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# Externs |
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Calling external commands is a fundamental part of using Nushell as a shell (and often using Nushell as a language). There's a problem, though: Nushell can't help with finding errors in the call, completions, or syntax highlighting with external commands. |
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This is where `extern` comes in. The `extern` keyword allows you to write a full signature for the command that lives outside of Nushell so that you get all the benefits above. If you take a look at the default config, you'll notice that there are a few extern calls in there. Here's one of them: |
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```nu |
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export extern "git push" [ |
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remote?: string@"nu-complete git remotes", # the name of the remote |
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refspec?: string@"nu-complete git branches" # the branch / refspec |
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--verbose(-v) # be more verbose |
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--quiet(-q) # be more quiet |
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--repo: string # repository |
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--all # push all refs |
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--mirror # mirror all refs |
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--delete(-d) # delete refs |
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--tags # push tags (can't be used with --all or --mirror) |
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--dry-run(-n) # dry run |
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--porcelain # machine-readable output |
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--force(-f) # force updates |
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--force-with-lease: string # require old value of ref to be at this value |
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--recurse-submodules: string # control recursive pushing of submodules |
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--thin # use thin pack |
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--receive-pack: string # receive pack program |
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--exec: string # receive pack program |
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--set-upstream(-u) # set upstream for git pull/status |
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--progress # force progress reporting |
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--prune # prune locally removed refs |
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--no-verify # bypass pre-push hook |
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--follow-tags # push missing but relevant tags |
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--signed: string # GPG sign the push |
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--atomic # request atomic transaction on remote side |
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--push-option(-o): string # option to transmit |
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--ipv4(-4) # use IPv4 addresses only |
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--ipv6(-6) # use IPv6 addresses only |
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] |
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``` |
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You'll notice this gives you all the same descriptive syntax that internal commands do, letting you describe flags, short flags, positional parameters, types, and more. |
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::: warning Note |
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A Nushell comment that continues on the same line for argument documentation purposes requires a space before the ` #` pound sign. |
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::: |
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## Types and custom completions |
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In the above example, you'll notice some types are followed by `@` followed by the name of a command. We talk more about [custom completions](custom_completions.md) in their own section. |
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Both the type (or shape) of the argument and the custom completion tell Nushell about how to complete values for that flag or position. For example, setting a shape to `path` allows Nushell to complete the value to a filepath for you. Using the `@` with a custom completion overrides this default behavior, letting the custom completion give you full completion list. |
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## Format specifiers |
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Positional parameters can be made optional with a `?` (as seen above) the remaining parameters can be matched with `...` before the parameter name, which will return a list of arguments. |
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```nu |
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export extern "git add" [ |
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...pathspecs: glob |
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# … |
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] |
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``` |
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## Limitations |
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There are a few limitations to the current `extern` syntax. In Nushell, flags and positional arguments are very flexible: flags can precede positional arguments, flags can be mixed into positional arguments, and flags can follow positional arguments. Many external commands are not this flexible. There is not yet a way to require a particular ordering of flags and positional arguments to the style required by the external. |
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The second limitation is that some externals require flags to be passed using `=` to separate the flag and the value. In Nushell, the `=` is a convenient optional syntax and there's currently no way to require its use. |
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