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History
JLine history lets users reuse commands they've entered before. By default, history entries exist only in memory; a subsequent run of the same program will start with a new, empty history.
To preserve a user's history across runs, you need to connect a few bits.
The DefaultHistory class looks for a path to the user history file in the HISTORY_FILE
variable.
You can set the variable when building your reader. If you have a
-
LineReaderBuilder
myLineReaderBuilder
, and - a
path
to a user history file
myLineReaderBuilder.variable(
LineReader.HISTORY_FILE,
path
);
You can represent path
as a java.io.File
, as a java.nio.Path
, or as a string.
Different operating systems put user's app-specific files in different places. harawata/appdirs makes it easy to find a user configuration directory specific to your program.
While you're doing that, you can configure other history options.
- You can also limit the number of history entries stored in the file
myLineReaderBuilder.variable( LineReader.HISTORY_FILE_SIZE, 1_000 // history entries );
-
LineReader.HISTORY_SIZE
limits the number of history entries kept in memory. -
LineReader.HISTORY_IGNORE
is a colon-separated list of patterns that will not be saved in history.
The line reader will load history on the first use, but you can pre-load history if you like:
History history = myLineReader.getHistory();
// Make sure the instance has access to the reader's variable set,
// and load history.
history.attach(myLineReader);
Your line reader will load history on first use, but it will not save it for you.
On exit, you should be sure to do
myLineReader.getHistory().save(); // May throw IOException
This could happen if the reader loop exits with an Exception.
You might put your save call in a finally
block, in a shutdown hook, or signal handler.
Beware that if a single user has multiple instances of your program running concurrently, saving history from one could clobber content from another.
This is not usually a problem in practice since the default History implementation takes care to only append history entries from the current session:
StandardOpenOption.WRITE, StandardOpenOption.APPEND, StandardOpenOption.CREATE)) { for (Entry entry : items.subList(from, items.size())) { if (isPersistable(entry)) { writer.append(format(entry)); } }