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A ZSH plugin that provides functions which integrate & bind fuzzy finder capabilities through fzf to certain commands such as ls, man, find and more.

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fzf-tools.zsh

FZF-Tools is a Zsh plugin aimed to enhance your command-line workflow by providing interactive selection capabilities through fzf, allowing you to quickly find files, search & run commands from history, run scripts of many supported types, browse git commits, and more.

The fzf-tools plugin provides functions, key-bindings, and aliases that aim to integrate fuzzy finder capabilities into the command line as a default output for certain commands such as man, ls, find, printenv, alias and others. My aim was to make it so that fzf would work without having to manually pipe commands through it, write aliases or explicitly call functions. In other words I wanted to avoid doing the following each time:

man -k . | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq | fzf | xargs -r man
ls |  --color=auto | fzf
find | fzf
printenv | fzf
alias | fzf
# or...
alias l="ls --color=auto | fzf"
alias m="man -k . | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq | fzf | xargs -r man"

There's nothing wrong with doing any of these, but I personally feel that fzf makes a great default feature for certain commands such as ls or man. It took a lot of trial and error but I finally got everything working smoothly and functioning well. If you have suggestions, ideas etc. consult the Contacts section.

To download and install fzf-tools choose an install method and follow the corresponding steps. Once fininshed jump to the Usage section.

  1. Download and place the zsh-toggles folder in a location of your choosing.
  2. Next source the script as shown in the Usage section.
  1. Open your terminal and navigate to the directory where you want to clone the repository:
cd where/I/want/to/install
  1. Next run the following command to clone the repository to the chosen location:
git clone https://github.com/happycod3r/fzf-tools.git
  1. Pick a directory to download it to:
cd where/I/want/
  1. Paste the following line into your terminal and press the Enter (^M) key:
curl https://github.com/happycod3r/fzf-tools.git

To use fzf-tools with oh-my-zsh follow these 2 steps:

  1. Install fzf: You need to install fzf on your system. You can find installation instructions for your operating system in the fzf GitHub repository: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf
  2. Simply move the fzf-tools folder to the ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/plugins directory and then add fzf-tools to the plugins array in your ~/.zshrc file.
plugins=(fzf-tools ...)

To use fzf-tools without a plugin manager like oh-my-zsh follow these steps:

  1. Install fzf: You need to install fzf on your system. You can find installation instructions for your operating system in the fzf GitHub repository: https://github.com/junegunn/fzf
  2. Next put the fzf-tools folder in a place of your choosing then source the fzf-tools.zsh file in your ~/.zshrc file.
source a/dir/of/your/choosing/fzf-tools.zsh

Defines the 'accept-line' widget function.

Please note that the fzf-command-widget function modifies the behavior of the Enter key for specific commands, so it may not work as expected in all scenarios! Also, if you decide to add to this or change anything, be cautious when modifying the behavior of core commands like ls and man!

function  fzf-command-widget() {
	local  full_command=$BUFFER
	case  "$full_command"  in
		ls*)
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
		man*)
			BUFFER="fzf-man $full_command"
		;;
		printenv* | env*)
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
		set)
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
		grep*)
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf -i --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
		find*)	
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf -i --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
		'ps aux')
			BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
				--preview='echo {}' \
				--preview-window down:10% \
				--layout='reverse-list' \
				--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
		;;
	esac
	zle  accept-line
	# Uncomment if the long command left over on the previous prompt bothers you.
	# $(clear)
}

The fzf-command-widget function is designed to handle the behavior when the enter key is pressed. It takes the entire command line entered by the user and stores it in a variable called $full_command. The case statement then checks for different commands and prefixes the existing command with the required options, arguments, and flags, before piping it through fzf. For example, when the user enters ls -la /path/to/directory and presses Enter(^M), the ls command with options and arguments will be executed as ls --color=auto -la /path/to/directory | fzf... Similarly, other commands like ls, man, printenv (including env as an alternative), set, grep, find and ps aux will be processed with their respective options, arguments, and flags. Please keep in mind that this approach will pass the entire command line through fzf, including options, arguments, and flags. However, it does not perform in-depth parsing or validation of the command structure, so the behavior and correctness of the resulting command are dependent on the proper usage of options and arguments. Due to this, entering invalid commands may have unexpected results. If you're not sure about a command's options and flags you can always consult the man pages.

  • After the command line is stored in $full_command the case statement checks if the command you entered is either ls, man, printenv, env, grep, find, set or ps aux.
  • For ls*, the BUFFER is modified to the following command, which pipes the output of ls through fzf.
	BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window right:50% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
  • For man, the BUFFER is modified to fzf_man $full_command which is called to pipe the output through fzf giving you a list of the manuals to choose from.
	BUFFER="fzf-man $full_command"
  • For printenv* | env*, the BUFFER is set to the following command, which pipes the output of printenv | env through fzf.
	BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
  • For grep*, the BUFFER is set to the following command, which sets up grep to search and pipe the output through fzf.
	BUFFER="$full_command | fzf -i --multi --cycle --no-sort \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
  • For find*, the BUFFER is set to the following command, which executesfind* and pipes the output through fzf.
	BUFFER="$full_command | fzf -i --multi --cycle --no-sort \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
  • For ps aux the BUFFER is set to the following command, which executes ps aux* and pipes the output through fzf.
	BUFFER="$full_command | fzf --multi --cycle --no-sort \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333"
  • The zle accept-line command accepts the modified command line and executes it.

Next we have to bind the accept-line widget function to the Enter key:

zle -N fzf-command-widget
bindkey '^M' fzf-command-widget
  • The zle -N fzf-command-widget line creates a new zsh widget from the fzf_command_widget function.
  • The bindkey '^M' fzf-command-widget line binds the new widget to the Enter key (^M).

My original approach for detecting specific commands like ls and man involved using the precmd hook which is a function defined by zsh that gets invoked before each prompt, so essentially every time the user presses the Enter key (^M), but this wasn't straight forward enough. I found myself tinkering with code more than progressing, so I decided to just create a widget and bind it to the Enter key (^M)


The fzf-man function is called by the fzf-command-widget function when it detects that the user has entered the mancommand and not meant to be called externally.

function  fzf-man() {
	local  selected_command
	selected_command=$(
		man  -k . \
		|  awk '{print $1}' \
		|  sort  \
		|  uniq  \
		|  fzf  --multi  --cycle  \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10%
	)
	if [[ -n  "$selected_command" ]]; then
		man  "$selected_command"  \
			|  fzf  --multi  --cycle  --tac  --no-sort  \
				--preview='echo {}'  \
				--preview-window  down:10%  \
				--layout='reverse-list'  \
				--color  bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333
	fi
}
  • If the command retrieved in fzf-command-widget is man, the fzf-man function is called.
  • The fzf-man function runs the man -k . command to retrieve available manual pages, then extracts the first column (command names) using awk, removes duplicates using sort and uniq, and finally pipes the output through fzf.
  • If a command is selected from fzf, it is passed to the man command and piped through fzf again to display the corresponding manual page through fuzzy finder for easy searching through the text.
  • The --tac flag on the second pipe through to fzf is required to display sentences in a legible manner. Without the --tac all of the man pages text is displayed backwards. The only downside to --tac is that the man pages will be displayed bottom up, so you will start at the bottom and scroll up to reach the beginning. Removing --tac fixes this, but then reverses the text as previously mentioned. This behavior is because of fzf. To me the benefits of fzf outweigh the slight nuisance of having to start at the bottom though.
  • Adding --layout='reverse-list' helps with the scrolling. If a man page is selected the prompt will be displayed at the bottom and this also allows scrolling in a more familiar manner, from top to bottom as well.

Allows searching for and executing a command from your command history interactively using fzf.

function  fzf-run-cmd-from-history() {
	local  selected_command
	selected_command=$(
		history  \
		|  awk '{$1=""; print $0}' \
		|  awk '!x[$0]++' \
		|  fzf  --cycle  --tac +s --no-sort  \
			--preview 'echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333 \
	)
	if [[ -n  "$selected_command" ]]; then
		eval  "$selected_command"
	fi
}

alias  fzhist='fzf-run-cmd-from-history'
  • The history command gets the command history of the current session.
  • The first awk command removes the line numbers from the history output in order to eval the command down the line.
  • The second awk command removes duplicate lines from the output.
  • The output is then piped to fzf using the +s flag to enable the multi-select feature.
  • The --cycle flag enables you to easily cycle back to beginning of your history from the end or vice versa.
  • The --no-sort flag is also enabled to avoid sorting the results. This way you see your history in the correct order with the last command listed first.
  • The --preview option is used to show a preview of the selected command using the echo command. You can replace 'echo {} with any other command you want to preview instead.
  • The --preview-window option sets the size and position of the preview window. It's at 10% to leave just enough room to display the currently selected command.
  • The selected command is then stored in the selected_command variable.
  • Finally it checks if a command is selected (i.e., the selected_command variable is not empty), and if so it is evaluated using eval.

Note: *Choosing a previous cd command from your history may fail to execute as the fzf-run-command-from-hisory function doesn't take into account your current position in the directory stack, so if you aren't in the same position that you were originally in when executing the cd some-dir command from your history it will fail giving you the following error: cd: no such file or directory: some-dir


This command will allow you to search for a script/s within the desired directory and its subdirectories, allowing you to interactively select and execute the desired script/s with their respective interpreters. When more than one script is selected they are all executed consecutively one after the other.

function fzf-exec-scripts() {
	local directory="$1"
	shift
	local file_exts=("$@")

	if [[ -z "$directory" || "${#file_exts[@]}" -eq 0 ]]; then
	    echo "Usage: fzf-exec-scripts <directory> <file_extension1> [<file_extension2> ...]"
	    return 1
	fi

	local selected_scripts=()
	local selected_script
	selected_script=$(find "$directory" -type f \( -name "*.${file_exts[1]}" $(printf -- "-o -name '*.%s' " "${file_exts[@]:1}") \) \
		| fzf --multi -m --cycle --tac +s  \
				--preview='echo {}'  \
				--preview-window  down:10%  \
				--layout='reverse-list'  \
				--color  bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333) && selected_scripts=("${(f)selected_script}")

	if [[ "${#selected_scripts[@]}" -eq 0 ]]; then
	    echo "No scripts selected."
	    return
	fi

	for script in "${selected_scripts[@]}"; do
	    chmod +x "$script"
	    case "$script" in
		    *.sh)
				bash  "$script"
			;;
			*.zsh)
				zsh  "$script"
			;; 
		    *.js)
		        node "$script"
	        ;;
		    *.py)
			    python "$script"
	        ;;
	        *.rb)
		        ruby "$script"
	        ;;
	        *.rs)
				filename=$(basename "${directory}/${script}")
				rustc  "$script"
				./$filename
			;;
		    *)	
		        echo "Unsupported file extension: $script"
		        return 1
	        ;;
	    esac
	done
}

alias fzscripts='fzf-exec-scripts'
  • The fzf-exec-scripts function accepts a directory as the first parameter and multiple file extensions as subsequent parameters. The shift command is used to remove the first parameter ($1) from the list, so that the remaining parameters represent the file extensions.
  • The function checks if both the directory and file extensions are provided. If either of them is missing, it displays a usage message and returns with an 'unsupported file extension' error.
  • The find command is then used to search for files with the specified file extensions in the specified directory. The -name option in find is used with logical OR (-o) to match files with any of the specified extensions.
  • The resulting file paths are then piped through fzf for interactive selection.
  • After selecting the scripts with fzf and storing them in the $selected_scripts array, we check if any scripts were selected ("${#selected_scripts[@]}" -eq 0). If no scripts were selected, we display a message and return.
  • If one or more scripts were selected, we iterate over the $selected_scripts array and execute each script individually. The execute permission is set on each script before executing it.
  • The case statement determines the file extension of each script and executes it with the corresponding interpreter.
  • The default case of the the case statement lets the user know that the interpreter they need to run the selected script isn't installed and/or where to get it.

To use fzf-exec-scripts supply it with the desired directory of your script/s and file extensions as parameters. When providing a file extension/s be sure to leave out the prepended '.' on the extension/s as you only need the extension name by it self (e.g. .sh -> sh | | .js -> js) . For example:

fzf-exec-scripts /path/to/scripts/ sh js py rb 

Interactively search for files on a given path.

function  fzf-search-files-on-path() {
	local  _path="$1"
	find  tree  "$_path"  -type  f  \
		|  fzf  -i --multim  --cycle  \
			--preview='echo {}'  \
			--preview-window  down:10%  \
			--color  bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333
}

alias  fzfop='fzf-search-files-on-path'
  • First the path is stored in the local $_path variable.
  • The find command is then used to search the given path for all things of type file and pipes the results through fzf.

Select a commit from git log using fzf.

function  fzf-git-log() {
	local  selected_commit
	selected_commit=$(\
		git log --oneline  |  fzf  --multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333 \
	) && git  show  "$selected_commit"
}

alias fzgl='fzf-git-log'
  • With this function, you can select a commit from the git log interactively.
  • It executes git log --oneline to retrieve a concise log of commits, and pipes the output through fzf.
  • Once you choose a commit, it displays the full details of that commit using git show.

Search for patterns in files using ag (The Silver Searcher) and fzf.

function  fzf-ag() {
	local  selected_file
	selected_file=$(\
		ag "$1" . |  fzf  \
			--multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333\
	) && $EDITOR  "$selected_file"
}

alias fzag='fzf-ag'
  • This function is similar to fzf-grep but uses ag (The Silver Searcher) instead of grep.
  • It searches for patterns in files using ag "$1", which searches for the specified pattern ($1) in the current directory.
  • The search results are then piped through fzf, and once you select a file, it opens in your default editor.

Select a Docker container from docker ps interactively using fzf.

function  fzf-docker-ps() {
	local  selected_container
	selected_container=$(docker ps -a  |  fzf  \
		--multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
		--preview='echo {}' \
		--layout='reverse-list' \
		--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333 \ 
		|  awk '{print $1}') \
		&& docker  logs  "$selected_container"
}

alias fzdps='fzf-docker-ps'
  • With this function, you can select a Docker container from docker ps interactively.
  • It executes docker ps -a to list all Docker containers and pipes the output through fzf.
  • Once you select a container, it displays the logs of that container using docker logs.

Select an SSH host from known_hosts using fzf.

function fzf-ssh() {
	local selected_host
	selected_host=$(\
		cat ~/.ssh/known_hosts \
		|  cut  -f  1  -d ' ' \
		|  sed  -e s/,.*//g |  uniq  |  fzf  --multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
			--preview='echo {}' \
			--preview-window down:10% \
			--layout='reverse-list' \
			--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333\
	) && ssh  "$selected_host"
}
alias fzssh='fzf-ssh'
  • This function enables you to select an SSH host from your known_hosts file interactively.
  • It uses cat, cut, sed and uniq to read the known_hosts file, extract the hostnames, remove any additional information, and presents them in fzf for selection.
  • Once you choose a host, it initiates an SSH connection using ssh.

Interactively search for patterns in files using grep and fzf.

function  fzf-grep() {
	local  selected_file
	selected_file=$(grep  -Ril "$1" . |  fzf  --multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
		--preview='echo {}' \
		--preview-window down:10% \
		--layout='reverse-list' \
		--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333\
	) && $EDITOR  "$selected_file"
}

alias fzgrep='fzf-grep'
  • This function combines grep and fzf to search for patterns in files interactively.
  • It uses the grep -Ril command to search for the specified pattern ($1) recursively in the current directory and its subdirectories.
  • The search results are then piped through fzf.
  • Once you select a file, it opens in your default editor.

Search for files using find and fzf.

function  fzf-find() {
	local  selected_file
	selected_file=$(find . -type f |  fzf  --multi  --no-sort  --cycle  \
		--preview='echo {}' \
		--preview-window down:10% \
		--layout='reverse-list' \
		--color bg:#222222,preview-bg:#333333\
	) && $EDITOR  "$selected_file"
}

alias fzfind='fzf-find'
  • This function allows you to search for files using the find command. It pipes the output of find . -type f (which searches for files in the current directory and its subdirectories) through fzf for interactive selection.
  • Once you select a file, it opens in your default editor ($EDITOR).

autoload -Uz fzf-command-widget fzf-man fzf-run-cmd-from-history fzf-exec-scripts fzf-search-files-on-path fzf-git-log fzf-ag fzf-docker-ps fzf-ssh fzf-grep fzf-find

The autoload -Uz command ensures that the functions of this plugin are lazily loaded when they are invoked.

if [[ -x  "$(command  -v fzf)" ]]; then
	export FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND='ag -g ""'
	export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='-m --preview-window=up:40%:wrap'
fi

Initializes the FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND and FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS environment variables which can be used to customize fzf's behavior. These are just some example options to start with for the 2 variables, but you can change them to whatever you would prefer.

If you have any feature requests, suggestions or general questions you can reach me via any of the methods listed below in the "Contacts" section

Reporting a vulnerability or bug?

Do not submit an issue or pull request: A general rule of thumb is to never publicly report bugs or vulnerabilities because you might inadvertently reveal it to unethical people who may use it for bad. Instead, you can email me directly at: [email protected]. I will deal with the issue privately and submit a patch as soon as possible.

Author: Paul M.

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A ZSH plugin that provides functions which integrate & bind fuzzy finder capabilities through fzf to certain commands such as ls, man, find and more.

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