react-fish

A configurable/extendable terminal component

Usage no npm install needed!

<script type="module">
  import reactFish from 'https://cdn.skypack.dev/react-fish';
</script>

README

<Terminal />

ReactFish is a configurable / extendable fish terminal component. It provides an easy way of adding a terminal to your application. The terminal has a few built in base commands, and allows a simple means of extending the understandable commands. It boasts things like autocomplete on tab, previous command navigation, and a test suite you can trust. It is easy to install and get started.

npm install --save react-fish

Try out the DEMO

Props

prop description
extensions An object of fish command extensions
history An array of initial history items
structure An object representing the file system
theme A string representing which theme to use (Terminal.Themes.LIGHT, Terminal.Themes.DARK)
styles An object overriding the theme styles passed to each section
prefix The string used to prefix commands in history: defaults to hacker@default

Currently supported commands and args

command args/flags description
help lists all available commands
clear clears history
ls path lists all file and dirs at path or cwd
cat path/file prints out the contents of a file
mkdir path/dir makes a new dir at path
cd path change directory to relative path
pwd prints out the cwd
echo any prints out all args with env variables
printenv prints out env variables
whoami prints out current user's username

Extending the command list

The extension prop is an easy way to extend the fish commands that can be parsed from the terminal input. In essence, each command is a state reducer returning a new terminal state. This provides a lot of flexibility. Each command has access to the structure, history, and cwd, and expects the object returned to be applied in setState of the React component. Note that each extension should keep the state immutable, otherwise the component will not update. If we were to extend the commands with and existing command like 'clear, here's how we could do it.

import Terminal from 'react-fish';

export const clear = {
    exec: ({ structure, history, cwd }, command) => {
        return { structure, cwd, history: [] };
    },
};

const extensions = { clear };
<Terminal extensions={extensions} />

Each command is given the state and a parsed command object. The command object provides the name, input, args, and flags corresponding to the input. Some commands can use optional or required arguments. There are three types of args: anonymous args, named args (--), and flag args (-). To see how ReactBash parses the input.

For the input foo some/path -baz --hello world, ReactBash would parse the input as:

{
  command = 'foo'
  input: 'foo some/path -baz --hello world',
  args: {
    0: 'some/path',
    hello: 'world',
  },
  flags: { b: true, a: true, z: true },
}

History

The history prop and state arrays are lists of items that will be displayed as history items in the terminal. Essentially, anything that gets 'printed' out onto the terminal is a history item. The prefix prop is available to alter the fish user info that prepends commands in the history. If you'd like to add a welcome message to the initial state of the terminal, it's as easy as passing in a prop.

const history = [{ value: 'Welcome to the terminal!' }];
<Terminal history={history}  />

Structure

The structure object is a representation of the "file system" found within the terminal. It is what is used to navigate into/out of directories, display file contents, and suggesting autocompletions. Each key in the dict is either a directory or a file. If the object has a content field then it is assumed to be a file. This simplified the interface and makes it easier to get started. Here's an example of what a structure might look like.

const structure = {
    src: {
        file1: { content: 'This is the text content for <file1> of <src>' },
        file2: { content: 'This is the text content for <file2> of <src>' },
        childDir1: {
            file: { content: 'This is the text content for <file> of <src/childDir1>' },
        },
        childDir2: {
        }
    },
    '.hiddenDir': {
    },
    '.hiddenFile': { content: 'This is a hidden file' },
    file: { content: 'This is the text content for <file> of the root directory' },
};

Scripts

script description
npm start run the demo on localhost:3000
npm run test run the test suite
npm run lint run the linter

Patrons

Be the second to contribute! ✌⊂(✰‿✰)つ✌

Some ideas for contributions:

  • Add grep command that walks/searches the structure
  • Add multiline support / text formatting for cat

License

MIT