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Case in point:

I'm a on mac with bash v3.2.17, I'm using git installed via macports with the bash_completion variant.

When I type git checkout m<tab>. for example, I get it completed to master.

However, I've got an alias to git checkout, gco. When I type gco m<tab>, I don't get the branch name autocompleted.

Ideally I'd like autocompletion to just magically work for all my aliases. Is it possible? Failing that, I'd like to manually customize it for each alias. So, how do I go about either?

greg-449
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kch
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14 Answers14

189

As stated in the comments above,

complete -o default -o nospace -F _git_checkout gco

will no longer work. However, there's a __git_complete function in git-completion.bash which can be used to set up completion for aliases like so:

__git_complete gco _git_checkout
chris_sutter
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    If you use global alias "g" for git, you could also add ```__git_complete g __git_main``` to get code completition working on all git commands. – Ondrej Machulda Apr 15 '13 at 12:03
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    ^^ For those new to git/shell/bash. The above comment refers to a global shell alias, not a native git alias. – Elijah Lynn Jul 30 '13 at 13:33
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    What if `git` was aliased to `g` and checkout is alised to `co` so I do `g co ` but doesn't autocomplete as well. – Jürgen Paul Oct 09 '13 at 21:38
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    Where should I put this? – benregn Nov 14 '13 at 15:26
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    Finally figured out how to do this properly! Step 1) Copy `git-completion.bash` from `/etc/bash-completion.d/` to `~/.git-completion.bash` Step 2) add `source ~/.git-completion.bash` to your `.bash_profile` Step 3) Add `__git_complete gco _git_checkout` anywhere after the above line in your .bash_profile. Step 4) Reboot shell and enjoy your alias auto completion! :) – kpsfoo Apr 05 '14 at 21:14
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    @benregn I placed it directly below the `source ~/.git_completion.sh` in my `~/.bash_profile` – drees Jun 20 '14 at 13:44
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    -1 This answer seems to assume that you'll have read and understood some older, incorrect answer (but which one?), and therefore know in what file and where in that file this line of text belongs. Try to only assume knowledge of things established in the question. – Theodore Murdock Mar 18 '15 at 23:28
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    There is a nice [Gist](https://gist.github.com/JuggoPop/10706934) that provides all information needed to set it up – stempler May 06 '15 at 13:13
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    To check the number of leading underscores for commands other than `__git_main` and `_git_checkout` (such as `_git_merge` and `_git_pull`), search in [the .git-completion.bash script](https://github.com/git/git/blob/master/contrib/completion/git-completion.bash). All of the common commands (the ones I alias) have only one leading underscore. – Jan Van Bruggen Sep 17 '15 at 15:59
  • What if the alias you want completion for has nothing to do with git; what if you don't have git installed on your system/server? – Alexej Magura Dec 13 '16 at 20:25
  • This is not an actual answer because it doesn't actually tell you what to do so much as just provide some information. Very incomplete. – still_dreaming_1 Oct 10 '18 at 17:26
  • For people who are looking for the completion script: `find / -name "git-completion.bash"`. – ShellFish Mar 25 '20 at 18:29
54

I ran into this problem as well and came up with this code snippet. This will automatically give you completion for all aliases. Run it after declaring all (or any) alias.

# wrap_alias takes three arguments:
# $1: The name of the alias
# $2: The command used in the alias
# $3: The arguments in the alias all in one string
# Generate a wrapper completion function (completer) for an alias
# based on the command and the given arguments, if there is a
# completer for the command, and set the wrapper as the completer for
# the alias.
function wrap_alias() {
  [[ "$#" == 3 ]] || return 1

  local alias_name="$1"
  local aliased_command="$2"
  local alias_arguments="$3"
  local num_alias_arguments=$(echo "$alias_arguments" | wc -w)

  # The completion currently being used for the aliased command.
  local completion=$(complete -p $aliased_command 2> /dev/null)

  # Only a completer based on a function can be wrapped so look for -F
  # in the current completion. This check will also catch commands
  # with no completer for which $completion will be empty.
  echo $completion | grep -q -- -F || return 0

  local namespace=alias_completion::

  # Extract the name of the completion function from a string that
  # looks like: something -F function_name something
  # First strip the beginning of the string up to the function name by
  # removing "* -F " from the front.
  local completion_function=${completion##* -F }
  # Then strip " *" from the end, leaving only the function name.
  completion_function=${completion_function%% *}

  # Try to prevent an infinite loop by not wrapping a function
  # generated by this function. This can happen when the user runs
  # this twice for an alias like ls='ls --color=auto' or alias l='ls'
  # and alias ls='l foo'
  [[ "${completion_function#$namespace}" != $completion_function ]] && return 0

  local wrapper_name="${namespace}${alias_name}"

  eval "
function ${wrapper_name}() {
  let COMP_CWORD+=$num_alias_arguments
  args=( \"${alias_arguments}\" )
  COMP_WORDS=( $aliased_command \${args[@]} \${COMP_WORDS[@]:1} )
  $completion_function
  }
"

  # To create the new completion we use the old one with two
  # replacements:
  # 1) Replace the function with the wrapper.
  local new_completion=${completion/-F * /-F $wrapper_name }
  # 2) Replace the command being completed with the alias.
  new_completion="${new_completion% *} $alias_name"

  eval "$new_completion"
}

# For each defined alias, extract the necessary elements and use them
# to call wrap_alias.
eval "$(alias -p | sed -e 's/alias \([^=][^=]*\)='\''\([^ ][^ ]*\) *\(.*\)'\''/wrap_alias \1 \2 '\''\3'\'' /')"

unset wrap_alias
Hesky Fisher
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    the line `let COMP_CWORD+=$num_alias_arguments` did not work on Mac OS X for some reason. Replacing it with `((COMP_CWORD+=$num_alias_arguments))` fixed it though – Mario F Jan 05 '11 at 20:17
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    Wow, that's awesome -- thanks! `wrap_alias` chokes on double quotes in the alias definition, and I guess it doesn't make much sense for multi-command aliases (`alias 'foo=bar; baz'`), so I'm putting an extra `| grep -v '[";|&]'` after the `alias -p`. Also, it gets a bit slow for hundreds of alias definitions, but I'm happy to confirm that using `echo` instead of `eval` and piping the output into a cache file (which can then be `eval`'ed in one go) works fine and is super-fast. – Jo Liss Jan 13 '11 at 20:07
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    Another hint: `wrap_alias` requires the completions to be set up, so I had to move `source /etc/bash_completion` in front of the `wrap_alias` code. – Jo Liss Jan 13 '11 at 20:30
  • I think there needs to be `\"` around `\${COMP_WORDS[@]:1}` to make this work with blank spaces in arguments. (But I don't really know what I'm doing, so I'm not comfortable editing the answer at the moment.) – Jo Liss Mar 04 '11 at 23:52
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    This worked for me on OS X 10.7.2 after changing the line `let COMP_CWORD+=$num_alias_arguments` to `let \"COMP_CWORD+=$num_alias_arguments\"`. – irh Oct 31 '11 at 12:29
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    Did the following to wrap only specified aliases: function wrap_aliases { for cmdname in "$@"; do cmdname="$(alias $cmdname | sed 's/sudo //')"; eval "$(echo $cmdname | sed -e 's/alias \([^=][^=]*\)='\''\([^ ][^ ]*\) *\(.*\)'\''/wrap_alias \1 \2 '\''\3'\'' /')"; done } – Graham Dec 23 '11 at 09:14
  • OSX 10.7.2 here, didn't work with either @irh's or MarioFernandez's tips. Any ideas what could be wrong or how I can debug this? – agentofuser Jan 30 '12 at 13:11
  • I had to exclude the following aliases: `[[ "_longopt" = $completion_function ]] && return 0` – Julien Carsique Jan 28 '13 at 15:00
  • Any way I can make this work with sudo? I added `alias agi='sudo apt-get install'` but agi+emac doesn't do anything. – agentofuser Apr 04 '14 at 16:49
  • @obvio171 You would need to have a completion function for sudo. – Hesky Fisher Apr 05 '14 at 19:45
  • @HeskyFisher could you give some more detail, please? Sorry, I'm not too experienced with bash. – agentofuser Apr 07 '14 at 00:09
  • @obvio171 I suggest asking this as a stack overflow question. – Hesky Fisher Apr 08 '14 at 01:02
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    @obvio171: From Graham's reply: Add `| sed 's/sudo //'` before the `sed -e 's/alias'` and it should automatically bring in the completion function for the command *after* `sudo`. – jamadagni Oct 25 '14 at 11:07
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    If anyone is having trouble with some aliases not getting the correct completion, please see my comment [here](http://superuser.com/questions/436314/how-can-i-get-bash-to-perform-tab-completion-for-my-aliases#comment1092143_437508) – jamadagni Oct 25 '14 at 16:05
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    See the updated version of this script at http://superuser.com/a/437508/102281 (for example, I added support for COMP_LINE and COMP_POINT which are required for some git completions). – John Mellor Nov 04 '14 at 17:24
  • I'm sorry, but non-threaded comments are the NOT proper place collaborate on code. At a minimum this should be a gist. But, since gists allow neither **issues** to be created or **pull requests** to be offered, this really should be an actual git repo. (even the link John Mellor shared is full comment coders) – Bruno Bronosky Feb 17 '17 at 17:51
  • Yikes, cool script, but it fails when it's a non-trivial alias which contains tokens such as `(($UID))` ;) ... still, very cool. I'm using `grep -v` to get rid of the few offending aliases and added that to the pipe sequence right after `alias -p` ... – 0xC0000022L Aug 20 '18 at 20:58
18

In git-completion.bash there is a line:

complete -o default -o nospace -F _git git

Looking at that line (and the _git function) you can add this line to your .bash_profile:

complete -o default -o nospace -F _git_checkout gco
Peter DeWeese
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Chris Lloyd
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    some of the _git_* bash functions no longer work using this method – cmcginty Sep 23 '11 at 01:37
  • Yes this used to work great until something changed in git_completion.bash... Now it works with the full command but not with the alias. – Michael Smith Jan 24 '12 at 03:21
  • See the end of this page for answers that work in modern git. – eighteyes Mar 22 '13 at 19:19
  • this works well - added this to my .bash_profile, and works fine with and without aliases so far: https://github.com/larrybotha/dotfiles/blob/master/.bash_profile#L22-L24 – Larry Jul 02 '13 at 14:25
18

Ideally I'd like autocompletion to just magically work for all my aliases. Is it possible?

Yes, it is possible with the complete-alias project (on Linux). Support for Mac is experimental but users have reported success.

Cyker
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    thanks a lot, this is so much better than figuring out how every utility in the world implements bash completion. – artm Jun 19 '17 at 08:56
15

I have aliased g='git', and combined with my git aliases I type things like

$ g co <branchname>

The simpler fix for my specific use case was to add a single line to git-completion.

Right below this line:

__git_complete git _git

I added this line to handle my single 'g' alias:

__git_complete g _git
wonderfulthunk
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    (I'm using Cygwin.) I couldn't find the file `git-completion` or that line in `/etc/bash_completion.d/git`, but I added `complete -o default -o nospace -F _git g` after my alias in `.bash_aliases` and it worked! – idbrii Dec 04 '12 at 19:07
  • Beware, that if you edit a file in `/etc/bash-completion.d/` or newly in `/usr/share/bash-completion/`, you will lose your changes whenever that file gets updated using your package manager. – kub1x Feb 26 '16 at 13:20
7

One more option is to use ~/.bash_completion file. To create the gco alias for git checkout just put this in there:

_xfunc git __git_complete gco _git_checkout

Then in ~/.bashrc you have to put just the alias itself:

alias gco='git checkout'

Two lines. That's it.

Explanation:

The ~/bash_completion gets sourced at the end of the main bash_completion script. In gentoo I found the main script in /usr/share/bash-completion/bash_completion.

The _xfunc git bit takes care of sourcing the git-completion file for you so you don't need to put anything else in ~/.bashrc.

The accepted answer require you to copy .git-completion.sh and source it from your ~/.bashrc file which I find lame.


PS: I'm still trying to figure out how not to source the whole git-completion script into my bash environment. Please comment or edit if you find a way.

kub1x
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  • Why is `_xfunc git` required? – Tom Hale Sep 16 '16 at 13:13
  • @TomHale I tried to improve the answer. Rather than doing `source ~/.git-completion.sh` I let `_xfunc` do it for me. It just feels nicer and cleaner to do it solely in `~/.bash_completion`. Without the `_xfunc` (or the sourcing) the `__git_complete` function doesn't exist. – kub1x Sep 18 '16 at 08:23
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    No need for the `~/.bash_completion` file - the `_xfunc` line works for me in `.bashrc`. – Tom Hale Sep 21 '16 at 15:08
5

This forum page shows a solution.

Put these lines into your .bashrc or .bash_profile:

# Author.: Ole J
# Date...: 23.03.2008
# License: Whatever

# Wraps a completion function
# make-completion-wrapper <actual completion function> <name of new func.>
#                         <command name> <list supplied arguments>
# eg.
#   alias agi='apt-get install'
#   make-completion-wrapper _apt_get _apt_get_install apt-get install
# defines a function called _apt_get_install (that's $2) that will complete
# the 'agi' alias. (complete -F _apt_get_install agi)
#
function make-completion-wrapper () {
    local function_name="$2"
    local arg_count=$(($#-3))
    local comp_function_name="$1"
    shift 2
    local function="
function $function_name {
    ((COMP_CWORD+=$arg_count))
    COMP_WORDS=( "$@" \${COMP_WORDS[@]:1} )
    "$comp_function_name"
    return 0
}"
    eval "$function"
}

# and now the commands that are specific to this SO question

alias gco='git checkout'

# we create a _git_checkout_mine function that will do the completion for "gco"
# using the completion function "_git"
make-completion-wrapper _git _git_checkout_mine git checkout

# we tell bash to actually use _git_checkout_mine to complete "gco"
complete -o bashdefault -o default -o nospace -F _git_checkout_mine gco

This solution is similar to balshetzer's script, but only this one actually works for me. (balshetzer's script had problems with some of my aliases.)

Community
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hcs42
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  • ;This almost works -- I get a couple of errors, but the completion goes through. Anything else I can do? `-bash: eval: line 28: unexpected EOF while looking for matching '''` `-bash: eval: line 29: syntax error: unexpected end of file` – pforhan Oct 11 '11 at 13:03
  • @pforhan I can see quoting issues above... the `"` quotes inside the `function` string should be quoted as `\"`. This probably eats one of your `'` quotes somewhere along the line. – Tom Hale Apr 28 '17 at 06:08
5

You could also try using Git aliases. For example, in my ~/.gitconfig file, I have a section that looks like this:

[alias]
        co = checkout

So you could type git co m<TAB>, and that should expand to git co master, which is the git checkout command.

mipadi
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2

You just have to find the complete command and duplicate the line having the alias name instead.

I have alias d-m="docker-machine". In words, d-m shall be the alias for docker-machine.

So on Mac (via brew), the completion files are in cd `brew --prefix`/etc/bash_completion.d/.
For my case I edited the file called docker-machine.
All the way at the bottom there was:

complete -F _docker_machine docker-machine

So I just added another line, with my alias:

complete -F _docker_machine docker-machine
complete -F _docker_machine d-m
luckydonald
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  • This is the best solution for simple (one to one) aliases, like `docker` aliased to `d`. Although for the example in the question, `git checkout` aliased to `gco` is more complex. – wisbucky Jun 11 '18 at 23:59
2

First, look up the original completion command. Example:

$ complete | grep git

complete -o bashdefault -o default -o nospace -F __git_wrap__git_main git

Now add these to your startup script (e.g. ~/.bashrc):

# copy the original statement, but replace the last command (git) with your alias (g)
complete -o bashdefault -o default -o nospace -F __git_wrap__git_main g

# load dynamically loaded completion functions (may not be required)
_completion_loader git

The _completion_loader line may not be required. But for some situations, the completion function is only loaded dynamically after you type the command and press TAB the first time. So if you haven't used the original command, and try the alias + TAB, you may get an error like "bash: completion: function '_docker' not found".

wisbucky
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  • The `_completion_loader` line is always required if the completion script is located in `/usr/share/bash-completion/completions/`. For backwards compatibility scripts that are located in `/etc/bash_completion.d` will still be loaded when `bash_completion` is being loaded. See: [github bash-completion commit](https://github.com/scop/bash-completion/commit/c41a76237bc9dcbfa326eeddd026b66d7646d91d) – DerRockWolf May 16 '21 at 20:11
1

There are a lot of answers to this question and like myself I bet a lot of confused readers. For my case I had also had the requirement to have my dotfiles work on multiple platforms with different versions of Git. I also don't alias g=git but instead have g defined as a function.

To accomplish this I had to slap together different answers here into one solution. Although this reiterates the answers already I thought someone in my boat might find this compilation useful as I would have when I first came to this question.

This assumes older and newer Git completion, Ubuntu defaults, and brew install git on MacOS. In the later case the brew installed completions were not being processed by bash (something I will diagnose later).

# Alias g to git

g() {
  if [[ $# > 0 ]]; then
    git "$@"
  else
    git status -sb
  fi
}

# Preload git completion in Ubuntu which is normally lazy loaded but we need
# the __git_wrap__git_main function available for our completion.
if [[ -e /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/git ]]; then
  source /usr/share/bash-completion/completions/git
elif [[ -e /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/git-completion.bash ]]; then
  source /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/git-completion.bash
fi

if command_exists __git_complete; then
  __git_complete g _git
elif command_exists __git_wrap__git_main; then
  complete -o bashdefault -o default -o nospace -F __git_wrap__git_main g
fi
Sukima
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0

If you use alias g='git', i add this line of code in .bash_aliases

complete -o default -o nospace -F _git g
Druta Ruslan
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0

Felipe Contreras, who is already quite active for Git completion features (see Zsh completion in Git 2.30) proposes (for -- possibly -- Git 2.31, Q1 2021) a public function which will help with alias autocompletion.

His proposal:

Back in 2012 I argued for the introduction of a helper that would allow users to specify aliases like:

git_complete gf git_fetch

Back then there was pushback because there was no clear guideline for public functions (git_complete vs _git_complete vs _GIT_complete), and some aliases didn't actually work.

Fast-forward to 2020 and there's still no guideline for public functions, and those aliases still don't work (even though I sent the fixes).

This has not prevented people from using this function that is clearly needed to setup custom aliases (this page), and in fact it's the recommended way.

But it is cumbersome that the user must type:

__git_complete gf _git_fetch

Or worse:

__git_complete gk __gitk_main

8 years is more than enough time to stop waiting for the perfect to come; let's define a public function (with the same name) that is actually user-friendly:

__git_complete gf git_fetch
__git_complete gk gitk

While also maintaining backwards compatibility.

The logic is:

  1. If $2 exists, use it directly
  2. If not, check if __$2_main exists
  3. If not, check if _$2 exists
  4. If not, fail
VonC
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0

You can bind Tab to alias-expand-line and complete (its default action) in ~/.inputrc. To do that you first need to bind each action to a key and then chain them together thus:

"\M-z":alias-expand-line
"\M-x":complete
TAB:"\M-z\M-x"

You can use whatever key combinations you like, I use the Meta one because it is free. See man 3 readline for more information.

Now, if you open a new terminal and type the alias:

gco m<TAB>

The line will be transformed into

git checkout master

Of course, Tab will still work as usual even if no alias is involved.

Quasímodo
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