Thursday, June 12, 2008

Add color to bash

In order to get syntax highlighting in bash when 'ls' command is executed, add the following line to (bottom of) ~/.bashrc file:
. /etc/profile.d/colorls.sh

Note: Make sure pointed file exists. Below is an example of one:

$ more colorls.sh
# color-ls initialization

alias ll='ls -l' 2>/dev/null
alias l.='ls -d .*' 2>/dev/null

COLORS=/etc/DIR_COLORS
[ -e "/etc/DIR_COLORS.$TERM" ] && COLORS="/etc/DIR_COLORS.$TERM"
[ -e "$HOME/.dircolors" ] && COLORS="$HOME/.dircolors"
[ -e "$HOME/.dircolors.$TERM" ] && COLORS="$HOME/.dircolors.$TERM"
[ -e "$HOME/.dir_colors" ] && COLORS="$HOME/.dir_colors"
[ -e "$HOME/.dir_colors.$TERM" ] && COLORS="$HOME/.dir_colors.$TERM"
[ -e "$COLORS" ] || return

eval `dircolors --sh "$COLORS"`
[ -z "$LS_COLORS" ] && return

if ! egrep -qi "^COLOR.*none" $COLORS >/dev/null 2>/dev/null ; then
alias ll='ls -l --color=tty' 2>/dev/null
alias l.='ls -d .* --color=tty' 2>/dev/null
alias ls='ls --color=tty' 2>/dev/null
fi

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