Tired of forgetting bash/linux/osx commands?
Store and run any command inside ehh
.
pipx install ehh
Well, ehh provides:
- An organized list of aliases
- List groups
- List filtering
- Support for vars, which are prompted on run
- Easy way to add an alias
ehh.mp4
- Store commands like
sudo lsof -iTCP -sTCP:LISTEN -n -P
(osx) under an alias likesys.ports
- Add a description to your command
Check Listening Ports
- Run the command by alias
ehh sys.ports
or by indexehh 23
- Show a list of all stored commands by typing
ehh
- Filter the list of stored commands by typing
ehh {query}
.ehh sys
will show all commands in the sys namespace.
ehh2.mp4
- Add vars to a commmand by using
(:var_name)
. For example:find "$(pwd)" -name (:search) 2>/dev/null
will prompt for a search query to search in the current directory (osx) - All commands are stored inside
~/ehh.yaml
- See
ehh help
for more info
Via pipx
pipx install ehh
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lvoogdt/ehh/main/ehh/cli.py -o ehh.py && chmod +x ehh.py
Add it to your path:
sudo ln -s $(pwd)/ehh.py /usr/local/bin/ehh
Install python libs:
pip install colorama click pyyaml
If you want to start with some commands you can use the example ehh.yaml. The commands in this file are linux based.
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lvoogdt/ehh/main/ehh/ehh.yaml -o ehh.yaml && mv ehh.yaml ~/ehh.yaml
$ ehh add
> Command: sudo usermod -a -G (:group) (:user)
> Description: Add a user to a group
> Group (optional):
> Alias (optional): user.group
$ ehh # Get a list
> 1 sudo usermod -a -G (:group) (:user) user.group Add a user to a group
$ ehh 1
> user: john
> group: docker
(Command sudo usermod -a -G docker john is ran)
$ ehh user.group # Using the lias
> user: john
> group: docker
(Command sudo usermod -a -G docker john is ran)
$ ehh add
Enter the command you want to store, a description and an optional group.
$ ehh ls QUERY?
List your commands with an index and description. Add an optional QUERY to filter the list.
$ ehh run INDEX|ALIAS
OR
$ ehh INDEX (less typing)
OR
$ ehh ALIAS
if ehh INDEX|ALIAS fails, it return the list filtered by query
Run your command by index. It's also possible to use an alias, it will loop through the matches and ask for it to be run.
$ ehh get INDEX
Get all the details of the command
$ ehh rm INDEX
Remove command by index