Go Ultimate Plumber is a tool for writing Linux pipes with instant live preview
up - the Ultimate Plumber
up is the Ultimate Plumber, a tool for writing Linux pipes in a
terminal-based UI interactively, with instant live preview of command results.
The main goal of the Ultimate Plumber is to help interactively and
incrementally explore textual data in Linux, by making it easier to quickly
build complex pipelines, thanks to a fast feedback loop. This is achieved
by boosting any typical Linux text-processing utils such as grep, sort,
cut, paste, awk, wc, perl, etc., etc., by providing a quick,
interactive, scrollable preview of their results.
To start using up, redirect any text-emitting command (or pipeline) into it
— for example:
$ lshw |& ./up
then:
use PgUp/PgDn and Ctrl-[←]/Ctrl-[→] for basic browsing through
the command output;
in the input box at the top of the screen, start writing any bash
pipeline; the Ultimate Plumber will execute the command as you type it,
and immediately show you the output of the pipeline in the scrollable
window below (replacing any earlier contents)
For example, you can try writing:
grep network -A2 | grep : | cut -d: -f2- | paste - -
— on my computer, the screen then shows the pipeline and a scrollable
preview of its output like below:
WARNING: Please be careful when using it! It could be dangerous.
In particular, writing "rm" or "dd" into it could be like running around
with a chainsaw. But you'd be careful writing "rm" anywhere in Linux
anyway, no? Also, why would you want to pipe something into "rm"? Other
than that, I don't really have good ideas how to protect against cases
like this. And in the other, non-dangerous cases, I find the tool
immensely useful. If you have some ideas how to
try to protect, please share!
That said, a tool wouldn't be really Unixy if you couldn't hurt yourself
with it, right? ;P
when you are satisfied with the result, you can press Ctrl-X to exit
the Ultimate Plumber, and the command you built will be written into
up1.sh file in the current working directory (or, if it already existed,
up2.sh, etc., until 1000, based on Shlemiel the Painter's
algorithm).
Alternatively, you can press Ctrl-C to quit without saving.
If the command you piped into up is long-running (in such case you will see
a tilde ~ indicator character in the top-left corner of the screen, meaning
that up is still waiting for more input), you may need to press
Ctrl-S to temporarily freeze up's input buffer (a freeze will be
indicated by a # character in top-left corner), which will inject a fake
EOF into the pipeline; otherwise, some commands in the pipeline may not print
anything, waiting for full input (especially commands like wc or sort,
but grep, perl, etc. may also show incomplete results). To unfreeze back,
press Ctrl-Q.
Additional Notes
The pipeline is passed verbatim to a bash -c command, so any bash-isms should work.
The input buffer of the Ultimate Plumber is currently fixed at 40 MB. If
you reach this limit, a + character should get displayed in the top-left
corner of the screen. (This is intended to be changed to a
dynamically/manually growable buffer in a future version of up.)
MacOSX support: I don't have a Mac, thus I have no idea if it works on
one. You are welcome to try, and also to send PRs. If you're interested in
me providing some kind of official-like support for MacOSX, please consider
trying to find a way to send me some usable-enough Mac computer. Please note
I'm not trying to "take advantage" of you by this, as I'm actually not at all
interested in achieving a Mac otherwise. (Also, trying to commit to this kind
of support will be an extra burden and obligation on me. Knowing someone out
there cares enough to do a fancy physical gesture would really help alleviate
this.) If you're serious enough to consider this option, please contact me by
email (mailto:czapkofan@gmail.com) or keybase (https://keybase.io/akavel), so
that we could try to research possible ways to achieve this.
Thanks for understanding!
Prior art: I was surprised no one seemed to write a similar tool before,
that I could find. It should have been possible to write this since the dawn
of Unix already, or earlier! And indeed, after I announced up, I got enough
publicity that my attention was directed to one such earlier project already:
Pipecut. Looks interesting! You may like
to check it too! (Thanks @TronDD.)
Future Ideas
This is version 0.1 of the Ultimate Plumber: a minimal viable product I was
comfortable to release to the public, hoping it might be of use to some of
you already.
I have quite a lot of ideas for further experimentation of development of
up, including but not limited to:
RIIR (once I learn enough of Rust... at some
point in future... maybe...) — esp. to hopefully make up be a smaller
binary (and also to maybe finally learn some Rust); though I'm somewhat
afraid if it might ossify the codbase and make harder to develop
further..? ...but maybe actually converse?...
Maybe it could be made into an UI-less, RPC/REST/socket/text-driven
service, like gocode or Language Servers, for
integration with editors/IDEs (emacs? vim? VSCode?...) I'd be especially
interested in eventually merging it into Luna
Studio; RIIR may help in this. (Before this, as
a simpler approach, multi-line editing may be needed, or at least
left&right scrolling of the command editor input box. Also, some kind of
jumping between words in the command line; readline's Alt-b & Alt-f?)
Adding tests... (ahem; see also
#1) ...also write --help...
Making it work on Windows,
somehow? Also, obviously, would
be nice to have some CI infrastructure enabling porting it to MacOSX,
BSDs, etc., etc...
Integration with fzf and other TUI
tools? I only have some vague thoughts and ideas about it as of now, not
even sure how this could look like.
Adding more previews, for each | in the pipeline; also forking of
pipelines, merging, feedback loops, and other mixing and matching (though
I'd strongly prefer if Luna was to do it
eventually).
If you are interested in financing my R&D work, contact me by email at:
czapkofan@gmail.com, or on keybase.io as akavel.
I suppose I will probably be developing the Ultimate Plumber further anyway,
but at this time it's purely a hobby project, with all the fun and risks this
entails.