I'm using SaltStack. I would like to auto-complete the minion name when calling the salt command.
The following line has been added into ~/.bashrc:
complete -o default -o nospace -W "$(sudo ls -1 /var/cache/salt/master/minions)" salt
Then typing salt inTab → salt integration-Tab; I can see it works as expected:
$ salt integration-TabTab integration-c integration-u integration-u2
To use with sudo, I have added complete -cf sudo into ~/.bashrc, but it didn't work:
sudo salt inTab
returned nothing.
I also have tried to install bash_completion and added the following lines to ~/.bash_profile:
if [ -f $(brew --prefix)/etc/bash_completion ]; then
    . $(brew --prefix)/etc/bash_completion
fi
but no luck.
Did I miss something?
Update
Oh, the first thing I would like to say is sometimes it works:
$ sudo salt integration-TabTab integration-c integration-u integration-u2
and sometimes it doesn't.
So first, let's see how much your bash_completion package does.
How can I check that? Here's my function:
# a wrapper method for the next one, when the offset is unknown
_command()
{
    local offset i
    # find actual offset, as position of the first non-option
    offset=1
    for (( i=1; i <= COMP_CWORD; i++ )); do
        if [[ "${COMP_WORDS[i]}" != -* ]]; then
            offset=$i
            break
        fi
    done
    _command_offset $offset
}
# A meta-command completion function for commands like sudo(8), which need to
# first complete on a command, then complete according to that command's own
# completion definition - currently not quite foolproof (e.g. mount and umount
# don't work properly), but still quite useful.
#
_command_offset()
{
    local cur func cline cspec noglob cmd i char_offset word_offset \
        _COMMAND_FUNC _COMMAND_FUNC_ARGS
    word_offset=$1
    # rewrite current completion context before invoking
    # actual command completion
    # find new first word position, then
    # rewrite COMP_LINE and adjust COMP_POINT
    local first_word=${COMP_WORDS[$word_offset]}
    for (( i=0; i <= ${#COMP_LINE}; i++ )); do
        if [[ "${COMP_LINE:$i:${#first_word}}" == "$first_word" ]]; then
            char_offset=$i
            break
        fi
    done
    COMP_LINE=${COMP_LINE:$char_offset}
    COMP_POINT=$(( COMP_POINT - $char_offset ))
    # shift COMP_WORDS elements and adjust COMP_CWORD
    for (( i=0; i <= COMP_CWORD - $word_offset; i++ )); do
        COMP_WORDS[i]=${COMP_WORDS[i+$word_offset]}
    done
    for (( i; i <= COMP_CWORD; i++ )); do
        unset COMP_WORDS[i];
    done
    COMP_CWORD=$(( $COMP_CWORD - $word_offset ))
    COMPREPLY=()
    _get_comp_words_by_ref cur
    if [[ $COMP_CWORD -eq 0 ]]; then
        _compopt_o_filenames
        COMPREPLY=( $( compgen -c -- "$cur" ) )
    else
        cmd=${COMP_WORDS[0]}
        if complete -p ${cmd##*/} &>/dev/null; then
            cspec=$( complete -p ${cmd##*/} )
            if [ "${cspec#* -F }" != "$cspec" ]; then
                # complete -F <function>
                # get function name
                func=${cspec#*-F }
                func=${func%% *}
                if [[ ${#COMP_WORDS[@]} -ge 2 ]]; then
                    $func $cmd "${COMP_WORDS[${#COMP_WORDS[@]}-1]}" "${COMP_WORDS[${#COMP_WORDS[@]}-2]}"
                else
                    $func $cmd "${COMP_WORDS[${#COMP_WORDS[@]}-1]}"
                fi
                # remove any \: generated by a command that doesn't
                # default to filenames or dirnames (e.g. sudo chown)
                # FIXME: I'm pretty sure this does not work!
                if [ "${cspec#*-o }" != "$cspec" ]; then
                    cspec=${cspec#*-o }
                    cspec=${cspec%% *}
                    if [[ "$cspec" != @(dir|file)names ]]; then
                        COMPREPLY=("${COMPREPLY[@]//\\\\:/:}")
                    else
                        _compopt_o_filenames
                    fi
                fi
            elif [ -n "$cspec" ]; then
                cspec=${cspec#complete};
                cspec=${cspec%%${cmd##*/}};
                COMPREPLY=( $( eval compgen "$cspec" -- "$cur" ) );
            fi
        elif [ ${#COMPREPLY[@]} -eq 0 ]; then
            _filedir
        fi
    fi
}
if you type
sudo mkdirTabTab, does it show a list of directories?
Yes:
$ sudo mkdir TabTab .FontForge/ .djangopypi2/ .ievms/ .ssh/ .wireshark-etc/




_command_offset. So first, let's see how much your bash_completion package does. If you remove thecomplete -cf sudoline from .bashrc, then logout and login again, and just use the support built in to bash_completion, do you see any special handling at all for sudo, e.g., if you typesudo mkdir <tab><tab>, does it show a list of directories?mkdir <tab><tab>, does it show a list of directories? --> Yes, see my update in the original question.sudowhen completions are not working. Do this by typingcomplete|grep sudo. Bash on OSX reads its init files in nonintuitive ways (see apple.stackexchange.com/a/13019), so my hunch is that sometimes not all your completion definitions are being read in or they are being superseded by unwanted definitions.