eza_colors - Man Page

customising the file and UI colours of eza

Synopsis

The EZA_COLORS environment variable can be used to customise the colours that eza uses to highlight file names, file metadata, and parts of the UI.

You can use the dircolors program to generate a script that sets the variable from an input file, or if you don’t mind editing long strings of text, you can just type it out directly. These variables have the following structure:

The key half of the pair can either be a two-letter code or a file glob, and anything that’s not a valid code will be treated as a glob, including keys that happen to be two letters long.

For backwards compatibility EXA_COLORS environment variables is checked if EZA_COLORS is unset.

Examples

EZA_COLORS="uu=0:gu=0"

Disable the “current user” highlighting

EZA_COLORS="da=32"

Turn the date column green

EZA_COLORS="Vagrantfile=1;4;33"

Highlight Vagrantfiles

EZA_COLORS="*.zip=38;5;125"

Override the existing zip colour

EZA_COLORS="*.md=38;5;121:*.log=38;5;248"

Markdown files a shade of green, log files a shade of grey

List of Codes

LS_COLORS can use these ten codes:

di

directories

ex

executable files

fi

regular files

pi

named pipes

so

sockets

bd

block devices

cd

character devices

ln

symlinks

or

symlinks with no target

EZA_COLORS can use many more:

oc

the permissions displayed as octal

ur

the user-read permission bit

uw

the user-write permission bit

ux

the user-execute permission bit for regular files

ue

the user-execute for other file kinds

gr

the group-read permission bit

gw

the group-write permission bit

gx

the group-execute permission bit

tr

the others-read permission bit

tw

the others-write permission bit

tx

the others-execute permission bit

su

setuid, setgid, and sticky permission bits for files

sf

setuid, setgid, and sticky for other file kinds

xa

the extended attribute indicator

sn

the numbers of a file’s size (sets nb, nk, nm, ng and nt)

nb

the numbers of a file’s size if it is lower than 1 KB/Kib

nk

the numbers of a file’s size if it is between 1 KB/KiB and 1 MB/MiB

nm

the numbers of a file’s size if it is between 1 MB/MiB and 1 GB/GiB

ng

the numbers of a file’s size if it is between 1 GB/GiB and 1 TB/TiB

nt

the numbers of a file’s size if it is 1 TB/TiB or higher

sb

the units of a file’s size (sets ub, uk, um, ug and ut)

ub

the units of a file’s size if it is lower than 1 KB/Kib

uk

the units of a file’s size if it is between 1 KB/KiB and 1 MB/MiB

um

the units of a file’s size if it is between 1 MB/MiB and 1 GB/GiB

ug

the units of a file’s size if it is between 1 GB/GiB and 1 TB/TiB

ut

the units of a file’s size if it is 1 TB/TiB or higher

df

a device’s major ID

ds

a device’s minor ID

uu

a user that’s you

uR

a user that’s root

un

a user that’s someone else

gu

a group that you belong to

gR

a group related to root

gn

a group you aren’t a member of

lc

a number of hard links

lm

a number of hard links for a regular file with at least two

ga

a new flag in Git

gm

a modified flag in Git

gd

a deleted flag in Git

gv

a renamed flag in Git

gt

a modified metadata flag in Git

gi

an ignored flag in Git

gc

a conflicted flag in Git

Gm

main branch of repo

Go

other branch of repo

Gc

clean branch of repo

Gd

dirty branch of repo

xx

“punctuation”, including many background UI elements

da

a file’s date

in

a file’s inode number

bl

a file’s number of blocks

hd

the header row of a table

lp

the path of a symlink

cc

an escaped character in a filename

bO

the overlay style for broken symlink paths

sp

special (not file, dir, mount, exec, pipe, socket, block device, char device, or link)

mp

a mount point

im

a regular file that is an image

vi

a regular file that is a video

mu

a regular file that is lossy music

lo

a regular file that is lossless music

cr

a regular file that is related to cryptography (ex: key or certificate)

do

a regular file that is a document (ex: office suite document or PDF)

co

a regular file that is compressed

tm

a regular file that is temporary (ex: a text editor’s backup file)

cm

a regular file that is a compilation artifact (ex: Java class file)

bu

a regular file that is used to build a project (ex: Makefile)

sc

a regular file that is source code

ic

the icon (this is optional, if not set the icon color matches the file name’s)

Sn

No security context on a file

Su

SELinux user

Sr

SELinux role

St

SELinux type

Sl

SELinux level

ff

BSD file flags

Values in EXA_COLORS override those given in LS_COLORS, so you don’t need to re-write an existing LS_COLORS variable with proprietary extensions.

List of Styles

Unlike some versions of ls, the given ANSI values must be valid colour codes: eza won’t just print out whichever characters are given.

The codes accepted by eza are:

1

for bold

2

for dimmed

3

for italic

4

for underline

31

for red text

32

for green text

33

for yellow text

34

for blue text

35

for purple text

36

for cyan text

37

for white text

90

for dark gray text

91

for bright red text

92

for bright green text

93

for bright yellow text

94

for bright blue text

95

for bright purple text

96

for bright cyan text

97

for bright text

38;5;nnn

for a colour from 0 to 255 (replace the nnn part)

Many terminals will treat bolded text as a different colour, or at least provide the option to.

eza provides its own built-in set of file extension mappings that cover a large range of common file extensions, including documents, archives, media, and temporary files. Any mappings in the environment variables will override this default set: running eza with LS_COLORS="*.zip=32" will turn zip files green but leave the colours of other compressed files alone.

You can also disable this built-in set entirely by including a reset entry at the beginning of EZA_COLORS. So setting EZA_COLORS="reset:*.txt=31" will highlight only text files; setting EZA_COLORS="reset" will highlight nothing.

Author

eza is maintained by Christina Sørensen and many other contributors.

Source code: https://github.com/eza-community/eza

Contributors: https://github.com/eza-community/eza/graphs/contributors

Our infinite thanks to Benjamin ‘ogham’ Sago and all the other contributors of exa, from which eza was forked.

See Also

Info

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