When you perform ls
in a bash shell, sometimes there are colours to indicate different resource types, and you can enable/control this with the --color
argument.
But neither the man page nor Google is providing an answer to the question:
What do these colours indicate by default, and how do I display what the current system uses?
UPDATE:
Thanks everyone for answers so far, however to make it easier to pick a winner, can anyone go a step further and provide a method to output descriptions in the colours they apply to.
Hmmm... my example doesn't work when posted (only when previewed), so if you preview this code it'll show what I mean...
<ul style="list-style:none; background:black; margin:0;padding:0.5em; width:10em">
<li style="color:blue">directory</li>
<li style="color:aqua">symbolic link</li>
<li style="color:#A00000;">*.tar files</li>
<li style="color:white">...</li>
</ul>
Thanks.
The colors are defined by the $LS_COLORS
environment variable. Depending on your distro, it is generated automatically when the shell starts, using ~/.dircolors
or /etc/DIR_COLORS
.
Edit:
To list color meanings, use this script:
eval $(echo "no:global default;fi:normal file;di:directory;ln:symbolic link;pi:named pipe;so:socket;do:door;bd:block device;cd:character device;or:orphan symlink;mi:missing file;su:set uid;sg:set gid;tw:sticky other writable;ow:other writable;st:sticky;ex:executable;"|sed -e 's/:/="/g; s/\;/"\n/g')
{
IFS=:
for i in $LS_COLORS
do
echo -e "\e[${i#*=}m$( x=${i%=*}; [ "${!x}" ] && echo "${!x}" || echo "$x" )\e[m"
done
}