I'm trying to write a not found handle in Bash that does the following:

  1. If $1 exists and it's a directory, cd into it.
  2. If $1 exists inside a user defined directory $DEV_DIR, `cd into it.
  3. If the previous conditions don't apply, fail.

Right now I have something like this:

export DEV_DIR=/Users/federico/programacion/

function command_not_found_handle () {
    if [ -d $1 ]; then          # the dir exists in '.'
        cd $1
    else
        to=$DEV_DIR$1
        if [ -d $to ]; then
            cd $to
            echo `pwd`
        else
            echo "${1}: command not found"
        fi
    fi
}

And although it seems to be working (the echo pwd command prints the expected dir), the directory in the actual shell does not change.

I was under the impression that since this is a function inside my .bashrc the shell wouldn't fork and I could do the cd but apparently that's not working. Any tips on how to solve this would be appreciated.

link|improve this question

Why do you need to do this? There is most likely a better way to accomplish whatever you have in mind. – Dennis Williamson Mar 20 '11 at 21:31
I want to move between subdirs inside the directory where I keep all my projects in an easy way. Doing cd ~/prog; cd something gets a bit tiring after some time. I'd love to hear any other suggestions to doing this. – Federico Builes Mar 21 '11 at 21:21
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

I think what's going on is that the shell fork()s after setting up any redirections but before looking for commands, so command_not_found_handle can't affect the interactive shell process.

link|improve this answer
1  
+1 Compare: f () { echo "$$ $BASHPID"; }; f; command_not_found_handle () { echo "$$ $BASHPID"; }; fooble (assuming you don't have anything called "fooble"). A new shell is forked. (Also, note that $SHLVL and $BASH_SUBSHELL don't vary if you include those in the functions for additional comparisons.) – Dennis Williamson Mar 20 '11 at 21:29
feedback

What you seem to want to do may partly possible using the autocd feature:

shopt -s autocd

From man bash:

autocd - If set, a command name that is the name of a directory is executed as if it were the argument to the cd com‐ mand. This option is only used by interactive shells.

Otherwise, just create a function that you invoke by name that performs the actions you are trying to use command_not_found_handle for.

link|improve this answer
This works perfectly for directories inside . but the most important thing I want to get done is being able to move quickly to directories in other locations. I'll keep it in mind though, thanks. – Federico Builes Mar 21 '11 at 21:16
1  
@FedericoBuiles: What about the suggestion I made in the last sentence? – Dennis Williamson Mar 21 '11 at 23:45
That'd require me to type the function name each time I want to swich (which would be effectively the same as setting up autocd). I do appreciate your effort though. – Federico Builes Mar 24 '11 at 17:17
feedback

It won't change directies if you run this program as a script in your main shell because it creates a sub-shell when it executes. If you source the script in your current shell then it will have the desired effect.

~/wbailey> source command_not_found.sh

That said, I think the following would achieve the same result:

wesbailey@feynman:~/code_katas> cd xxx 2> /dev/null || cd ..; pwd
/Users/wesbailey

just replace the ".." with your env var defined directory and create an alias in your .bashrc file.

link|improve this answer
That's not why it's not working. The function is defined in the current shell, but Bash forks a new shell to execute the function (which is not normally the case). – Dennis Williamson Mar 20 '11 at 21:30
The idea of defining an alias is exactly what I don't want to do. I have 82 directories inside my $DEV_DIR so I don't want to be creating a new alias for each one. – Federico Builes Mar 21 '11 at 21:17
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.