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DIR_COLORS(5)                                                    DIR_COLORS(5)



NAME
       dir_colors - configuration file for dircolors(1)

DESCRIPTION
       The  program  ls(1) uses the environment variable LS_COLORS to determine the colors
       in which the filenames are to be displayed.  This environment variable  is  usually
       set by a command like

              eval ‘dircolors some_path/dir_colors‘

       found  in  a  system  default  shell  initialization  file,  like  /etc/profile  or
       /etc/csh.cshrc.   (See  also  dircolors(1).)   Usually,  the  file  used  here   is
       /etc/DIR_COLORS  and  can  be overridden by a .dir_colors file in one’s home direc-
       tory.

       This configuration file consists of several statements,  one  per  line.   Anything
       right of a hash mark (#) is treated as a comment, if the hash mark is at the begin-
       ning of a line or is preceded by at least one whitespace.  Blank lines are ignored.

       The  global  section  of  the  file consists of any statement before the first TERM
       statement.  Any statement in the global section of the file is considered valid for
       all  terminal types.  Following the global section is one or more terminal-specific
       sections, preceded by one or more TERM statements which specify the terminal  types
       (as  given  by  the TERM environment variable) the following declarations apply to.
       It is always possible to override a global declaration by  a  subsequent  terminal-
       specific one.

       The following statements are recognized; case is insignificant:


       TERM terminal-type
              Starts  a  terminal-specific section and specifies which terminal it applies
              to.  Multiple TERM statements can be used to create a section which  applies
              for several terminal types.

       COLOR yes|all|no|none|tty
              (Slackware  only; ignored by GNU dircolors(1).)  Specifies that colorization
              should always be enabled (yes or  all),  never  enabled  (no  or  none),  or
              enabled only if the output is a terminal (tty).  The default is no.

       EIGHTBIT yes|no
              (Slackware only; ignored by GNU dircolors(1).)  Specifies that eight-bit ISO
              8859 characters should be enabled by default.   For  compatibility  reasons,
              this can also be specified as 1 for yes or 0 for no.  The default is no.

       OPTIONS options
              (Slackware only; ignored by GNU dircolors(1).)  Adds command line options to
              the default ls command line.  The options can be any valid ls  command  line
              options,  and  should include the leading minus sign.  Please note that dir-
              colors does not verify the validity of these options.

       NORMAL color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for normal (non-filename) text.

       FILE color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a regular file.

       DIR color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for directories.

       LINK color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a symbolic link.

       ORPHAN color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for an orphaned symbolic link (one which points  to
              a  nonexistent  file).   If  this is unspecified, ls will use the LINK color
              instead.

       MISSING color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a missing file (a nonexistent file which never-
              theless  has  a  symbolic  link pointing to it).  If this is unspecified, ls
              will use the FILE color instead.

       FIFO color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a FIFO (named pipe).

       SOCK color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a socket.

       DOOR color-sequence
              (Supported since file-utils  4.1)  Specifies  the  color  used  for  a  door
              (Solaris 2.5 and later).

       BLK color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a block device special file.

       CHR color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a character device special file.

       EXEC color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for a file with the executable attribute set.

       LEFTCODE color-sequence
              Specifies the left code for non-ISO 6429 terminals (see below).

       RIGHTCODE color-sequence
              Specifies the right code for non-ISO 6429 terminals (see below).

       ENDCODE color-sequence
              Specifies the end code for non-ISO 6429 terminals (see below).

       *extension color-sequence
              Specifies the color used for any file that ends in extension.

        .extension color-sequence
              Same  as  *.extension.   Specifies  the color used for any file that ends in
              .extension.  Note that the period is included in the extension, which  makes
              it  impossible to specify an extension not starting with a period, such as ~
              for emacs backup files.  This form should be considered obsolete.

ISO 6429 (ANSI) COLOR SEQUENCES
       Most color-capable ASCII terminals today use ISO 6429 (ANSI) color  sequences,  and
       many common terminals without color capability, including xterm and the widely used
       and cloned DEC VT100, will recognize ISO 6429 color codes and harmlessly  eliminate
       them  from the output or emulate them.  ls uses ISO 6429 codes by default, assuming
       colorization is enabled.

       ISO 6429 color sequences are composed of sequences of numbers  separated  by  semi-
       colons.  The most common codes are:

          0     to restore default color
          1     for brighter colors
          4     for underlined text
          5     for flashing text
         30     for black foreground
         31     for red foreground
         32     for green foreground
         33     for yellow (or brown) foreground
         34     for blue foreground
         35     for purple foreground
         36     for cyan foreground
         37     for white (or gray) foreground
         40     for black background
         41     for red background
         42     for green background
         43     for yellow (or brown) background
         44     for blue background
         45     for purple background
         46     for cyan background
         47     for white (or gray) background

       Not all commands will work on all systems or display devices.

       ls uses the following defaults:

         NORMAL   0       Normal (non-filename) text
         FILE     0       Regular file
         DIR      32      Directory
         LINK     36      Symbolic link
         ORPHAN   undefined       Orphanned symbolic link
         MISSING  undefined       Missing file
         FIFO     31      Named pipe (FIFO)
         SOCK     33      Socket
         BLK      44;37   Block device
         CHR      44;37   Character device
         EXEC     35      Executable file

       A  few  terminal  programs do not recognize the default properly.  If all text gets
       colorized after you do a directory listing, change the NORMAL and FILE codes to the
       numerical codes for your normal foreground and background colors.

OTHER TERMINAL TYPES (ADVANCED CONFIGURATION)
       If  you  have  a  color-capable  (or otherwise highlighting) terminal (or printer!)
       which uses a different set of codes, you can still generate a suitable  setup.   To
       do so, you will have to use the LEFTCODE, RIGHTCODE, and ENDCODE definitions.

       When  writing  out a filename, ls generates the following output sequence: LEFTCODE
       typecode RIGHTCODE filename ENDCODE, where the typecode is the color sequence  that
       depends  on  the  type  or name of file.  If the ENDCODE is undefined, the sequence
       LEFTCODE NORMAL RIGHTCODE will be used instead.   The  purpose  of  the  left-  and
       rightcodes  is  merely  to  reduce the amount of typing necessary (and to hide ugly
       escape codes away from the user).  If they are not appropriate for  your  terminal,
       you can eliminate them by specifying the respective keyword on a line by itself.

       NOTE:  If the ENDCODE is defined in the global section of the setup file, it cannot
       be undefined in a terminal-specific section of the file.   This  means  any  NORMAL
       definition  will  have  no effect.  A different ENDCODE can, however, be specified,
       which would have the same effect.

ESCAPE SEQUENCES
       To specify control- or blank characters in the color sequences or  filename  exten-
       sions, either C-style \-escaped notation or stty-style ^-notation can be used.  The
       C-style notation includes the following characters:

         \a      Bell (ASCII 7)
         \b      Backspace (ASCII 8)
         \e      Escape (ASCII 27)
         \f      Form feed (ASCII 12)
         \n      Newline (ASCII 10)
         \r      Carriage Return (ASCII 13)
         \t      Tab (ASCII 9)
         \v      Vertical Tab (ASCII 11)
         \?      Delete (ASCII 127)
         \nnn Any character (octal notation)
         \xnnn        Any character (hexadecimal notation)
         \_      Space
         \\     Backslash (\)
         \^      Caret (^)
         \#      Hash mark (#)

       Please note that escapes are necessary to enter a space, backslash, caret,  or  any
       control character anywhere in the string, as well as a hash mark as the first char-
       acter.

NOTES
       The default LEFTCODE and RIGHTCODE definitions, which are used by ISO  6429  termi-
       nals are:

         LEFTCODE  \e[
         RIGHTCODE m

       The default ENDCODE is undefined.

SEE ALSO
       dircolors(1), ls(1), stty(1), xterm(1)

FILES
       /etc/DIR_COLORS
              System-wide configuration file.

       ~/.dir_colors
              Per-user configuration file.

NOTES
       This  page  describes the dir_colors file format as used in the fileutils-4.1 pack-
       age; other versions  may  differ  slightly.   Mail  corrections  and  additions  to
       aeb AT cwi.nl.  Report bugs in the program to fileutils-bugs AT gnu.edu.



GNU fileutils 4.1                 2001-12-26                     DIR_COLORS(5)

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