fzf/ADVANCED.md
Junegunn Choi f6c621ef1b
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Advanced fzf examples

(Last update: 2021/04/09)

Introduction

fzf is an interactive Unix filter program that is designed to be used with other Unix tools. It reads a list of items from the standard input, allows you to select a subset of the items, and prints the selected ones to the standard output. You can think of it as an interactive version of grep, and it's already useful even if you don't know any of its options.

# 1. ps:   Feed the list of processes to fzf
# 2. fzf:  Interactively select a process using fuzzy matching algorithm
# 3. awk:  Take the PID from the selected line
# 3. kill: Kill the process with the PID
ps -ef | fzf | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9

While the above example succinctly summarizes the fundamental concept of fzf, you can build much more sophisticated interactive workflows using fzf once you learn its wide variety of features.

  • To see the full list of options and features, see man fzf
  • To see the latest additions, see CHANGELOG.md

This document will guide you through some examples that will familiarize you with the advanced features of fzf.

Screen Layout

--height

fzf by default opens in fullscreen mode, but it's not always desirable. Oftentimes, you want to see the current context of the terminal while using fzf. --height is an option for opening fzf below the cursor in non-fullscreen mode so you can still see the previous commands and their results above it.

fzf --height=40%

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You might also want to experiment with other layout options such as --layout=reverse, --info=inline, --border, --margin, etc.

fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1
fzf --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1

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(See Layout section of the man page to see the full list of options)

But you definitely don't want to repeat --height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1 every time you use fzf. You could write a wrapper script or shell alias, but there is an easier option. Define $FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS like so:

export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="--height=40% --layout=reverse --info=inline --border --margin=1 --padding=1"

fzf-tmux

Before fzf had --height option, we would open fzf in a tmux split pane not to take up the whole screen. This is done using fzf-tmux script.

# Open fzf on a tmux split pane below the current pane.
# Takes the same set of options.
fzf-tmux --layout=reverse

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The limitation of fzf-tmux is that it only works when you're on tmux unlike --height option. But the advantage of it is that it's more flexible. (See man fzf-tmux for available options.)

# On the right (50%)
fzf-tmux -r

# On the left (30%)
fzf-tmux -l30%

# Above the cursor
fzf-tmux -u30%

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Popup window support

But here's the really cool part; tmux 3.2 (stable version is not yet released as of now) supports popup windows. So if you have tmux built from the latest source, you can open fzf in a popup window, which is quite useful if you frequently use split panes.

# Open tmux in a tmux popup window (default size: 50% of the screen)
fzf-tmux -p

# 80% width, 60% height
fzf-tmux -p 80%,60%

image

You might also want to check out my tmux plugins which support this popup window layout.

Dynamic reloading of the list

fzf can dynamically update the candidate list using an arbitrary program with reload bindings (The design document for reload can be found here).

Updating the list of processes by pressing CTRL-R

This example shows how you can set up a binding for dynamically updating the list without restarting fzf.

(date; ps -ef) |
  fzf --bind='ctrl-r:reload(date; ps -ef)' \
      --header=$'Press CTRL-R to reload\n\n' --header-lines=2 \
      --preview='echo {}' --preview-window=down,3,wrap \
      --layout=reverse --height=80% | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9

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  • The initial command is (date; ps -ef). It prints the current date and time, and the list of the processes.
  • With --header option, you can show any message as the fixed header.
  • To disallow selecting the first two lines (date and ps header), we use --header-lines=2 option.
  • --bind='ctrl-r:reload(date; ps -ef)' binds CTRL-R to reload action that runs date; ps -ef, so we can update the list of the processes by pressing CTRL-R.
  • We use simple echo {} preview option, so we can see the entire line on the preview window below even if it's too long

Toggling between data sources

You're not limiited to just one reload binding. Set up multiple bindings so you can switch between data sources.

find * | fzf --prompt 'All> ' \
             --header 'CTRL-D: Directories / CTRL-F: Files' \
             --bind 'ctrl-d:change-prompt(Directories> )+reload(find * -type d)' \
             --bind 'ctrl-f:change-prompt(Files> )+reload(find * -type f)'

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Ripgrep integration

Using fzf as the secondary filter

fzf is pretty fast for filtering a list that you will rarely have to think about its performance. But it is not the right tool for searching for text inside many large files, and in that case you should definitely use something like Ripgrep.

In the next example, Ripgrep is the primary filter that searches for the given text in files, and fzf is used as the secondary fuzzy filter that adds interactivity to the workflow. And we use bat to show the matching line in the preview window.

This is a bash script and it will not run as expected on other non-compliant shells. To avoid the compatibility issue, let's save this snippet as a script file called rfv.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# 1. Search for text in files using Ripgrep
# 2. Interactively narrow down the list using fzf
# 3. Open the file in Vim
IFS=: read -ra selected < <(
  rg --color=always --line-number --no-heading --smart-case "${*:-}" |
    fzf --ansi \
        --color "hl:-1:underline,hl+:-1:underline:reverse" \
        --delimiter : \
        --preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
        --preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3'
)
[ -n "${selected[0]}" ] && vim "${selected[0]}" "+${selected[1]}"

And run it with an initial query string.

# Make the script executable
chmod +x rfv

# Run it with the initial query "algo"
./rfv algo

Ripgrep will perform the initial search and list all the lines that contain algo. Then we further narrow down the list on fzf.

image

I know it's a lot to digest, let's try to break down the code.

  • Ripgrep prints the matching lines in the following format
    man/man1/fzf.1:54:.BI "--algo=" TYPE
    man/man1/fzf.1:55:Fuzzy matching algorithm (default: v2)
    man/man1/fzf.1:58:.BR v2 "     Optimal scoring algorithm (quality)"
    src/pattern_test.go:7:  "github.com/junegunn/fzf/src/algo"
    
    The first token delimited by : is the file path, and the second token is the line number of the matching line. They respectively correspond to {1} and {2} in the preview command.
    • --preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}'
  • As we run rg with --color=always option, we should tell fzf to parse ANSI color codes in the input by setting --ansi.
  • We customize how fzf colors various text elements using --color option. -1 tells fzf to keep the original color from the input. See man fzf for available color options.
  • The value of --preview-window option consists of 5 components delimited by ,
    1. up — Position of the preview window
    2. 60% — Size of the preview window
    3. border-bottom — Preview window border only on the bottom side
    4. +{2}+3/3 — Scroll offset of the preview contents
    5. ~3 — Fixed header
  • Let's break down the latter two. We want to display the bat output in the preview window with a certain scroll offset so that the matching line is positioned near the center of the preview window.
    • +{2} — The base offset is extracted from the second token
    • +3 — We add 3 lines to the base offset to compensate for the header part of bat output
      • ───────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
               │ File: CHANGELOG.md
        ───────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
           1   │ CHANGELOG
           2   │ =========
           3   │
           4   │ 0.26.0
           5   │ ------
        
    • /3 adjusts the offset so that the matching line is shown at a third position in the window
    • ~3 makes the top three lines fixed header so that they are always visible regardless of the scroll offset
  • Once we selected a line, we open the file with vim (vim "${selected[0]}") and move the cursor to the line (+${selected[1]}).

Using fzf as interative Ripgrep launcher

We have learned that we can bind reload action to a key (e.g. --bind=ctrl-r:execute(ps -ef)). In the next example, we are going to bind reload action to change event so that whenever the user changes the query string on fzf, reload action is triggered.

Here is a variation of the above rfv script. fzf will restart Ripgrep every time the user updates the query string on fzf. Searching and filtering is completely done by Ripgrep, and fzf merely provides the interactive interface. So we lose the "fuzziness", but the performance will be better on larger projects, and it will free up memory as you narrow down the results.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

# 1. Search for text in files using Ripgrep
# 2. Interactively restart Ripgrep with reload action
# 3. Open the file in Vim
RG_PREFIX="rg --column --line-number --no-heading --color=always --smart-case "
INITIAL_QUERY="${*:-}"
IFS=: read -ra selected < <(
  FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND="$RG_PREFIX $(printf %q "$INITIAL_QUERY")" \
  fzf --ansi \
      --disabled --query "$INITIAL_QUERY" \
      --bind "change:reload:sleep 0.1; $RG_PREFIX {q} || true" \
      --delimiter : \
      --preview 'bat --color=always {1} --highlight-line {2}' \
      --preview-window 'up,60%,border-bottom,+{2}+3/3,~3'
)
[ -n "${selected[0]}" ] && vim "${selected[0]}" "+${selected[1]}"

image

  • Instead of starting fzf in rg ... | fzf form, we start fzf without an explicit input, but with a custom FZF_DEFAULT_COMMAND variable. This way fzf can kill the initial Ripgrep process it starts with the initial query. Otherwise, the initial Ripgrep process will keep consuming system resources even after reload is triggered.
  • Filtering is no longer a responsibitiliy of fzf; hence --disabled
  • {q} in the reload command evaluates to the query string on fzf prompt.
  • sleep 0.1 in the reload command is for "debouncing". This small delay will reduce the number of intermediate Ripgrep processes while we're typing in a query.

Log tailing

fzf can run long-running preview commands and render partial results before completion. And when you specify follow flag in --preview-window option, fzf will "tail -f" the result, automatically scrolling to the bottom.

# With "follow", preview window will automatically scroll to the bottom.
# "\033[2J" is an ANSI escape sequence for clearing the screen.
# When fzf reads this code it clears the previous preview contents.
fzf --preview-window follow --preview 'for i in $(seq 100000); do
  echo "$i"
  sleep 0.01
  (( i % 300 == 0 )) && printf "\033[2J"
done'

image

Admittedly, that was a silly example. Here's a practical one for browsing Kubernetes pods.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

read -ra tokens < <(
  kubectl get pods --all-namespaces |
    fzf --info=inline --layout=reverse --header-lines=1 --border \
        --prompt "$(kubectl config current-context | sed 's/-context$//')> " \
        --header $'Press CTRL-O to open log in editor\n\n' \
        --bind ctrl-/:toggle-preview \
        --bind 'ctrl-o:execute:${EDITOR:-vim} <(kubectl logs --namespace {1} {2}) > /dev/tty' \
        --preview-window up,follow \
        --preview 'kubectl logs --follow --tail=100000 --namespace {1} {2}' "$@"
)
[ ${#tokens} -gt 1 ] &&
  kubectl exec -it --namespace "${tokens[0]}" "${tokens[1]}" -- bash

image

  • The preview window will "log tail" the pod
    • Holding on to a large amount of log will consume a lot of memory. So we limited the initial log amount with --tail=100000.
  • With execute binding, you can press CTRL-O to open the log in your editor without leaving fzf
  • Select a pod (with an enter key) to kubectl exec into it

Key bindings for git objects

I have blogged about my fzf+git key bindings a few years ago. I'm going to show them here again, because they are seriously useful.

Files listed in git status

CTRL-GCTRL-F

image

Branches

CTRL-GCTRL-B

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Commit hashes

CTRL-GCTRL-H

image

The full source code can be found here.

Color themes

You can customize how fzf colors the text elements with --color option. Here are a few color themes. Note that you need a terminal emulator that can display 24-bit colors.

# junegunn/seoul256.vim (dark)
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3F3F3F,bg:#4B4B4B,border:#6B6B6B,spinner:#98BC99,hl:#719872,fg:#D9D9D9,header:#719872,info:#BDBB72,pointer:#E12672,marker:#E17899,fg+:#D9D9D9,preview-bg:#3F3F3F,prompt:#98BEDE,hl+:#98BC99'

seoul256

# junegunn/seoul256.vim (light)
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#D9D9D9,bg:#E1E1E1,border:#C8C8C8,spinner:#719899,hl:#719872,fg:#616161,header:#719872,info:#727100,pointer:#E12672,marker:#E17899,fg+:#616161,preview-bg:#D9D9D9,prompt:#0099BD,hl+:#719899'

seoul256-light

# morhetz/gruvbox
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3c3836,bg:#32302f,spinner:#fb4934,hl:#928374,fg:#ebdbb2,header:#928374,info:#8ec07c,pointer:#fb4934,marker:#fb4934,fg+:#ebdbb2,prompt:#fb4934,hl+:#fb4934'

gruvbox

# arcticicestudio/nord-vim
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#3B4252,bg:#2E3440,spinner:#81A1C1,hl:#616E88,fg:#D8DEE9,header:#616E88,info:#81A1C1,pointer:#81A1C1,marker:#81A1C1,fg+:#D8DEE9,prompt:#81A1C1,hl+:#81A1C1'

nord

# tomasr/molokai
export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS='--color=bg+:#293739,bg:#1B1D1E,border:#808080,spinner:#E6DB74,hl:#7E8E91,fg:#F8F8F2,header:#7E8E91,info:#A6E22E,pointer:#A6E22E,marker:#F92672,fg+:#F8F8F2,prompt:#F92672,hl+:#F92672'

molokai

Generating fzf color theme from Vim color schemes

The Vim plugin of fzf can generate --color option from the current color scheme according to g:fzf_colors variable. You can find the detailed explanation here.

Here is an example. Add this to your Vim configuration file.

let g:fzf_colors =
\ { 'fg':         ['fg', 'Normal'],
  \ 'bg':         ['bg', 'Normal'],
  \ 'preview-bg': ['bg', 'NormalFloat'],
  \ 'hl':         ['fg', 'Comment'],
  \ 'fg+':        ['fg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn', 'Normal'],
  \ 'bg+':        ['bg', 'CursorLine', 'CursorColumn'],
  \ 'hl+':        ['fg', 'Statement'],
  \ 'info':       ['fg', 'PreProc'],
  \ 'border':     ['fg', 'Ignore'],
  \ 'prompt':     ['fg', 'Conditional'],
  \ 'pointer':    ['fg', 'Exception'],
  \ 'marker':     ['fg', 'Keyword'],
  \ 'spinner':    ['fg', 'Label'],
  \ 'header':     ['fg', 'Comment'] }

Then you can see how the --color option is generated by printing the result of fzf#wrap().

:echo fzf#wrap()

Use this command to append export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="..." line to the end of the current file.

:call append('$', printf('export FZF_DEFAULT_OPTS="%s"', matchstr(fzf#wrap().options, "--color[^']*")))