I've written a command which could be compared to time or timeout in that it's used at the start of the line as a prefix to any other bash command. My question is, how do I convince my bash completion script/rule to run the normal completion for the subcommand - exactly as it would do if my prefix command wasn't present?
E.g. the current situation is:
$ svn [tab] - lists the svn commands
and:
$ mything svn [tab] - my completion needs to hand-over to svn's completion
but svn in the example above may be pretty much any bash command.
As per my comments above, I've answered my own question!
After doing "complete -p | grep time", we can see how that command does it - you just need to define a completion rule as follows:
complete -o filenames -F _command mything
and put it into an otherwise empty a file called /etc/bash_completion.d/mything. When you open a new bash terminal, you should then find that your mything command can complete any subcommands in the normal manner.
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