Created
August 30, 2013 17:11
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A primer for changing the color profile of Bash under Mac OS X.
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LSCOLORS The value of this variable describes what color to use for which attribute when colors are enabled with CLICOLOR. This string is a concatenation of pairs of the format fb, where f is the foreground color and b is the background color. | |
The color designators are as follows: | |
a black | |
b red | |
c green | |
d brown | |
e blue | |
f magenta | |
g cyan | |
h light grey | |
A bold black, usually shows up as dark grey | |
B bold red | |
C bold green | |
D bold brown, usually shows up as yellow | |
E bold blue | |
F bold magenta | |
G bold cyan | |
H bold light grey; looks like bright white | |
x default foreground or background | |
Note that the above are standard ANSI colors. The actual display may differ depending on the color capabilities of the terminal in use. | |
The order of the attributes are as follows: | |
1. directory | |
2. symbolic link | |
3. socket | |
4. pipe | |
5. executable | |
6. block special | |
7. character special | |
8. executable with setuid bit set | |
9. executable with setgid bit set | |
10. directory writable to others, with sticky bit | |
11. directory writable to others, without sticky bit | |
The default is "exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad", i.e. blue fore-ground and default background for regular directories, black foreground and red background for setuid executables, etc. |
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