powerline-rs
is a rewrite of powerline-shell, inspired by
powerline-go.
Note: powerline-rs is in somewhat of a maintenance mode. I’ll try to make time to fix bugs and add new features, but the code is messy and I will not be fixing it any time soon unfortunately. It could be reworked to be more generic and maybe read a config file for the prompt, since it’s still going to be very fast thanks to rust. But I’m not going to implement that. Not now, at least.
That said, I still use this for my own prompt and will probably never stop, so don’t worry it’s definitely not a dead project.
Speed! I haven’t done any extensive benchmarks, but it appears like
even the debug version of powerline-rs
is about 20 milliseconds
faster than powerline-go
. The Rust language is perfect for fast
applications, since copying large structures isn’t implicit.
I strongly recommend installing powerline-rs using the Nix package manager, which will get you all the required native dependencies by default.
nix-env -iA powerline-rs
If you’d prefer the absolutely latest git version, you can use this instead:
nix-env -if https://gitlab.com/jD91mZM2/powerline-rs/-/archive/master.tar.gz
Then add the following code to your shell:
You can also install powerline-rs from an unofficial AUR package.
Using other installation options you’ll unfortunately have to fetch all native dependencies yourself. I’ve tried to guess which dependencies most users will need to install to build this, feel free to update the following matrix if it proves outdated.
Configuration | Native dependencies | Description |
---|---|---|
Default | All of the below | |
–no-default-features | None of the below | |
–features chrono | None | Add time support for `–shell bare` |
–features flame | None | Adds some performance benchmarks. Don’t use this. |
–features git2 | libgit2, libzip | Add git support |
–features users | None | Add username support for `–shell bare` |
You’ll also need Rust, obviously. After that you can install powerline-rs via cargo.
cargo install powerline-rs
Well, the default modules have changed to not include the username and hostname. I feel like most people already know theirs. But you can always enable it, of course!
- Generally just using Rust.
- Using
libgit2
over calling and parsinggit
output (Thanks tbodt for suggesting it!) libgit2
can be disabled at compile time if you don’t plan on using git functionality.- Themes are using a simple small
key=value
scripts. No JSON overhead or similar. - The output of
powerline-rs
is slightly smaller than the 2 alternatives I mentioned. To be honest, I have no idea why.
Most of the service-specific modules are deleted. I am very lazy. Pull requests are welcome, though.
Also, the jobs
module won’t work with --shell bare
.
prompt() {
PS1="$(powerline-rs --shell bash $?)"
}
PROMPT_COMMAND=prompt
prompt() {
PS1="$(powerline-rs --shell zsh $?)"
}
precmd_functions+=(prompt)
function fish_prompt
powerline-rs --shell bare $status
end
We can’t display the success status because ion now forbids the use
$?
from functions as a bi-product of the new namespacing
system. This will of course eventually be resolved.
fn PROMPT
powerline-rs --shell bare
end
User contributed themes are found in contrib/ You can define usage of a theme with argument –theme ~/.dotfiles/powerline-rs/solarized.theme If no theme is defined the default theme will be used.