.hy .TH "exa" "1" "2019\-07\-15" "exa 0.9.0" "" .SH NAME .PP exa \- a modern replacement for ls .SH SYNOPSIS .PP exa [\f[I]options\f[]] [\f[I]files\f[]]... .SH DESCRIPTION .PP \f[C]exa\f[] is a modern replacement for \f[C]ls\f[]. It uses colours for information by default, helping you distinguish between many types of files, such as whether you are the owner, or in the owning group. It also has extra features not present in the original \f[C]ls\f[], such as viewing the Git status for a directory, or recursing into directories with a tree view. .SH DISPLAY OPTIONS .TP .B \-1, \-\-oneline display one entry per line .RS .RE .TP .B \-G, \-\-grid display entries as a grid (default) .RS .RE .TP .B \-l, \-\-long display extended file metadata as a table .RS .RE .TP .B \-x, \-\-across sort the grid across, rather than downwards .RS .RE .TP .B \-R, \-\-recurse recurse into directories .RS .RE .TP .B \-T, \-\-tree recurse into directories as a tree .RS .RE .TP .B \-F, \-\-classify display type indicator by file names .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-color, \-\-colour=\f[I]WHEN\f[] when to use terminal colours (always, automatic, never) .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-color-scale, \-\-colour-scale highlight levels of file sizes distinctly .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-icons display icons .RS .RE .SH FILTERING AND SORTING OPTIONS .TP .B \-a, \-\-all show hidden and \[aq]dot\[aq] files. Use this twice to also show the \f[C].\f[] and \f[C]..\f[] directories. .RS .RE .TP .B \-d, \-\-list\-dirs list directories like regular files .RS .RE .TP .B \-L, \-\-level=\f[I]DEPTH\f[] limit the depth of recursion .RS .RE .TP .B \-r, \-\-reverse reverse the sort order .RS .RE .TP .B \-s, \-\-sort=\f[I]SORT_FIELD\f[] which field to sort by. Valid fields are name, Name, extension, Extension, size, modified, changed, accessed, created, inode, type, and none. The modified field has the aliases date, time, and newest, and its reverse order has the aliases age and oldest. Fields starting with a capital letter will sort uppercase before lowercase: 'A' then 'B' then 'a' then 'b'. Fields starting with a lowercase letter will mix them: 'A' then 'a' then 'B' then 'b'. .RS .RE .TP .B \-I, \-\-ignore\-glob=\f[I]GLOBS\f[] Glob patterns, pipe-separated, of files to ignore .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-git\-ignore ignore files mentioned in '.gitignore' .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-group\-directories\-first list directories before other files .RS .RE .TP .B \-D, \-\-only\-dirs list only directories .RS .RE .SH LONG VIEW OPTIONS .PP These options are available when running with \f[C]\-\-long\f[] (\f[C]\-l\f[]): .TP .B \-b, \-\-binary list file sizes with binary prefixes .RS .RE .TP .B \-B, \-\-bytes list file sizes in bytes, without any prefixes .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-changed use the changed timestamp field .RS .RE .TP .B \-g, \-\-group list each file\[aq]s group .RS .RE .TP .B \-h, \-\-header add a header row to each column .RS .RE .TP .B \-H, \-\-links list each file\[aq]s number of hard links .RS .RE .TP .B \-i, \-\-inode list each file\[aq]s inode number .RS .RE .TP .B \-m, \-\-modified use the modified timestamp field .RS .RE .TP .B \-S, \-\-blocks list each file\[aq]s number of file system blocks .RS .RE .TP .B \-t, \-\-time=\f[I]WORD\f[] which timestamp field to list (modified, changed, accessed, created) .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-time\-style=\f[I]STYLE\f[] how to format timestamps (default, iso, long-iso, full-iso) .RS .RE .TP .B \-u, \-\-accessed use the accessed timestamp field .RS .RE .TP .B \-U, \-\-created use the created timestamp field .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-no\-permissions suppress the permissions field .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-no\-filesize suppress the filesize field .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-no\-user suppress the user field .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-no\-time suppress the time field .RS .RE .TP .B \-\@, \-\-extended list each file\[aq]s extended attributes and sizes .RS .RE .TP .B \-\-git list each file\[aq]s Git status, if tracked .RS .RE .SH EXAMPLES .PP To display a list of files, with the largest at the top: .IP .nf \f[C] exa\ \-\-reverse\ \-\-sort=size \f[] .fi .PP To display a tree of files, three levels deep: .IP .nf \f[C] exa\ \-\-long\ \-\-tree\ \-\-level=3 \f[] .fi .SH ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES .PP exa responds to the following environment variables: .SS \f[C]COLUMNS\f[] .PP Overrides the width of the terminal, in characters. For example, \f[C]COLUMNS=80\ exa\f[] will show a grid view with a maximum width of 80 characters. .PP This option won\[aq]t do anything when exa\[aq]s output doesn\[aq]t wrap, such as when using the \f[C]\-\-long\f[] view. .SS \f[C]EXA_STRICT\f[] .PP Enables \f[I]strict mode\f[], which will make exa error when two command\-line options are incompatible. Usually, options can override each other going right\-to\-left on the command line, so that exa can be given aliases: creating an alias \f[C]exa=exa\ \-\-sort=ext\f[] then running \f[C]exa\ \-\-sort=size\f[] with that alias will run \f[C]exa\ \-\-sort=ext\ \-\-sort=size\f[], and the sorting specified by the user will override the sorting specified by the alias. In strict mode, the two options will not co\-operate, and exa will error. .PP This option is intended for use with automated scripts and other situations where you want to be \f[I]certain\f[] you\[aq]re typing in the right command. .SS \f[C]EXA_GRID_ROWS\f[] .PP Limits the grid\-details view (\f[C]exa\ \-\-grid\ \-\-long\f[]) so it\[aq]s only activated when at least the given number of rows of output would be generated. With widescreen displays, it\[aq]s possible for the grid to look very wide and sparse, on just one or two lines with none of the columns lining up. By specifying a minimum number of rows, you can only use the view if it\[aq]s going to be worth using. .SS \f[C]LS_COLORS\f[] and \f[C]EXA_COLORS\f[] .PP The \f[C]EXA_COLORS\f[] variable is the traditional way of customising the colours used by \f[C]ls\f[]. .PP You can use the \f[C]dircolors\f[] program to generate a script that sets the variable from an input file, or if you don\[aq]t mind editing long strings of text, you can just type it out directly. These variables have the following structure: .IP \[bu] 2 A list of key\-value pairs separated by \f[C]=\f[], such as \f[C]*.txt=32\f[]. .IP \[bu] 2 Multiple ANSI formatting codes are separated by \f[C];\f[], such as \f[C]*.txt=32;1;4\f[]. .IP \[bu] 2 Finally, multiple pairs are separated by \f[C]:\f[], such as \f[C]*.txt=32:*.mp3=1;35\f[]. .PP The key half of the pair can either be a two\-letter code or a file glob, and anything that\[aq]s not a valid code will be treated as a glob, including keys that happen to be two letters long. .PP \f[C]LS_COLORS\f[] can use these ten codes: .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]di\f[], directories .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ex\f[], executable files .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]fi\f[], regular files .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]pi\f[], named pipes .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]so\f[], sockets .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]bd\f[], block devices .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]cd\f[], character devices .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ln\f[], symlinks .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]or\f[], symlinks with no target .PP \f[C]EXA_COLORS\f[] can use many more: .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ur\f[], the user\-read permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]uw\f[], the user\-write permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ux\f[], the user\-execute permission bit for regular files .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ue\f[], the user\-execute for other file kinds .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gr\f[], the group\-read permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gw\f[], the group\-write permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gx\f[], the group\-execute permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]tr\f[], the others\-read permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]tw\f[], the others\-write permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]tx\f[], the others\-execute permission bit .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]su\f[], setuid, setgid, and sticky permission bits for files .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]sf\f[], setuid, setgid, and sticky for other file kinds .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]xa\f[], the extended attribute indicator .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]sn\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size (sets nb, nk, nm, ng and nh) .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]nb\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size if it is lower than 1 KB/Kib .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]nk\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 KB/KiB and 1 MB/MiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]nm\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 MB/MiB and 1 GB/GiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ng\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 GB/GiB and 1 TB/TiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]nt\f[], the numbers of a file\[aq]s size if it is 1 TB/TiB or higher .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]sb\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size (sets ub, uk, um, ug and uh) .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ub\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size if it is lower than 1 KB/Kib .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]uk\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 KB/KiB and 1 MB/MiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]um\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 MB/MiB and 1 GB/GiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ug\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size if it is between 1 GB/GiB and 1 TB/TiB .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ut\f[], the units of a file\[aq]s size if it is 1 TB/TiB or higher .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]df\f[], a device\[aq]s major ID .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ds\f[], a device\[aq]s minor ID .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]uu\f[], a user that\[aq]s you .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]un\f[], a user that\[aq]s someone else .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gu\f[], a group that you belong to .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gn\f[], a group you aren\[aq]t a member of .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]lc\f[], a number of hard links .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]lm\f[], a number of hard links for a regular file with at least two .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]ga\f[], a new flag in Git .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gm\f[], a modified flag in Git .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gd\f[], a deleted flag in Git .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gv\f[], a renamed flag in Git .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]gt\f[], a modified metadata flag in Git .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]xx\f[], "punctuation", including many background UI elements .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]da\f[], a file\[aq]s date .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]in\f[], a file\[aq]s inode number .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]bl\f[], a file\[aq]s number of blocks .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]hd\f[], the header row of a table .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]lp\f[], the path of a symlink .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]cc\f[], an escaped character in a filename .IP \[bu] 2 \f[B]bO\f[], the overlay style for broken symlink paths .PP Values in \f[C]EXA_COLORS\f[] override those given in \f[C]LS_COLORS\f[], so you don\[aq]t need to re\-write an existing \f[C]LS_COLORS\f[] variable with proprietary extensions. .PP Unlike some versions of \f[C]ls\f[], the given ANSI values must be valid colour codes: exa won\[aq]t just print out whichever characters are given. The codes accepted by exa are: .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]1\f[], for bold .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]4\f[], for underline .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]31\f[], for red text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]32\f[], for green text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]33\f[], for yellow text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]34\f[], for blue text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]35\f[], for purple text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]36\f[], for cyan text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]37\f[], for white text .IP \[bu] 2 \f[C]38;5;\f[]\f[I]\f[C]nnn\f[]\f[], for a colour from 0 to 255 (replace the \f[I]nnn\f[] part) .PP Many terminals will treat bolded text as a different colour, or at least provide the option to. .PP exa 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 exa with \f[C]LS_COLORS="*.zip=32"\f[] will turn zip files green but leave the colours of other compressed files alone. .PP You can also disable this built\-in set entirely by including a \f[C]reset\f[] entry at the beginning of \f[C]EXA_COLORS\f[]. So setting \f[C]EXA_COLORS="reset:*.txt=31"\f[] will highlight only text files; setting \f[C]EXA_COLORS="reset"\f[] will highlight nothing. .SS Examples .IP \[bu] 2 Disable the "current user" highlighting: \f[C]EXA_COLORS="uu=0:gu=0"\f[] .IP \[bu] 2 Turn the date column green: \f[C]EXA_COLORS="da=32"\f[] .IP \[bu] 2 Highlight Vagrantfiles: \f[C]EXA_COLORS="Vagrantfile=1;4;33"\f[] .IP \[bu] 2 Override the existing zip colour: \f[C]EXA_COLORS="*.zip=38;5;125"\f[] .IP \[bu] 2 Markdown files a shade of green, log files a shade of grey: \f[C]EXA_COLORS="*.md=38;5;121:*.log=38;5;248"\f[] .SS BUILT\-IN EXTENSIONS .IP \[bu] 2 "Immediate" files are the files you should look at when downloading and building a project for the first time: READMEs, Makefiles, Cargo.toml, and others. They\[aq]re highlighted in yellow and underlined. .IP \[bu] 2 Images (png, jpeg, gif) are purple. .IP \[bu] 2 Videos (mp4, ogv, m2ts) are a slightly purpler purple. .IP \[bu] 2 Music (mp3, m4a, ogg) is a deeper purple. .IP \[bu] 2 Lossless music (flac, alac, wav) is deeper than \f[I]that\f[] purple. In general, most media files are some shade of purple. .IP \[bu] 2 Cryptographic files (asc, enc, p12) are a faint blue. .IP \[bu] 2 Documents (pdf, doc, dvi) are a less faint blue. .IP \[bu] 2 Compressed files (zip, tgz, Z) are red. .IP \[bu] 2 Temporary files (tmp, swp, ~) are grey. .IP \[bu] 2 Compiled files (class, o, pyc) are faint orange. A file is also counted as compiled if it uses a common extension and is in the same directory as one of its source files: \[aq]styles.css\[aq] will count as compiled when next to \[aq]styles.less\[aq] or \[aq]styles.sass\[aq], and \[aq]scripts.js\[aq] when next to \[aq]scripts.ts\[aq] or \[aq]scripts.coffee\[aq]. .SH AUTHOR .PP \f[C]exa\f[] is maintained by Benjamin \[aq]ogham\[aq] Sago and many other contributors. You can view the full list at .