fish-shell/share/functions/ls.fish
Fabian Homborg a633889244 ls: Ignore ruby colorls
Apart from OpenBSD's "colorls" that is basically an ls that can do
color, there's also a ruby tool called "colorls" that's closer to exa.

Ignore that one since the options it understands are quite different
and I'm betting it's slower (given my experience with ruby tools).

See #8042.
2021-06-03 09:54:20 +02:00

57 lines
2.3 KiB
Fish

function __fish_set_lscolors --description 'Set $LS_COLORS if possible'
if ! set -qx LS_COLORS && set -l cmd (command -s {g,}dircolors)[1]
set -l colorfile
for file in ~/.dir_colors ~/.dircolors /etc/DIR_COLORS
if test -f $file
set colorfile $file
break
end
end
# Here we rely on the legacy behavior of `dircolors -c` producing output
# suitable for csh in order to extract just the data we're interested in.
set -gx LS_COLORS ($cmd -c $colorfile | string split ' ')[3]
# The value should always be quoted but be conservative and check first.
if string match -qr '^([\'"]).*\1$' -- $LS_COLORS
set LS_COLORS (string match -r '^.(.*).$' $LS_COLORS)[2]
end
end
end
function ls --description "List contents of directory"
# Make ls use colors and show indicators if we are on a system that supports that feature and writing to stdout.
#
# BSD, macOS and others support colors with ls -G.
# GNU ls and FreeBSD ls takes --color=auto. Order of this test is important because ls also takes -G but it has a different meaning.
# Solaris 11's ls command takes a --color flag.
# OpenBSD requires the separate colorls program for color support.
# Also test -F because we'll want to define this function even with an ls that can't do colors (like NetBSD).
if not set -q __fish_ls_color_opt
set -g __fish_ls_color_opt
set -g __fish_ls_command ls
# OpenBSD ships a command called "colorls" that takes "-G" and "-F",
# but there's also a ruby implementation that doesn't understand "-F".
# Since that one's quite different, don't use it.
if command -sq colorls
and command colorls -GF >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
set -g __fish_ls_color_opt -GF
set -g __fish_ls_command colorls
else
for opt in --color=auto -G --color -F
if command ls $opt / >/dev/null 2>/dev/null
set -g __fish_ls_color_opt $opt
break
end
end
end
end
# Set the colors to the default via `dircolors` if none is given.
__fish_set_lscolors
isatty stdout
and set -a opt -F
command $__fish_ls_command $__fish_ls_color_opt $argv
end