WRAPPER_FOUND=0 for wrapsource in "/usr/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh" "/usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh" "/usr/local/share/python/virtualenvwrapper.sh" "/etc/bash_completion.d/virtualenvwrapper" ; do if [[ -e $wrapsource ]] ; then WRAPPER_FOUND=1 source $wrapsource if [[ ! $DISABLE_VENV_CD -eq 1 ]]; then # Automatically activate Git projects' virtual environments based on the # directory name of the project. Virtual environment name can be overridden # by placing a .venv file in the project root with a virtualenv name in it function workon_cwd { # Check that this is a Git repo PROJECT_ROOT=`git rev-parse --show-toplevel 2> /dev/null` if (( $? == 0 )); then # Check for virtualenv name override ENV_NAME=`basename "$PROJECT_ROOT"` if [[ -f "$PROJECT_ROOT/.venv" ]]; then ENV_NAME=`cat "$PROJECT_ROOT/.venv"` fi # Activate the environment only if it is not already active if [[ "$VIRTUAL_ENV" != "$WORKON_HOME/$ENV_NAME" ]]; then if [[ -e "$WORKON_HOME/$ENV_NAME/bin/activate" ]]; then workon "$ENV_NAME" && export CD_VIRTUAL_ENV="$ENV_NAME" fi fi elif [ $CD_VIRTUAL_ENV ]; then # We've just left the repo, deactivate the environment # Note: this only happens if the virtualenv was activated automatically deactivate && unset CD_VIRTUAL_ENV fi unset PROJECT_ROOT } # New cd function that does the virtualenv magic function cd { builtin cd "$@" && workon_cwd } fi break fi done if [ $WRAPPER_FOUND -eq 0 ] ; then print "zsh virtualenvwrapper plugin: Couldn't activate virtualenvwrapper. Please run \`pip install virtualenvwrapper\`." fi