2015-06-16 4:55 GMT+03:00 Paul <paul.domaskis@gmail.com>:
> On Monday, June 15, 2015 at 9:11:12 PM UTC-4, Gary Johnson wrote:
>> I had the same problem a while back, but in my case I could verify
>> that my ~/.bashrc was _not_ being sourced when Vim executed bash.
>>
>>On 2015-06-15, Paul wrote:
>>> To track down the cause, I created the dummy text line
>>>
>>> shopt -p extglob
>>>
>>> and used diagnostic echo commands to ensure that the above 2
>>> invocations of bash actually execute ~/.bashrc and ~/.alias.bash
>>> (they do). For both bash invocations, extglob is unset.
>>
>> Your observation that extglob is not set contradicts your claim that
>> ~/.bashrc is being sourced.
>
> Indeed, that's part of the puzzle.
>
>> As you say later, it should not be.
>> How did you determine that ~/.bashrc is being sourced?
>
> In each of.bashrc and .alias.bash, I put echo statements saying that
> the files is being run. In all my tests so far, they have run, though
> as I said, I'm not sure why. They're not suppose to as far as I
> understand (which is not a very high bar!).
>
>> Having determined in my case that ~/.bashrc was not being sourced
>> when Vim invoked bash (except as :sh), and not really wanting it to
>> be sourced in that case because of the overhead, I found two
>> solutions.
>>
>> One is to put the following in my ~/.vimrc:
>>
>> set shellcmdflag=-O\ extglob\ -c
>
> Based on your post, I tried each of the following:
>
> set shellcmdflag=-i\ -c
> set shellcmdflag=-O\ extglob\ -c
>
> For each setting, I rested the cursor on the following text line:
>
> shopt -p extglob
>
> and tried each of the following:
>
> !!bash
> :. w !bash
>
> For each test, both ~/.bashrc and ~/.alias.bash ran, but extglob was
> unset.
Of course. You run bash *inside* bash -i -c configured by
&shellcmdflag and *that* bash is doing execution. It is absolutely
irrelevant what &shell* settings are in this case: you can have `set
shell=fish` and get exactly the same result with exactly the same fix:
use `!!bash -i -c`.
~/.bashrc is run in the *outer* bash which is run by Vim. If
everything is OK it should be run twice: once for outer bash run by
Vim and once for inner bash run at your request by bash.
>
>> The other, which I currently use, is to create a file,
>> ~/.vim/bash_env.sh, which contains the following:
>>
>> shopt -s extglob # Enable !(pattern-list).
>>
>> and then put this in my ~/.vimrc:
>>
>> if !exists("$BASH_ENV") || $BASH_ENV == ""
>> if filereadable($HOME . "/.vim/bash_env.sh")
>> let $BASH_ENV = "$HOME/.vim/bash_env.sh"
>> endif
>> endif
>>
>> The second seems more robust to me in part because I use the same
>> ~/.vimrc on a variety of machines and OSes and the first solution
>> doesn't work on Vims older that 7.3.269.
>
> I looked up BASH_ENV, and I see what you're doing. However, my vimrc
> (which is confirmed to run) explicitly does shopt -s extglob. In
If *vimrc* is doing `shopt -s extglob` then these setting will
disappear immediately because it persist only as long as shell is run.
> fact, I added an immediately subsequent shopt -p extglob, which
The only reason this may work is that you have `-i` in flags and
bashrc is setting shopt.
> confirms that extglob was successfully enabled. That's great when
> ~/.bashrc is running, but once that's done, it seems that it doesn't
> persist to the point where the code banged out from vim is run. Very,
> very weird.
>
> It's late, but I've got your example code above to try when I get a
> few extra moments. It's obvious that the shopt setting of extglob
> gets dropped sometime between completion of ~/.bashrc and execution of
> the code that is banged out from vim. BASH_ENV may solve the problem
> because it is persistent, and may get picked up by whatever bash
> process actually ends up running the banged out code.
>
> Thanks.
>
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