-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
.dircolors-16
127 lines (127 loc) · 2.86 KB
/
.dircolors-16
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
# vim: ft=dircolors
# Configuration file for dircolors, a utility to help you set the
# LS_COLORS environment variable used by GNU ls with the --color option.
# The keywords COLOR, OPTIONS, and EIGHTBIT (honored by the
# slackware version of dircolors) are recognized but ignored.
# Below, there should be one TERM entry for each termtype that is colorizable
TERM linux
TERM linux-c
TERM mach-color
TERM console
TERM con132x25
TERM con132x30
TERM con132x43
TERM con132x60
TERM con80x25
TERM con80x28
TERM con80x30
TERM con80x43
TERM con80x50
TERM con80x60
TERM cygwin
TERM dtterm
TERM gnome
TERM gnome-256color
TERM konsole
TERM konsole-16color
TERM knosole-256color
TERM mlterm
TERM putty
TERM putty-256color
TERM xterm
TERM xterm-color
TERM xterm-debian
TERM xterm-16color
TERM xterm-256color
TERM rxvt
TERM rxvt-unicode
TERM screen
TERM screen-bce
TERM screen-w
TERM screen-16color
TERM screen-16color-bce
TERM screen-256color
TERM screen-256color-bce
TERM vt100
TERM Eterm
# Below are the color init strings for the basic file types. A color init
# string consists of one or more of the following numeric codes:
# Attribute codes:
# 00=none 01=bold 04=underscore 05=blink 07=reverse 08=concealed
# Text color codes:
# 30=black 31=red 32=green 33=yellow 34=blue 35=magenta 36=cyan 37=white
# Background color codes:
# 40=black 41=red 42=green 43=yellow 44=blue 45=magenta 46=cyan 47=white
NORMAL 00 # global default, although everything should be something.
FILE 00 # normal file
DIR 94 # directory
LINK 96 # symbolic link. (If you set this to 'target' instead of a
# numerical value, the color is as for the file pointed to.)
FIFO 40;33 # pipe
SOCK 95 # socket
DOOR 95 # door
BLK 40;93 # block device driver
CHR 40;93 # character device driver
ORPHAN 40;91 # symlink to nonexistent file
SETUID 37;41 # file that is setuid (u+s)
SETGID 30;43 # file that is setgid (g+s)
STICKY_OTHER_WRITABLE 30;42 # dir that is sticky and other-writable (+t,o+w)
OTHER_WRITABLE 34;42 # dir that is other-writable (o+w) and not sticky
STICKY 37;44 # dir with the sticky bit set (+t) and not other-writable
# This is for files with execute permission:
EXEC 92
# List any file extensions like '.gz' or '.tar' that you would like ls
# to colorize below. Put the extension, a space, and the color init string.
# (and any comments you want to add after a '#')
# If you use DOS-style suffixes, you may want to uncomment the following:
# executables (bright green)
#.cmd 92
#.exe 92
#.com 92
#.btm 92
#.bat 92
# archives or compressed (bright red)
.tar 91
.tgz 91
.arj 91
.taz 91
.lzh 91
.zip 91
.xpi 91
.z 91
.Z 91
.gz 91
.bz2 91
.deb 91
.rpm 91
.jar 91
# image formats (bright magenta)
.jpg 95
.jpeg 95
.gif 95
.bmp 95
.pbm 95
.pgm 95
.ppm 95
.tga 95
.xbm 95
.xpm 95
.tif 95
.tiff 95
.png 95
.apng 95
.mov 95
.mpg 95
.mpeg 95
.avi 95
.fli 95
.gl 95
.dl 95
.xcf 95
.xwd 95
# audio formats (bright magenta)
.flac 95
.mp3 95
.mpc 95
.ogg 95
.wav 95