In4989661
, I reduced the init time for bin/doom by eliminating the extra `emacs` call in its shebang. This does the same for bin/doomscript. Ref:498966179f
92 lines
3.6 KiB
Bash
Executable file
92 lines
3.6 KiB
Bash
Executable file
#!/usr/bin/env sh
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# -*- coding: utf-8-unix -*-
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# This is a shebang interpreter for launching Emacs Lisp scripts with Doom's CLI
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# framework preloaded, plus any environment variables it needs. Use it like so:
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#
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# #!/usr/bin/env doomscript
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# (print! "Hello world!")
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#
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# For this to work (and to avoid an absolute path in your shebang line), this
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# file must be in your $PATH:
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#
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# export PATH="$HOME/.config/emacs/bin:$PATH"
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#
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# This isn't used for bin/doom because of this $PATH/absolute path requirement
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# (and using $BASH_SOURCE to locate it would reduce its POSIX compliance), but
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# this should be less of an issue for folks writing their own doomscripts.
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if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then
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>&2 echo "Error: missing required file argument"
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exit 1
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fi
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case "$EMACS" in
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*term*) EMACS=emacs ;; # in {ansi-,v}term
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*\ *) ;;
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*) EMACS="${EMACS:-emacs}"
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# Only sanity-check $EMACS if it's a path or executable
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if ! type "$EMACS" >/dev/null 2>&1; then
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echo "Error: failed to run Emacs with command '$EMACS'"
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echo
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echo "Are you sure Emacs is installed and in your \$PATH?"
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exit 1
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fi >&2
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;;
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esac
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# Careful not to use -Q! It implies --no-site-lisp, which omits the site-lisp
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# directory from `load-path', which would prevent Doom from manually loading the
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# site files later. These are important on some systems or deployment methods
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# (like Snap or NixOS).
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emacs="$EMACS -q --no-site-file --batch"
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# Doom respects $EMACSDIR to tell it where Doom lives. If it fails, then this is
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# either isn't bash, or it's a posix shell being directly sourced with sh, which
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# is unsupported.
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export EMACSDIR="${EMACSDIR:-$(CDPATH='' cd -- "$(dirname -- "${BASH_SOURCE:-$0}")/.." && pwd)}"
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if [ ! -f "$EMACSDIR/early-init.el" ]; then
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echo "Error: cannot load $EMACSDIR/early-init.el."
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echo
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echo "Either the file doesn't exist (indicating a broken or missing Doom install)"
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echo "or that doomscript is being source directly (which is unsupported)."
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echo
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echo "Set \$EMACSDIR to the path of an existing Doom installation."
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exit 1
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fi >&2
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# Some state that Doom's CLI framework needs to know about the terminal. Read
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# the comments at the top of bin/doom for explanations.
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export __DOOMSH="${__DOOMSH:-sh}"
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export __DOOMPID="${__DOOMPID:-$$}"
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export __DOOMSTEP="${__DOOMSTEP:-0}"
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export __DOOMGEOM="${__DOOMGEOM:-$(tput cols 2>/dev/null)x$(tput lines 2>/dev/null)}"
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export __DOOMGPIPE="${__DOOMGPIPE:-$__DOOMPIPE}"
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export __DOOMPIPE=
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[ -t 0 ] || __DOOMPIPE="${__DOOMPIPE}0"
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[ -t 1 ] || __DOOMPIPE="${__DOOMPIPE}1"
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# Now we're ready to execute the given script. $EMACSDIR/early-init.el is Doom's
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# universal bootstrapper (and will only load the bare minimum), so it must be
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# loaded first.
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script="$1"
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shift
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$emacs --load "$EMACSDIR/early-init" \
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--load "$script" \
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-- "$@"
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exit=$?
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# To simulate execve syscalls (which replaces the running process), Doom
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# generates a temporary exit-script if a Doomscript returns a 254 exit code.
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if [ "${exit:-0}" -eq 254 ]; then
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# $TMPDIR (or $TEMP and $TMP on Windows) aren't guaranteed to have values,
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# and mktemp isn't available on all systems, but you know what is? Emacs! So
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# I rely on it to provide TMPDIR.
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export TMPDIR="${TMPDIR:-${TMP:-${TEMP:-$($emacs -Q --eval '(princ (temporary-file-directory))' 2>/dev/null)}}}"
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# The user may have a noexec flag set on /tmp, so the exit-script should be
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# passed to /bin/sh rather than executed directly.
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sh "${TMPDIR}/doom.${__DOOMPID}.${__DOOMSTEP}.sh" "$0" "$@"
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exit="$?"
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fi
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exit $exit
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# doomscript ends here... Unless?
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