yay/cmd.go

485 lines
16 KiB
Go
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package main
import (
"bufio"
"fmt"
"net/http"
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"os"
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alpm "github.com/Jguer/go-alpm/v2"
"github.com/leonelquinteros/gotext"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/completion"
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"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/db"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/intrange"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/news"
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"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/query"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/settings"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/text"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/upgrade"
"github.com/Jguer/yay/v10/pkg/vcs"
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)
func usage() {
fmt.Println(`Usage:
yay
yay <operation> [...]
yay <package(s)>
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operations:
yay {-h --help}
yay {-V --version}
yay {-D --database} <options> <package(s)>
yay {-F --files} [options] [package(s)]
yay {-Q --query} [options] [package(s)]
yay {-R --remove} [options] <package(s)>
yay {-S --sync} [options] [package(s)]
yay {-T --deptest} [options] [package(s)]
yay {-U --upgrade} [options] <file(s)>
New operations:
yay {-Y --yay} [options] [package(s)]
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yay {-P --show} [options]
yay {-G --getpkgbuild} [options] [package(s)]
If no arguments are provided 'yay -Syu' will be performed
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If no operation is provided -Y will be assumed
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New options:
--repo Assume targets are from the repositories
-a --aur Assume targets are from the AUR
Permanent configuration options:
--save Causes the following options to be saved back to the
config file when used
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--aururl <url> Set an alternative AUR URL
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--builddir <dir> Directory used to download and run PKGBUILDS
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--absdir <dir> Directory used to store downloads from the ABS
--editor <file> Editor to use when editing PKGBUILDs
--editorflags <flags> Pass arguments to editor
--makepkg <file> makepkg command to use
--mflags <flags> Pass arguments to makepkg
--pacman <file> pacman command to use
--git <file> git command to use
--gitflags <flags> Pass arguments to git
--gpg <file> gpg command to use
--gpgflags <flags> Pass arguments to gpg
--config <file> pacman.conf file to use
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--makepkgconf <file> makepkg.conf file to use
--nomakepkgconf Use the default makepkg.conf
--requestsplitn <n> Max amount of packages to query per AUR request
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--completioninterval <n> Time in days to refresh completion cache
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--sortby <field> Sort AUR results by a specific field during search
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--searchby <field> Search for packages using a specified field
--answerclean <a> Set a predetermined answer for the clean build menu
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--answerdiff <a> Set a predetermined answer for the diff menu
--answeredit <a> Set a predetermined answer for the edit pkgbuild menu
--answerupgrade <a> Set a predetermined answer for the upgrade menu
--noanswerclean Unset the answer for the clean build menu
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--noanswerdiff Unset the answer for the edit diff menu
--noansweredit Unset the answer for the edit pkgbuild menu
--noanswerupgrade Unset the answer for the upgrade menu
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--cleanmenu Give the option to clean build PKGBUILDS
--diffmenu Give the option to show diffs for build files
--editmenu Give the option to edit/view PKGBUILDS
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--upgrademenu Show a detailed list of updates with the option to skip any
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--nocleanmenu Don't clean build PKGBUILDS
--nodiffmenu Don't show diffs for build files
--noeditmenu Don't edit/view PKGBUILDS
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--noupgrademenu Don't show the upgrade menu
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--askremovemake Ask to remove makedepends after install
--removemake Remove makedepends after install
--noremovemake Don't remove makedepends after install
--cleanafter Remove package sources after successful install
--nocleanafter Do not remove package sources after successful build
--bottomup Shows AUR's packages first and then repository's
--topdown Shows repository's packages first and then AUR's
--devel Check development packages during sysupgrade
--nodevel Do not check development packages
--rebuild Always build target packages
--rebuildall Always build all AUR packages
--norebuild Skip package build if in cache and up to date
--rebuildtree Always build all AUR packages even if installed
--redownload Always download pkgbuilds of targets
--noredownload Skip pkgbuild download if in cache and up to date
--redownloadall Always download pkgbuilds of all AUR packages
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--provides Look for matching providers when searching for packages
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--noprovides Just look for packages by pkgname
--pgpfetch Prompt to import PGP keys from PKGBUILDs
--nopgpfetch Don't prompt to import PGP keys
--useask Automatically resolve conflicts using pacman's ask flag
--nouseask Confirm conflicts manually during the install
--combinedupgrade Refresh then perform the repo and AUR upgrade together
--nocombinedupgrade Perform the repo upgrade and AUR upgrade separately
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--batchinstall Build multiple AUR packages then install them together
--nobatchinstall Build and install each AUR package one by one
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--sudo <file> sudo command to use
--sudoflags <flags> Pass arguments to sudo
--sudoloop Loop sudo calls in the background to avoid timeout
--nosudoloop Do not loop sudo calls in the background
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--timeupdate Check packages' AUR page for changes during sysupgrade
--notimeupdate Do not check packages' AUR page for changes
show specific options:
-c --complete Used for completions
-d --defaultconfig Print default yay configuration
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-g --currentconfig Print current yay configuration
-s --stats Display system package statistics
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-w --news Print arch news
yay specific options:
-c --clean Remove unneeded dependencies
--gendb Generates development package DB used for updating
getpkgbuild specific options:
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-f --force Force download for existing ABS packages
-p --print Print pkgbuild of packages`)
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}
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func handleCmd(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("h", "help") {
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return handleHelp(cmdArgs)
}
if config.SudoLoop && cmdArgs.NeedRoot(config.Runtime) {
sudoLoopBackground()
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}
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switch cmdArgs.Op {
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
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case "V", "version":
handleVersion()
return nil
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
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case "D", "database":
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
case "F", "files":
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
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case "Q", "query":
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return handleQuery(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
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case "R", "remove":
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return handleRemove(cmdArgs, config.Runtime.VCSStore)
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
case "S", "sync":
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return handleSync(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
case "T", "deptest":
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
case "U", "upgrade":
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
case "G", "getpkgbuild":
return handleGetpkgbuild(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
case "P", "show":
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return handlePrint(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
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case "Y", "--yay":
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return handleYay(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
}
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return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("unhandled operation"))
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
}
func getFilter(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments) (upgrade.Filter, error) {
deps, explicit := cmdArgs.ExistsArg("d", "deps"), cmdArgs.ExistsArg("e", "explicit")
switch {
case deps && explicit:
return nil, fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("invalid option: '--deps' and '--explicit' may not be used together"))
case deps:
return func(pkg upgrade.Upgrade) bool {
return pkg.Reason == alpm.PkgReasonDepend
}, nil
case explicit:
return func(pkg upgrade.Upgrade) bool {
return pkg.Reason == alpm.PkgReasonExplicit
}, nil
}
return func(pkg upgrade.Upgrade) bool {
return true
}, nil
}
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func handleQuery(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("u", "upgrades") {
filter, err := getFilter(cmdArgs)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return printUpdateList(cmdArgs, dbExecutor, cmdArgs.ExistsDouble("u", "sysupgrade"), filter)
}
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
}
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func handleHelp(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments) error {
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if cmdArgs.Op == "Y" || cmdArgs.Op == "yay" {
usage()
return nil
}
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
}
func handleVersion() {
fmt.Printf("yay v%s - libalpm v%s\n", yayVersion, alpm.Version())
}
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func handlePrint(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
switch {
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("d", "defaultconfig"):
tmpConfig := settings.DefaultConfig()
fmt.Printf("%v", tmpConfig)
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return nil
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("g", "currentconfig"):
fmt.Printf("%v", config)
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return nil
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("n", "numberupgrades"):
filter, err := getFilter(cmdArgs)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return printNumberOfUpdates(dbExecutor, cmdArgs.ExistsDouble("u", "sysupgrade"), filter)
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("w", "news"):
double := cmdArgs.ExistsDouble("w", "news")
quiet := cmdArgs.ExistsArg("q", "quiet")
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return news.PrintNewsFeed(dbExecutor.LastBuildTime(), config.SortMode, double, quiet)
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case cmdArgs.ExistsDouble("c", "complete"):
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return completion.Show(dbExecutor, config.AURURL, config.Runtime.CompletionPath, config.CompletionInterval, true)
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("c", "complete"):
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return completion.Show(dbExecutor, config.AURURL, config.Runtime.CompletionPath, config.CompletionInterval, false)
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case cmdArgs.ExistsArg("s", "stats"):
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return localStatistics(dbExecutor)
}
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return nil
}
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func handleYay(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("gendb") {
return createDevelDB(config, dbExecutor)
}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsDouble("c") {
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return cleanDependencies(cmdArgs, dbExecutor, true)
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("c", "clean") {
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return cleanDependencies(cmdArgs, dbExecutor, false)
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}
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if len(cmdArgs.Targets) > 0 {
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return handleYogurt(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
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}
return nil
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
}
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func handleGetpkgbuild(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("p", "print") {
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return printPkgbuilds(dbExecutor, config.Runtime.HTTPClient, cmdArgs.Targets)
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}
return getPkgbuilds(cmdArgs.Targets, dbExecutor, cmdArgs.ExistsArg("f", "force"))
}
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func handleYogurt(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
config.SearchMode = numberMenu
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return displayNumberMenu(cmdArgs.Targets, dbExecutor, cmdArgs)
Foundation for re writing the argument parsing system Currently the foundation for a new fuller argument parsing has been implemented in parser.go. Most of the parsing is now done through the argParser object instead of seperate arrays for options and packages. The rest of the code still expects the old system so I have left most of the operations unimplemented for now until I redo it with the new system. Currently only '-S' and number menu have any functionality for testing purposes. This new system parses arguments fully instead of just looking for predefined strings such as: '-Sqi' '-Siq'. This allows: '-Syu', '-S -y -u', '--sync -y -u' to all be parsed as the same. This system tries to be as similar to pacman as possible, eventually aming to fully wrap pacman, allowing yay to be used instead of pacman in all instances. The current implementation is not as strict as pacman when checking arguments. If you pass --someinvalidflag to yay then yay will simply ignore it. The flag should still be passed to pacman which should then cause an error. Although operations '-S' '-R' '-U' ect. are checked to make sure you can not try to use two operations at once. conflicting flags such as: '--quiet' and '--info' will not raise an error and which options gains precedence is depend on the implementation. Another minor issue which is worth noting is. Due to the way double arguments are parsed: '-dd' '-cc' '--deps --deps' if you pass the long version and the short version: '-d --deps' yay will not realize its a double argument. Meanwhile pacman will reconise it when yay calls pacman. Currently there are a few things that need to be done before this new system can be fuly released: Reimplement all operations to use to new parsing system so that the new system is at least as functional as the old one Strip yay specific flags before passing them to pacman Move parts of config into the argument system and only use config for options that are meant to be saved to disk Move yay specific operations into its own operator '-Y' Update documentation to show the altered syntax
2017-12-31 16:18:12 +01:00
}
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func handleSync(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
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targets := cmdArgs.Targets
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("s", "search") {
if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("q", "quiet") {
config.SearchMode = minimal
} else {
config.SearchMode = detailed
}
return syncSearch(targets, dbExecutor)
}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("p", "print", "print-format") {
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("c", "clean") {
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return syncClean(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("l", "list") {
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return syncList(cmdArgs, dbExecutor)
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("g", "groups") {
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("i", "info") {
return syncInfo(cmdArgs, targets, dbExecutor)
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("u", "sysupgrade") {
return install(cmdArgs, dbExecutor, false)
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}
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if len(cmdArgs.Targets) > 0 {
return install(cmdArgs, dbExecutor, false)
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}
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if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("y", "refresh") {
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
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}
return nil
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}
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func handleRemove(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, localCache *vcs.InfoStore) error {
err := config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
if err == nil {
localCache.RemovePackage(cmdArgs.Targets)
}
return err
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}
// NumberMenu presents a CLI for selecting packages to install.
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func displayNumberMenu(pkgS []string, dbExecutor db.Executor, cmdArgs *settings.Arguments) error {
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var (
aurErr, repoErr error
aq aurQuery
pq repoQuery
lenaq, lenpq int
)
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pkgS = query.RemoveInvalidTargets(pkgS, config.Runtime.Mode)
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAUR || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
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aq, aurErr = narrowSearch(pkgS, true)
lenaq = len(aq)
}
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeRepo || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
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pq = queryRepo(pkgS, dbExecutor)
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lenpq = len(pq)
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if repoErr != nil {
return repoErr
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}
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}
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if lenpq == 0 && lenaq == 0 {
return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("no packages match search"))
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}
switch config.SortMode {
case settings.TopDown:
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeRepo || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
pq.printSearch(dbExecutor)
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}
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAUR || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
aq.printSearch(lenpq+1, dbExecutor)
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}
case settings.BottomUp:
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAUR || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
aq.printSearch(lenpq+1, dbExecutor)
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}
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if config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeRepo || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny {
pq.printSearch(dbExecutor)
}
default:
return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("invalid sort mode. Fix with yay -Y --bottomup --save"))
2017-04-29 19:12:12 +02:00
}
2018-04-03 07:49:41 +02:00
if aurErr != nil {
text.Errorln(gotext.Get("Error during AUR search: %s\n", aurErr))
text.Warnln(gotext.Get("Showing repo packages only"))
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}
text.Infoln(gotext.Get("Packages to install (eg: 1 2 3, 1-3 or ^4)"))
text.Info()
2018-03-09 06:25:05 +01:00
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reader := bufio.NewReader(os.Stdin)
2018-03-09 06:25:05 +01:00
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numberBuf, overflow, err := reader.ReadLine()
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if err != nil {
return err
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}
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if overflow {
return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("input too long"))
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}
include, exclude, _, otherExclude := intrange.ParseNumberMenu(string(numberBuf))
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arguments := cmdArgs.CopyGlobal()
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isInclude := len(exclude) == 0 && len(otherExclude) == 0
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for i, pkg := range pq {
var target int
switch config.SortMode {
case settings.TopDown:
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target = i + 1
case settings.BottomUp:
target = len(pq) - i
default:
return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("invalid sort mode. Fix with yay -Y --bottomup --save"))
2017-04-29 19:12:12 +02:00
}
if (isInclude && include.Get(target)) || (!isInclude && !exclude.Get(target)) {
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arguments.AddTarget(pkg.DB().Name() + "/" + pkg.Name())
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}
}
for i := range aq {
var target int
switch config.SortMode {
case settings.TopDown:
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target = i + 1 + len(pq)
case settings.BottomUp:
target = len(aq) - i + len(pq)
default:
return fmt.Errorf(gotext.Get("invalid sort mode. Fix with yay -Y --bottomup --save"))
2018-03-09 06:25:05 +01:00
}
if (isInclude && include.Get(target)) || (!isInclude && !exclude.Get(target)) {
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arguments.AddTarget("aur/" + aq[i].Name)
}
}
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if len(arguments.Targets) == 0 {
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fmt.Println(gotext.Get(" there is nothing to do"))
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return nil
}
if config.SudoLoop {
sudoLoopBackground()
}
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return install(arguments, dbExecutor, true)
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}
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func syncList(cmdArgs *settings.Arguments, dbExecutor db.Executor) error {
aur := false
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for i := len(cmdArgs.Targets) - 1; i >= 0; i-- {
if cmdArgs.Targets[i] == "aur" && (config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAUR) {
cmdArgs.Targets = append(cmdArgs.Targets[:i], cmdArgs.Targets[i+1:]...)
aur = true
}
}
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if (config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAUR) && (len(cmdArgs.Targets) == 0 || aur) {
resp, err := http.Get(config.AURURL + "/packages.gz")
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer resp.Body.Close()
scanner := bufio.NewScanner(resp.Body)
scanner.Scan()
for scanner.Scan() {
name := scanner.Text()
2020-07-05 02:45:23 +02:00
if cmdArgs.ExistsArg("q", "quiet") {
fmt.Println(name)
} else {
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fmt.Printf("%s %s %s", text.Magenta("aur"), text.Bold(name), text.Bold(text.Green(gotext.Get("unknown-version"))))
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if dbExecutor.LocalPackage(name) != nil {
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fmt.Print(text.Bold(text.Blue(gotext.Get(" [Installed]"))))
}
fmt.Println()
}
}
}
2020-07-08 03:22:01 +02:00
if (config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeAny || config.Runtime.Mode == settings.ModeRepo) && (len(cmdArgs.Targets) != 0 || !aur) {
return config.Runtime.CmdRunner.Show(passToPacman(cmdArgs))
}
return nil
}