kill previous nrepl sessions when nrepl-jack-in called? - emacs

At this moment in time, I am using nrepl primarily to talk to Clojurescript apps. I like to use nrepl from within emacs. I start nrepl by typing M-x nrepl-jack-in.
Unfortunately, my nrepl session often gets completely hung. When this happens, I dutifully kill the 3 buffers related to nrepl. These buffers are:
*nrepl*
*nrepl-connection*
*nrepl-server*
*nrepl-server* also has an active process, it ask me if I want to close it, and I say yes.
I then type M-x nrepl-jack-in again.
This is a pain.
I would like to overload nrepl-jack-in so that it automatically checks if any of these 3 buffers exist. If any of them do exist, it will kill these buffers and any active processes associated with these bufers. After doing this, the overloaded nrepl-jack-in will proceed as usual. I would like this because then, whenever I detect that nrepl has decided to hang itself again, I could just type M-X nrepl-jack-in and restart what I was doing.

This should get the job done:
(defun my-nrepl-jack-in ()
(interactive)
(dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
(when (string-prefix-p "*nrepl" (buffer-name buffer))
(kill-buffer buffer)))
(nrepl-jack-in nil))

The chosen answer didn't quite work for me... The nrepl process sentinel threw an error, preventing it from restarting. I played with it a bit and came up with the following (which also gives a separate kill-nrepl function)
;; Disable prompt on killing buffer with a process
(setq kill-buffer-query-functions
(remq 'process-kill-buffer-query-function
kill-buffer-query-functions))
(defun nrepl-kill ()
"Kill all nrepl buffers and processes"
(interactive)
(when (get-process "nrepl-server")
(set-process-sentinel (get-process "nrepl-server")
(lambda (proc evt) t)))
(dolist (buffer (buffer-list))
(when (string-prefix-p "*nrepl" (buffer-name buffer))
(kill-buffer buffer))))
(defun nrepl-me ()
(interactive)
(nrepl-kill)
(nrepl-jack-in nil))

Related

Run function before exit emacs

I want such feature in org-mode: before exiting emacs (while org-mode is running) it asks me: "Do you want to run function vc-dir before exit?"
I tried this:
(add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook 'vc-dir)
But it errors: "wrong number of arguments"
also tried as found here:
(defadvice save-buffers-kill-emacs (before update-mod-flag activate)
(vc-dir))
The same error.
So how to make it work in easy way: vc-dir runs always on exit.
Or how to make it work with warning message (the best way)?
Thanks!
vc-dir takes an argument (the "dir").
So you can do:
(add-hook 'kill-emacs-hook (lambda () (vc-dir "your-dir-here")))
Of course this won't stop emacs from exiting: vc-dir opens a buffer but does not "wait" for user input. For the interactive approach you want you can do this:
(add-hook 'kill-emacs-query-functions
(lambda ()
(if (y-or-n-p "Do you want to run function vc-dir before exit?")
(progn
(vc-dir "your-directory")
nil)
t)))
Change "your-directory" by default-directory if you want to use the last visited buffer as vc-directory.
How about trying that function, which asks for confirmation before running vc-dir:
(defun my-vc-check-onexit ()
(interactive)
(let ((doquit (read-from-minibuffer "Do you want to run vcs? ")))
(if (string-equal doquit "y") (vc-dir "~/my/dir"))
))
and bound it to the hook.
note: it may not be good elisp ;)

Kill the *terminal* buffer with C-d

I found a nice post a few
days ago detailing how to kill the shell buffer with the C-d key. Basically,
after killing the process with C-d you can now tap C-d again to also kill
the buffer.
I was trying to implement something similar for term-mode, but I ran into a
problem. After you kill the term process (with the usual C-d) it seems that
the key-map being used by the buffer changes, but I can't find out what it is!
For example, launch the term command (M-x term RET RET) and then just
immediatelly hit C-d. Once the process is dead, the buffer still reports being
in term-mode, but they key-map it's using is neither term-mode-map nor
term-raw-map.
So
I either need to find out what map it is using so I can bind C-d to kill-buffer.
Or I need another way to kill the buffer with C-d in term-mode.
Try this out:
(defun delete-char-or-kill-terminal-buffer (N &optional killflag)
(interactive "p\nP")
(if (string= (buffer-name) "*terminal*")
(kill-buffer (current-buffer))
(delete-char N killflag)))
(global-set-key (kbd "C-d") 'delete-char-or-kill-terminal-buffer)
When the *terminal* process exits, the mode of the buffer switches to fundamental, which is why the C-d doesn't do what you want.
While Trey Jackson's version is absolutely correct, below is another version which doesn't require knowing the buffer name. It is then easier to manage multiple terminal buffers.
(defun term-handle-exit--close-buffer (&rest args)
(when (null (get-buffer-process (current-buffer)))
(insert "Press <C-d> to kill the buffer.")
(use-local-map (let ((map (make-sparse-keymap)))
(define-key map (kbd "C-d")
(lambda ()
(interactive)
(kill-buffer (current-buffer))))
map))))
(advice-add 'term-handle-exit :after #'term-handle-exit--close-buffer)

How to Kill buffer in emacs without answering confirmation?

How to kill the buffer in emacs without being questioned.
This will kill the current visible buffer without confirmation unless the buffer has been modified. In this last case, you have to answer y/n.
(global-set-key [(control x) (k)] 'kill-this-buffer)
I use this
(defun volatile-kill-buffer ()
"Kill current buffer unconditionally."
(interactive)
(let ((buffer-modified-p nil))
(kill-buffer (current-buffer))))
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x k") 'volatile-kill-buffer) ;; Unconditionally kill unmodified buffers.
It will kill the buffer unless it's modified.
OK, I've done some poking around in the Emacs manual and found a working solution (as of Emacs 23.4.1). It's almost identical to Noufal's solution:
(defun kill-this-buffer-volatile ()
"Kill current buffer, even if it has been modified."
(interactive)
(set-buffer-modified-p nil)
(kill-this-buffer))
I've renamed the function a bit to make it a closer cousin to kill-this-buffer.
Apparently, the EmacsWiki has a page on this topic at http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/KillBufferUnconditionally (modified in 2007), but the code is just a copy of Noufal's.
Use (kill-current-buffer) instead of (kill-this-buffer) if you want to bind it to some key. See the docs for (kill-this-buffer)
...
This command can be reliably invoked only from the menu bar,
otherwise it could decide to silently do nothing.
and (kill-current-buffer)
...
This is like ‘kill-this-buffer’, but it doesn’t have to be invoked
via the menu bar, and pays no attention to the menu-bar’s frame.
So I would put the following in my init.el:
(global-set-key (kbd "C-x k") 'kill-current-buffer)
This works at least in emacs 26.1.
I use the following piece of code -- unlike Noufal's solution of ignoring the buffer being modified or not, this will save the buffer and then kill it. It also deletes the window which makes a difference when you have several sub-windows showing -- by default it will remove the window instead of switching to some other buffer. (To use this conveniently, you need to bind some key to it, of course.)
;; Kill the current buffer immediatly, saving it if needed.
(defvar kill-save-buffer-delete-windows t
"*Delete windows when `kill-save-buffer' is used.
If this is non-nil, then `kill-save-buffer' will also delete the corresponding
windows. This is inverted by `kill-save-buffer' when called with a prefix.")
(defun kill-save-buffer (arg)
"Save the current buffer (if needed) and then kill it.
Also, delete its windows according to `kill-save-buffer-delete-windows'.
A prefix argument ARG reverses this behavior."
(interactive "P")
(let ((del kill-save-buffer-delete-windows))
(when arg (setq del (not del)))
(when (and (buffer-file-name) (not (file-directory-p (buffer-file-name))))
(save-buffer))
(let ((buf (current-buffer)))
(when del (delete-windows-on buf))
(kill-buffer buf))))

How to open multiple terminals?

In Emacs, I often find myself in a situation where I need to jump back and forth between various source files to various terminals. However, I feel like I do not have a good way to do this efficiently and it's clumsy that you can only open one shell in Emacs (shell, eshell, or term).
Moreover, I need an efficient way of juggle between multiple terminals and source files.
How can I achieve this?
You can have as many terminals and shells open at once as you want. Just use M-x rename-buffer to change the name of an existing *term* or *shell* buffer, and the next time you do M-x term or M-x shell, a brand new buffer will be created. In the case of M-x shell, a prefix argument will cause you to be prompted for the name of the new shell buffer, as offby1 noted.
A few years ago I had a job where I had to regularly log in to various production servers named "host01.foo.com", "host02.foo.com", etc. I wrote a little function like this one to make it easier to manage them all:
(defun ssh-to-host (num)
(interactive "P")
(let* ((buffer-name (format "*host%02d*" num))
(buffer (get-buffer buffer-name)))
(if buffer
(switch-to-buffer buffer)
(term "/bin/bash")
(term-send-string
(get-buffer-process (rename-buffer buffer-name))
(format "ssh host%02d.foo.com\r" num)))))
Then I bound this command to (say) s-h (super H), enabling me to just type M-5 s-h. If I didn't already have a buffer named *host05*, it would start a new terminal emulator buffer, rename it to *host05*, and ssh me into host05.foo.com. If buffer *host05* already existed, it would simply switch me to it. Quite handy!
You can certainly have multiple interactive shells open. Try typing C-u M-x shell RET RET.
Try using MultiTerm to open multiple shells.
You can use Emacs Lisp Screen, which emulates GNU Screen and provides easy key bindings to jump to and between a number of different shells.
I use many methods for incorporating my terminal life into Emacs:
elscreen.el is a life saver, if you have a complicated window layout like gdb or have simply become overwhelmed with clutter you just open a new screen. In your case you could dedicate one screen to terminals.
multi-term.el makes managing terminals a bit easier.
shell-pop.el, a great tool for quick terminal access. shell-pop lets you assign a key to opening and closing a specific shell buffer window, if you've used drop-down terminals like tilda you know how incredibly handy this can be:
Here's and example of my shell-pop configuration, I use the key C-t to pop up an eshell:
(require 'shell-pop)
(shell-pop-set-internal-mode "eshell") ; Or "ansi-term" if you prefer
(shell-pop-set-window-height 60) ; Give shell buffer 60% of window
;; If you use "ansi-term" and want to use C-t
;; (defvar ansi-term-after-hook nil)
;; (add-hook 'ansi-term-after-hook
;; '(lambda ()
;; (define-key term-raw-map (kbd "C-t") 'shell-pop)))
;; (defadvice ansi-term (after ansi-term-after-advice (org))
;; (run-hooks 'ansi-term-after-hook))
;; (ad-activate 'ansi-term)
(global-set-key (kbd "C-t") 'shell-pop)
I usually do an an M-x server-start and then use emacsclient --no-wait to open files. I've aliased that to e with some embellishments so that it's a little more convenient.
I do all my work in a single terminal and just "throw" the files I want to edit into Emacs using e. Inside Emacs, I juggle around using iswitchb and it works just fine. YMMV.
I regularly used 10 or so shells in my old workplace. The secret is you have to rename additional shell buffers. I did this automatically though in my .emacs, creating and naming the shells logically (I had projnameRun and projnameBuild for every project). Worked really well together with anything, making it very easy to refind the right shell (you use the end of the project name combined with either r or b for run/build).
Instead of having several terminal windows in emacs, I spawn a different xterm whenever I need a new terminal. This of course is bearable because I use a very lightweight terminal emulator (urxvt) which starts in under 0.2s.
Then I use my window manager to switch between them and emacs frames. A configurable window manager will have plenty of options to tune to switch between windows (extremely) efficiently. Inside emacs, I use windmove and ido-mode, and have bound to C-tab a function that switches to the last buffer (because I use C-x b in that fashion a lot).
So um, not sure how useful it is to you since it's quite different from your use pattern, but this is what works for me.
I had exactly the same problem some years ago, and found nothing that satisfied me; so I wrote my own "toggle shell" function. It toggles between the current frame or window configuration and a system shell buffer. It can also put the shell into a dedicated frame, and inject a pushd to the current buffer directory.
This is an excerpt from my .emacs:
(defvar --toggle-shell-last-window-conf nil "The last window configuration.")
(defvar --toggle-shell-last-buf nil "The last buffer object in case there's no last window configuration.")
(defvar --toggle-shell-last-frame nil "The frame that was selected when opening a shell buffer.")
(defun --toggle-shell-have-conf ()
(window-configuration-p --toggle-shell-last-window-conf))
(defun --toggle-shell-store-last-conf ()
(setq --toggle-shell-last-buf (current-buffer)
--toggle-shell-last-frame (selected-frame)
--toggle-shell-last-window-conf (current-window-configuration)))
(defun --toggle-shell-restore-last-conf ()
(if (--toggle-shell-have-conf)
(progn (raise-frame --toggle-shell-last-frame)
(set-window-configuration --toggle-shell-last-window-conf))
(let ((bufnam (if (bufferp --toggle-shell-last-buf)
(buffer-name --toggle-shell-last-buf) --toggle-shell-last-buf)))
(if bufnam
(if (get-buffer bufnam) (switch-to-buffer bufnam t)
(message "%s: buffer not available" bufnam))))))
(defun --toggle-shell (&optional display inject-cd)
"Toggles between current buffers and a system shell buffer. With prefix-arg
close the shell.
When DISPLAY is 'vertical splits the shell as vertical window; when 'frame uses
a dedicated frame (default: single window). When INJECT-CD executes a `pushd'
to the working directory of the buffer from which you toggled the shell."
(interactive)
(let* ((shell-buf (get-buffer "*shell*"))
(shell-window ; non-nil when currently displayed
(if shell-buf (get-buffer-window shell-buf t)))
(shell-frame
(if shell-window (window-frame shell-window)))
(in-shell (eq (current-buffer) shell-buf))
(vertical (string= display 'vertical))
(popup-frame (or (string= display 'frame)
(and inject-cd (not (bufferp shell-buf)))
(and (framep shell-frame)
(not (eq shell-frame (selected-frame)))))))
;; With prefix-arg close shell, restore windows. Otherwise (no prefix-arg)
;; toggle shell window; restore windows when called twice in a row, or the
;; current buffer is the shell buffer (`in-shell').
(if current-prefix-arg
(if (bufferp shell-buf)
(progn (message "Exiting shell '%s'" (buffer-name shell-buf))
(kill-buffer shell-buf)
(if in-shell (--toggle-shell-restore-last-conf)))
(error "No shell buffer to kill."))
;; If already in shell-buffer toggle back to stored frame-configuration.
(if (and in-shell (not inject-cd))
(progn
(--toggle-shell-restore-last-conf)
;; Recurse to reopen the shell-buffer in a dedicated frame, or
;; close the dedicated frame and reopen the buffer in a window.
(if (and popup-frame (eq shell-frame (selected-frame)))
(--toggle-shell 'frame inject-cd)
(when (and popup-frame shell-frame)
(delete-frame shell-frame)
(--toggle-shell nil inject-cd))))
;; Not in shell buffer. Warp to it or create new one.
(unless in-shell
(--toggle-shell-store-last-conf))
(if popup-frame
(progn (switch-to-buffer-other-frame (or shell-buf "*shell*"))
(raise-frame
(or shell-frame (window-frame (get-buffer-window "*shell*" t)))))
(if (> (count-windows) 1)
(delete-other-windows)))
;; Finally `cd' into the working directory the current buffer.
(let ((new-shell (not (bufferp shell-buf)))
(new-dir ; `default-directory' of `--toggle-shell-last-buf'
(if --toggle-shell-last-buf
(buffer-local-value 'default-directory --toggle-shell-last-buf))))
;; Open shell, move point to end-of-buffer. The new shell-buffer's
;; `default-directory' will be that of the buffer the shell was
;; launched from.
(when vertical
(if (> (count-windows) 1)
(delete-other-windows))
(split-window-vertically) (other-window 1))
(funcall 'shell)
(when new-shell
(message "New shell %s (%s)" (buffer-name (current-buffer)) new-dir)
(if inject-cd (sit-for 2))) ; wait for prompt
(goto-char (point-max))
;; If on a command-prompt insert and launch a "cd" command (assume no
;; job is running).
(when (and inject-cd new-dir)
(save-excursion
(backward-line-nomark) (end-of-line)
(unless (setq inject-cd (re-search-forward comint-prompt-regexp (point-max) t))
(error "Cannot `pushd', shell is busy")))
(when (and inject-cd)
(let* ((cmd (format
"pushd '%s' %s" (comint-quote-filename new-dir)
(if (buffer-file-name --toggle-shell-last-buf)
(format "# '%s'" (file-name-directory (buffer-file-name --toggle-shell-last-buf)))
""))))
;; `shell-process-cd' set new `default-directory' and set
;; `shell-last-dir' to old. (If the pushd command is
;; successful, a dirs is performed as well; >nul discards this
;; output.)
(shell-process-cd new-dir)
(insert cmd)
(comint-send-input)
(message "%s: cd '%s'" (buffer-name --toggle-shell-last-buf) new-dir))
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
--toggle-shell is the function that does the trick. I bind it to F12:
;; F12 toggle between shell buffer and current window configuration
;; SHIFT-F12 like before, but let shell buffer appear in a dedicated frame
;; ALT-F12 inject a pushd to change to directory of current buffer
;; CTRL-F12 `shell-command'
(global-set-key [(f12)] '--toggle-shell)
(global-set-key [(shift f12)] '(lambda()(interactive)(--toggle-shell 'frame)))
(global-set-key [(meta f12)] '(lambda()(interactive)(--toggle-shell nil t)))
(global-set-key [(meta f10)] '(lambda()(interactive)(--toggle-shell nil t)))
(global-set-key [(control f12)] 'shell-command) ; alias M-!
This is a significant bunch of code to be posted here. But it shall work well.
Semi related - you can quickly run a shell command on selected file with
M+shift+!
It saves a lot of time for smaller commands chmod etc
And maybe my quick pop-up shell also might help you. A quick pop-up shell for emacs
Ecb + eshell will be what you want exactly!
I use vi, but hope this helps. I can open as many terminals as I want by (eg. in Ubuntu 16.04):
ctrl + alt + t
I usually open 2 terminals, and move (position) one terminal to the right by:
ctrl + super + right-arrow
and move the other terminal to the left by:
ctrl + super + left-arrow
so that I have a divided screen by 2 terminals.

Emacs - Can't get buffer-offer-save working

I would like to have Emacs ask me whether I want to save a modified buffer, when that buffer is not associated with a file. To open a new buffer (not visiting a file) I have the following function in my .emacs file:
;; Creates a new empty buffer
(defun new-empty-buffer ()
"Opens a new empty buffer."
(interactive)
(let ((buf (generate-new-buffer "untitled")))
(switch-to-buffer buf)
(funcall (and default-major-mode))
(setq buffer-offer-save t)))
I thought setting "buffer-offer-save" to something not nil would made the trick. But whenever I kill the buffer with "kill-this-buffer", it gets instantly killed without asking anything.
This happens on GNU Emacs 23.1.1
Any ideas?
Thanks,
W
Edited to add use of buffers-offer-save. Note: the variable buffer-offer-save is only used upon exiting Emacs.
You can start with this code and customize it to what you want:
(add-to-list 'kill-buffer-query-functions 'ask-me-first)
(defun ask-me-first ()
"prompt when killing a buffer"
(if (or buffer-offer-save
(eq this-command 'kill-this-buffer)
(and (buffer-modified-p) (not (buffer-file-name))))
(y-or-n-p (format "Do you want to kill %s without saving? " (buffer-name)))
t))
Upon further reflection, that is a bit heavy-handed because you get prompted for all buffers that get killed, and there are often lots of temporary buffers that Emacs uses. If you just want to be prompted when you try to interactively kill a buffer (that isn't associated with a file).
You can use this advice which only prompts you when you're interactively trying to kill a buffer:
(defadvice kill-buffer (around kill-buffer-ask-first activate)
"if called interactively, prompt before killing"
(if (and (or buffer-offer-save (interactive-p))
(buffer-modified-p)
(not (buffer-file-name)))
(let ((answ (completing-read
(format "Buffer '%s' modified and not associated with a file, what do you want to do? (k)ill (s)ave (a)bort? " (buffer-name))
'("k" "s" "a")
nil
t)))
(when (cond ((string-match answ "k")
;; kill
t)
((string-match answ "s")
;; write then kill
(call-interactively 'write-file)
t)
(nil))
ad-do-it)
t)
;; not prompting, just do it
ad-do-it))
Modifying 'new-empty-buffer seems to make it work as I intended with Trey's defadvice.
;; Creates a new empty buffer
(defun new-empty-buffer ()
"Opens a new empty buffer."
(interactive)
(let ((buf (generate-new-buffer "untitled")))
(switch-to-buffer buf)
(funcall (and default-major-mode))
(put 'buffer-offer-save 'permanent-local t)
(setq buffer-offer-save t)))
This makes buffer-offer-save permanent local in our new buffer, so it won't get killed with the rest of the local variables when switching major modes.
buffer-offer-save asking on exiting Emacs but not on closing a buffer manually doesn't make sense, so why not “enlarge” its responsibilities?
(defadvice kill-buffer (around kill-buffer-ask activate)
"If `buffer-offer-save' is non-nil and a buffer is modified,
prompt before closing."
(if (and buffer-offer-save (buffer-modified-p))
(when (yes-or-no-p "The document isn't saved. Quit? ")
ad-do-it)
ad-do-it))
It will not prompt if untitled buffer is newly created. It will not prompt if you use kill-buffer from Elisp. It will not prompt on Emacs system buffers like *Messages*. But it will prompt if you created an empty buffer and wrote something in it.
See also my answer on creating an empty buffer.