a new version of antigen. ## Show off > Enough talk. Let's fight! > -- Po, Kung-fu Panda. You're going to experience antigen right in your open shell. No `.zshrc` tweaking and reading the rest of this documentation. Kinda like an ice-cream sample, if you will. Get and load antigen. curl https://raw.github.com/zsh-users/antigen/master/antigen.zsh > antigen.zsh source antigen.zsh There. You now have all the antigen goodies. Let's try install some plugins. How about some color to start with. Get the [syntax highlighting plugin][] by running antigen-bundle zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting Now let it do its thing and once you're back at your prompt, try and type a command. See that? Colors! So, you do git? ruby? git and ruby? There are lots of awesome plugins over at oh-my-zsh. Treat yourself to some. antigen-bundle robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh plugins/ruby # Or for the lazy, antigen-bundle git There are lots of plugins out there in the wild and people are writing zsh utilities as small scripts all the time. Antigen is compatible with all of them. The plugins and scripts don't need any special handling to be compatible with antigen. Another example, [kennethreitz's autoenv][autoenv]. Just a bundle command away. antigen-bundle kennethreitz/autoenv And boom! you have all the autoenv goodness. Just remember how you used to do these before antigen, clone it, modify your bashrc to source it, load a new terminal, all just to test it out. Duh! A subtle aspect of this is that you can tell antigen to grab just about anything from anyone's `dotfiles` repo, as long as it is in a directory under any repo on github. And themes? How would you like a fancy new prompt for yourself? antigen-theme funky No? Not your taste? There are many themes available to you, check out the oh-my-zsh's [page on themes][]. (You can currently only install themes from robbyrussell's, i.e., the canonical oh-my-zsh repo). Note: Many of those plugins and especially themes, assume you have the core library of oh-my-zsh loaded. So, if you want to experiment further, issue a antigen-lib and continue until you're tired. At which point you can come back to this page ;) ## Usage So, now that you're here, I suppose you are convinced and want antigen running your shell all the time. Sweet. Let's do it. First, clone this repo, probably as a submodule if you have your dotfiles in a git repo, git clone https://github.com/zsh-users/antigen.git The usage should be very familiar to you if you use Vundle. A typical `.zshrc` might look like this source /path-to-antigen-clone/antigen.zsh # Load the oh-my-zsh's library. antigen-lib # Bundles from the default repo (robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh). antigen-bundle git antigen-bundle heroku antigen-bundle pip antigen-bundle lein antigen-bundle command-not-found # Syntax highlighting bundle. antigen-bundle zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting # Load the theme. antigen-theme robbyrussell # Tell antigen that you're done. antigen-apply Open your zsh with this zshrc and you should see all the bundles you defined here, getting installed. Once its done, you are ready to roll. The complete syntax for the `antigen-bundle` command is discussed further down on this page. ## Motivation If you use zsh and [oh-my-zsh][], you know that having many different plugins that are developed by many different authors in a single (sub)repo is not very easy to maintain. There are some really fantastic plugins and utilities in oh-my-zsh, but having them all in a single repo doesn't really scale well. And I admire robbyrussell's efforts for reviewing and merging the gigantic number of pull requests the project gets. We need a better way of plugin management. This was discussed on [a][1] [few][2] [issues][3], but it doesn't look like there was any progress made. So, I'm trying to start this off with antigen, hoping to better this situation. Please note that I'm by no means a zsh or any shell script expert (far from it). [1]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/issues/465 [2]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/issues/377 [3]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/issues/1014 Inspired by vundle, antigen can pull oh-my-zsh style plugins from various github repositories. You are not limited to use plugins from the oh-my-zsh repository only and you don't need to maintain your own fork and pull from upstream every now and then. I actually encourage you to grab plugins and scripts from various sources, straight from the authors, before they even submit it to oh-my-zsh as a pull request. Antigen also lets you switch the prompt theme with one command, just like that bundle-theme candy and your prompt is changed, just for this session of course (unless you put this line in your `.zshrc`). ## Commands The following are the commands provided by antigen. Note that the `-` in the following commands can be replaced with a space. You can write `antigen-bundle ...` as `antigen bundle ...` and get away with it. For more details see the help on `antigen` command further down in this section. ### antigen-bundle This command tells antigen to install (if not already installed) and load the given plugin. The simplest usage follows the following syntax. antigen-bundle This will install and load the `plugins/` directory from [robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh][oh-my-zsh] (can be changed by setting `ANTIGEN_DEFAULT_REPO_URL`). However, the above is just syntax sugar for the extended syntax of the `antigen-bundle` command. antigen-bundle [ []] where `` is the repository url and it defaults to [robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh][oh-my-zsh] repo (can be changed by setting `ANTIGEN_DEFAULT_REPO_URL` discussed further down). `` is the path under this repository which has the zsh plugin. This is typically the directory that contains a `*.plugin.zsh` file, but it could contain a completion file or just many `*.zsh` files to be sourced. `` defaults to `/`, which indicates the repository itself is a plugin. An example invocation would be # The following is the same as `antigen-bundle ant`. But for demonstration # purposes, we use the extended syntax here. antigen-bundle https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh.git plugins/ant This would install the ant plugin from robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh repo. Of course, github url's can be shortened. antigen-bundle robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh plugins/ant And since this repo is the default, even that isn't necessary. But we can't specify the `loc` without giving the first argument. For this and a few other reasons, `antigen-bundle` also supports a simple keyword argument syntax, using which we can rewrite the above as antigen-bundle --loc=plugins/ant Which picks up the default for the `url` argument, and uses the `loc` given to it. *Note* that you can mix and match positional and keyword arguments. But you can't have positional arguments after keyword arguments. antigen-bundle robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh --loc=plugins/ant And keyword arguments don't care about the order in which the arguments are specified. The following is perfectly valid. antigen-bundle --loc=plugins/ant --url=robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh You can also specify a local directory on your file system as a bundle. In this case, make sure the path you give is the absolute path (i.e., starts with a `/`). Relative paths are not supported. If the repo you gave is a local directory path, then it is not necessary that this path is a git repo. Please refer to the notes on `--no-local-clone` below. This command can also be used from your shell environment. This allows you to install plugins on the fly and try them out. Of course if you want a bundle to be available every time you open a shell, put it in your `.zshrc`. Other keyword-only arguments accepted: `--branch={git-branch-name}` — Specify the branch of the git repo to be used for this bundle (without the braces of course). The default is whatever branch the clone comes with, which is usually `master`. For example, antigen-bundle github-user/repo --branch=develop This will get the plugin as in the branch `develop`. Note that if you specify two plugins to be loaded from the same git repo, but different branches, then two separate clones of this repo will be maintained. This is a small implementation detail and shouldn't influence you in any way. `--no-local-clone` — This command can be useful if you are developing a plugin and already have a clone on your local file system. If this argument is not given, even if the given repo url is a local path, a clone is made in the `$ADOTDIR/repos`, and the plugin is loaded from that clone. But, if you give this argument, the plugin is sourced straight from the repo location, without creating a clone. For example, antigen-bundle /absolute/path/to/the/plugin --no-local-clone Note that if the repo url is *not* an absolute local path or a branch has been specified with the `--branch` option, this argument has no effect. That is, for this option to have any affect, the repo url must be an absolute local path and no `--branch` should be specified. Also, if the local path given as the url is not a git repo, then this argument is forced as it doesn't makes sense to *clone* something that's not a git repo. This property can be used to load any utility scripts you have in your dotfiles repo. For example, antigen-bundle $HOME/dotfiles/oh-my-zsh/custom In addition to the above discussed arguments, `antigen-bundle` also takes a `btype` keyword-only argument, that is used internally. You shouldn't be concerned with this argument, its only used internally and will probably go away in the future. It indicates whether the bundle is a theme or a simple plugin. ### antigen-bundles If you have a fair number of bundles, using the `antigen-bundle` command can look cumbersome. You can use the `antigen-bundles` command to *bulk* define bundles instead of individual calls to `antigen-bundle`. Usage is pretty straightforward. Just pipe the bundle specifications, just as you would give to the `antigen-bundle` command, one per line, into the `antigen-bundles` command. The easiest way to do this, is using the heredoc syntax. antigen-bundles < The `btype` field is an internal detail, that specifies if the bundle is a `plugin` or a `theme`. The final field is `true` or `false` reflecting whether there is a local clone for this bundle. ### antigen-cleanup Used to clean up the clones of repos which are not used by any plugins currently loaded. It takes no arguments. When run, it lists out the repo-clones that are available but are not used by any plugin *currently loaded*. This command, by default asks for confirmation before deleting the unused clones. If the `--force` argument is given, then this confirmation is not asked. It straight away deletes all the unused clones. This option makes this command usable in a non-interactive fashion. ### antigen-lib This is a shortcut to antigen-bundle --loc=lib So, it basically installs the oh-my-zsh's library as a bundle. Please note that this assumes that the `ANTIGEN_DEFAULT_REPO_URL` is set to the oh-my-zsh repo or a fork of that repo. If you want to specify the `url` too, then you can't use the `antigen-lib` short cut. You have to do that directly with the `antigen-bundle` command. This is present only for legacy reasons and *might* (or might not) be removed in the future. Use antigen-lib in your `.zshrc`, before any `antigen-bundle` declarations. It takes no arguments. ### antigen-theme Used for switching the prompt theme. Invoke it with the name of the theme you want to use. antigen-theme fox Currently, themes are pulled from robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh repo, but it will support getting themes from other repos as well in the future. You can use this command to change your theme on the fly in your shell. Go on, try out a few themes in your shell before you set it in your `.zshrc`. **Note**: Some themes use functions that are loaded by `antigen-lib`. So, to avoid any trouble, run `antigen-lib` if you haven't already before experimenting with themes. If you have `antigen-lib` in your `.zshrc`, you're covered. ### antigen-apply You have to add this command after defining all bundles you need, in your zshrc. The completions defined by your bundles will be loaded at this step. It is possible to load completions as and when a bundle is specified with the bundle command, in which case this command would not be necessary. But loading the completions is a time-consuming process, so if the completions were loaded at every call to `antigen-bundle`, your shell will start noticeably slow when you have a good number of bundle specifications. However, if you can suggest a way so that this would not be necessary, I am very interested in discussing it. Please open up an issue with your details. Thanks. ### antigen-help This exists so that there can be some help right in the command line. Currently it doesn't provide much help other than redirecting you to the project page for documentation. It is intended to provide more meaning and sub-command specific help in the future. I could use some help here as I'm not that good at writing documentation that looks good as output on the command line. ### antigen This is a parent command that mainly exists for convenience. This exists so the following two can be the same. antigen-list antigen list and antigen-help antigen help Because of this, we can create aliases like alias a=antigen alias an=antigen and run the antigen commands without making them look annoyingly long. a bundle ruby a theme candy a list And even... an update ## Configuration The following environment variables can be set to customize the behavior of antigen. Make sure you set them *before* source-ing `antigen.zsh`. `ANTIGEN_DEFAULT_REPO_URL` — This is the default repository url that is used for `bundle` commands. The default value is robbyrussell's oh-my-zsh repo, but you can set this to the fork url of your own fork. `ADOTDIR` — This directory is used to store all the repo clones, your bundles, themes, caches and everything else antigen requires to run smoothly. Defaults to `$HOME/.antigen`. **Note**: `ANTIGEN_REPO_CACHE` & `ANTIGEN_BUNDLE_DIR` — These variables were used previously but are now removed. Please use `ADOTDIR` instead, as mentioned above. ## Running the tests All the tests are in the `tests` folder and are run using the [cram][] test system. Once you have cram installed, you can run the tests as make or make tests If you are making a feature addition, I'd really appreciate if you can add a test for your feature. Even if you can add a test for an existing feature, that would be great as the tests are currently seriously lagging behind the full functionality of antigen. ## Notes on writing plugins If you are just going to write a single `.sh` file with the goodness you want to create, just forget about this and go do that. Antigen will work just fine with such a plugin. If you want to know how antigen loads the plugins, do continue. Firstly, antigen looks for a `*.plugin.zsh` file in the plugin directory. If present, it will source *only* this script. Nothing else is sourced. Otherwise, it looks for `*.zsh` files and if there are any, *all* of them are sourced. The order in which they are sourced is not currently defined. Please don't rely on this order. Nothing else is sourced after all the `*.zsh` scripts. If no `*.zsh` files are present, it finally looks for any `*.sh` files and sources *all* of them. Again, the order in which they are sourced in not currently defined. No matter which (or none) of the above happen to be sourced, this plugin directory is added to the zsh's function path (`$fpath`) so that any completions in it are loaded. One exception to this rule is that if this plugin is a theme. In which case the theme script is just sourced and nothing else is done. Not even adding to `$fpath`. ## Meta ### Helping out Antigen is licensed with the [MIT License][license]. To contribute, just fork, make changes and send a pull request. If its a rather long/complicated change, please consider opening an [issue][] first so we can discuss it out. ### Feedback please Any comments/suggestions/feedback welcome. Please join the discussion on the [reddit page][] of this project. Also, follow me on twitter, [@sharat87][twitter]. [Vundle]: https://github.com/gmarik/vundle [page on themes]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/wiki/Themes [syntax highlighting plugin]: https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-syntax-highlighting [autoenv]: https://github.com/kennethreitz/autoenv [oh-my-zsh]: https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh [cram]: https://bitheap.org/cram/ [issue]: https://github.com/zsh-users/antigen/issues [license]: http://mit.sharats.me [reddit page]: http://www.reddit.com/r/commandline/comments/u4f26/antigen_a_plugin_manager_for_zsh_shell/ [twitter]: http://twitter.com/sharat87