A modern replacement for ‘ls’.
Go to file
2015-01-28 10:43:19 +00:00
src Implement Git status for directories 2015-01-28 10:43:19 +00:00
.gitignore Upgrade to latest ansi_term 2014-11-26 07:36:09 +00:00
.travis.yml Leverage new Travis support for Rust 2014-11-23 23:50:26 +00:00
Cargo.lock Preliminary Git support! 2015-01-27 15:01:17 +00:00
Cargo.toml Support Git by default 2015-01-27 16:03:26 +00:00
LICENCE Update LICENCE 2014-07-02 22:07:09 +01:00
README.md Support Git by default 2015-01-27 16:03:26 +00:00
screenshot.png Use brighter colours in screenshot 2014-12-18 07:16:27 +00:00

exa Build status

exa is a replacement for ls written in Rust.

Screenshot

Screenshot of exa

Options

  • -1, --oneline: display one entry per line
  • -a, --all: show dot files
  • -b, --binary: use binary (power of two) file sizes
  • -B, --bytes: list file sizes in bytes, without prefixes
  • -d, --list-dirs: list directories as regular files
  • -g, --group: show group as well as user
  • -h, --header: show a header row
  • -H, --links: show number of hard links column
  • -i, --inode: show inode number column
  • -l, --long: display extended details and attributes
  • -r, --reverse: reverse sort order
  • -s, --sort=(field): field to sort by
  • -S, --blocks: show number of file system blocks
  • -x, --across: sort multi-column view entries across

You can sort by name, size, ext, inode, or none.

Installation

exa is written in Rust. You'll have to use the nightly -- I try to keep it up to date with the latest version when possible. Once you have it set up, a simple cargo build will pull in all the dependencies and compile exa.

exa depends on libgit2 for certain features. If you're unable to compile libgit2, you can opt out of Git support by passing --no-default-features to Cargo.