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NAMEterminal-colors.d - configure output colorization for various utilities SYNOPSIS/etc/terminal-colors.d/[[name][@term].][type] DESCRIPTIONFiles in this directory determine the default behavior for utilities when coloring output. The name is a utility name. The name is optional and when none is specified then the file is used for all unspecified utilities. The term is a terminal identifier (the TERM environment variable). The terminal identifier is optional and when none is specified then the file is used for all unspecified terminals. The type is a file type. Supported file types are: disable Turns off output colorization for all compatible
utilities. See also the NO_COLOR environment variable below.
enable Turns on output colorization; any matching disable
files are ignored.
scheme Specifies colors used for output. The file format may be
specific to the utility, the default format is described below.
If there are more files that match for a utility, then the file with the more specific filename wins. For example, the filename "@xterm.scheme" has less priority than "dmesg@xterm.scheme". The lowest priority are those files without a utility name and terminal identifier (e.g., "disable"). The user-specific $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/terminal-colors.d or $HOME/.config/terminal-colors.d overrides the global setting. DEFAULT SCHEME FILES FORMATThe following statement is recognized: name color-sequence
The name is a logical name of color sequence (for example "error"). The names are specific to the utilities. For more details always see the COLORS section in the man page for the utility. The color-sequence is a color name, ASCII color sequences or escape sequences. Color namesblack, blink, blue, bold, brown, cyan, darkgray, gray, green, halfbright, lightblue, lightcyan, lightgray, lightgreen, lightmagenta, lightred, magenta, red, reset, reverse, and yellow. ANSI color sequencesThe color sequences are composed of sequences of numbers separated by semicolons. The most common codes are:
Escape sequencesTo specify control or blank characters in the color sequences, C-style \-escaped notation can be used:
Please note that escapes are necessary to enter a space, backslash, caret, or any control character anywhere in the string, as well as a hash mark as the first character. For example, to use a red background for alert messages in the output of dmesg(1), use: echo 'alert 37;41' >>
/etc/terminal-colors.d/dmesg.scheme
CommentsLines where the first non-blank character is a # (hash) are ignored. Any other use of the hash character is not interpreted as introducing a comment. ENVIRONMENTTERMINAL_COLORS_DEBUG=all enables debug output.
NO_COLOR if defined, this disables output colorization unless
explicitly enabled by a command-line option. See
<https://no-color.org/> for more details. Supported since util-linux
version 2.41.
FILES$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/terminal-colors.d $HOME/.config/terminal-colors.d /etc/terminal-colors.d EXAMPLEDisable colors for all compatible utilities: touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/disable
Disable colors for all compatible utils on a vt100 terminal: touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/@vt100.disable
Disable colors for all compatible utils except dmesg(1): touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/disable touch /etc/terminal-colors.d/dmesg.enable
COMPATIBILITYThe terminal-colors.d functionality is currently supported by all util-linux utilities which provides colorized output. For more details always see the COLORS section in the man page for the utility. REPORTING BUGSFor bug reports, use the issue tracker <https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues>. AVAILABILITYterminal-colors.d is part of the util-linux package which can be downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>.
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