-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
Copy pathdircolors
203 lines (187 loc) · 5.1 KB
/
dircolors
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
# Configuration file for the 256color ls utility
# This file goes in the /etc directory, and must be world readable.
# You can copy this file to .dir_colors in your $HOME directory to override
# the system defaults.
# Configuration file for dircolors, a utility to help you set the
# LS_COLORS environment variable used by GNU ls with the --color option.
# Copyright (C) 1996-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
# Copying and distribution of this file, with or without modification,
# are permitted provided the copyright notice and this notice are preserved.
# The keywords COLOR, OPTIONS, and EIGHTBIT (honored by the
# slackware version of dircolors) are recognized but ignored.
# For compatibility, the pattern "^COLOR.*none" is recognized as a way to
# disable colorization. See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1349579 for details.
# Below are TERM entries, which can be a glob patterns, to match
# against the TERM environment variable to determine if it is colorizable.
TERM *256color*
TERM rxvt-unicode256
# Below are the color init strings for the basic file types. A color init
# string consists of one or more of the following numeric codes:
# Attribute codes:
# 00=none 01=bold 04=underscore 05=blink 07=reverse 08=concealed
# Text color codes:
# 30=black 31=red 32=green 33=yellow 34=blue 35=magenta 36=cyan 37=white
# Background color codes:
# 40=black 41=red 42=green 43=yellow 44=blue 45=magenta 46=cyan 47=white
# Text color(256 colors mode) codes:
# Valid syntax for text 256color is 38;5;<color number> , where color number
# is number between 0 and 255.
# You may find following command useful to search the best one for you:
# for ((x=0; x<=255; x++));do echo -e "${x}:\033[38;5;${x}mcolor\033[000m";done
# Background color(256 colors mode) codes:
# Valid syntax for background 256color is 48;5;<color number> , where
# color number is number between 0 and 255.
# You may find following command useful to search the best one for you:
# for ((x=0; x<=255; x++));do echo -e "${x}:\033[48;5;${x}mcolor\033[000m";done
#NORMAL 00 # no color code at all
#FILE 00 # regular file: use no color at all
RESET 0 # reset to "normal" color
DIR 38;5;33 # directory
LINK 38;5;51 # symbolic link. (If you set this to 'target' instead of a
# numerical value, the color is as for the file pointed to.)
MULTIHARDLINK 00 # regular file with more than one link
FIFO 40;38;5;11 # pipe
SOCK 38;5;13 # socket
DOOR 38;5;5 # door
BLK 48;5;232;38;5;11 # block device driver
CHR 48;5;232;38;5;3 # character device driver
ORPHAN 48;5;232;38;5;9 # symlink to nonexistent file, or non-stat'able file ...
MISSING 01;05;37;41 # ... and the files they point to
SETUID 48;5;196;38;5;15 # file that is setuid (u+s)
SETGID 48;5;11;38;5;16 # file that is setgid (g+s)
CAPABILITY 48;5;196;38;5;226 # file with capability
STICKY_OTHER_WRITABLE 48;5;10;38;5;16 # dir that is sticky and other-writable (+t,o+w)
OTHER_WRITABLE 48;5;10;38;5;21 # dir that is other-writable (o+w) and not sticky
STICKY 48;5;21;38;5;15 # dir with the sticky bit set (+t) and not other-writable
# This is for files with execute permission:
EXEC 38;5;40
# List any file extensions like '.gz' or '.tar' that you would like ls
# to colorize below. Put the extension, a space, and the color init string.
# (and any comments you want to add after a '#')
# If you use DOS-style suffixes, you may want to uncomment the following:
#.cmd 01;32 # executables (bright green)
#.exe 01;32
#.com 01;32
#.btm 01;32
#.bat 01;32
# Or if you want to colorize scripts even if they do not have the
# executable bit actually set.
#.sh 01;32
#.csh 01;32
# archives or compressed (bright red)
.tar 38;5;9
.tgz 38;5;9
.arc 38;5;9
.arj 38;5;9
.taz 38;5;9
.lha 38;5;9
.lz4 38;5;9
.lzh 38;5;9
.lzma 38;5;9
.tlz 38;5;9
.txz 38;5;9
.tzo 38;5;9
.t7z 38;5;9
.zip 38;5;9
.z 38;5;9
.Z 38;5;9
.dz 38;5;9
.gz 38;5;9
.lrz 38;5;9
.lz 38;5;9
.lzo 38;5;9
.xz 38;5;9
.zst 38;5;9
.tzst 38;5;9
.bz2 38;5;9
.bz 38;5;9
.tbz 38;5;9
.tbz2 38;5;9
.tz 38;5;9
.deb 38;5;9
.rpm 38;5;9
.jar 38;5;9
.war 38;5;9
.ear 38;5;9
.sar 38;5;9
.rar 38;5;9
.alz 38;5;9
.ace 38;5;9
.zoo 38;5;9
.cpio 38;5;9
.7z 38;5;9
.rz 38;5;9
.cab 38;5;9
.wim 38;5;9
.swm 38;5;9
.dwm 38;5;9
.esd 38;5;9
# image formats
.jpg 38;5;13
.jpeg 38;5;13
.mjpg 38;5;13
.mjpeg 38;5;13
.gif 38;5;13
.bmp 38;5;13
.pbm 38;5;13
.pgm 38;5;13
.ppm 38;5;13
.tga 38;5;13
.xbm 38;5;13
.xpm 38;5;13
.tif 38;5;13
.tiff 38;5;13
.png 38;5;13
.svg 38;5;13
.svgz 38;5;13
.mng 38;5;13
.pcx 38;5;13
.mov 38;5;13
.mpg 38;5;13
.mpeg 38;5;13
.m2v 38;5;13
.mkv 38;5;13
.webm 38;5;13
.ogm 38;5;13
.mp4 38;5;13
.m4v 38;5;13
.mp4v 38;5;13
.vob 38;5;13
.qt 38;5;13
.nuv 38;5;13
.wmv 38;5;13
.asf 38;5;13
.rm 38;5;13
.rmvb 38;5;13
.flc 38;5;13
.avi 38;5;13
.fli 38;5;13
.flv 38;5;13
.gl 38;5;13
.dl 38;5;13
.xcf 38;5;13
.xwd 38;5;13
.yuv 38;5;13
.cgm 38;5;13
.emf 38;5;13
# https://wiki.xiph.org/MIME_Types_and_File_Extensions
.ogv 38;5;13
.ogx 38;5;13
# audio formats
.aac 38;5;45
.au 38;5;45
.flac 38;5;45
.m4a 38;5;45
.mid 38;5;45
.midi 38;5;45
.mka 38;5;45
.mp3 38;5;45
.mpc 38;5;45
.ogg 38;5;45
.ra 38;5;45
.wav 38;5;45
# https://wiki.xiph.org/MIME_Types_and_File_Extensions
.oga 38;5;45
.opus 38;5;45
.spx 38;5;45
.xspf 38;5;45