Re: No coloring with colorls
This method also works! Instead of vt220 I now used xterm-256color. Thank you! Op 30-03-2024 om 11:51 schreef Stuart Henderson: On 2024-03-29, Karel Lucas wrote: What should I put in /etc/ttys, taking into account that I regularly use multiple virtual consoles? And where in that file do I place that? At the beginning or the end? Or somewhere in between? Replace "vt220" with your preferred option on "console" and "ttyC" lines.
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-29, Karel Lucas wrote: > What should I put in /etc/ttys, taking into account that I regularly use > multiple virtual consoles? And where in that file do I place that? At > the beginning or the end? Or somewhere in between? Replace "vt220" with your preferred option on "console" and "ttyC" lines.
Re: No coloring with colorls
What should I put in /etc/ttys, taking into account that I regularly use multiple virtual consoles? And where in that file do I place that? At the beginning or the end? Or somewhere in between? Op 29-03-2024 om 09:15 schreef Stuart Henderson: On 2024-03-28, Karel Lucas wrote: Op 28-03-2024 om 07:51 schreef Stuart Henderson: For the console, use /etc/ttys. For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm). The file /etc/ttys is 22.5kB in size and is full of all kinds of "tty** ...". I don't think this is the right file to use something like that. It seems to me that you are making the system disrupted/unstable by doing so. Those "ttys**..." won't vouch for it for nothing. Yes that is exactly the right file. That is what the file is *for*. It sets the console type for various ways of accessing consoles on the system. The "console" and "ttyC*" lines are the ones you want (the additional ones are for various virtual consoles on ctrl-alt-f2, etc). (The "tty0*" are for serial consoles if you have them.)
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-28, Karel Lucas wrote: > > > Op 28-03-2024 om 07:51 schreef Stuart Henderson: >> For the console, use /etc/ttys. >> >> For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal >> (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm). > > The file /etc/ttys is 22.5kB in size and is full of all kinds of "tty** > ...". I don't think this is the right file to use something like that. > It seems to me that you are making the system disrupted/unstable by > doing so. Those "ttys**..." won't vouch for it for nothing. Yes that is exactly the right file. That is what the file is *for*. It sets the console type for various ways of accessing consoles on the system. The "console" and "ttyC*" lines are the ones you want (the additional ones are for various virtual consoles on ctrl-alt-f2, etc). (The "tty0*" are for serial consoles if you have them.) -- Please keep replies on the mailing list.
Re: No coloring with colorls
Op 28-03-2024 om 07:51 schreef Stuart Henderson: For the console, use /etc/ttys. For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm). The file /etc/ttys is 22.5kB in size and is full of all kinds of "tty** ...". I don't think this is the right file to use something like that. It seems to me that you are making the system disrupted/unstable by doing so. Those "ttys**..." won't vouch for it for nothing.
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-27, Karel Lucas wrote: > What is the correct setting, taking into account the coloring of the > directory listing? For the console, use /etc/ttys. For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm). sheesh. > Op 27-03-2024 om 14:02 schreef Stuart Henderson: >> On 2024-03-27, Karel Lucas wrote: >>> It works correctly! My /etc/profile now looks like this: >>> export TERM=xterm-256color >> That is not working correctly, because you forcibly override the correct >> TERM which is set for things like screen/tmux. >> >> For the console, use /etc/ttys. >> >> For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal >> (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm). >> >> > > -- Please keep replies on the mailing list.
Re: No coloring with colorls
What is the correct setting, taking into account the coloring of the directory listing? Op 27-03-2024 om 14:02 schreef Stuart Henderson: On 2024-03-27, Karel Lucas wrote: It works correctly! My /etc/profile now looks like this: export TERM=xterm-256color That is not working correctly, because you forcibly override the correct TERM which is set for things like screen/tmux. For the console, use /etc/ttys. For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm).
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-27, Karel Lucas wrote: > It works correctly! My /etc/profile now looks like this: > export TERM=xterm-256color That is not working correctly, because you forcibly override the correct TERM which is set for things like screen/tmux. For the console, use /etc/ttys. For an X terminal, use whatever mechanism is correct for that terminal (.Xdefaults XTerm*termName for xterm).
Re: No coloring with colorls
It works correctly! My /etc/profile now looks like this: export TERM=xterm-256color export CLICOLOR=yes export CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes export LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad And with colorls -Ghl I get the output in color. Thank you all very much! Op 25-03-2024 om 23:46 schreef Benjamin Stürz: On 25.03.24 23:40, Karel Lucas wrote: Hi all, After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. Default environment: TERM=vt220 Added environment: CLICOLOR=yes CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad Try CLICOLOR=1 (and TERM=xterm-256color, if it doesn't help).
Re: No coloring with colorls
Hello, I use in my user .profile ~/.profile TERM=wsvt25 export PATH HOME TERM export ENV=$HOME/.kshrc export CLICOLOR=true export LSCOLORS=ExGxcxdxCxegedabagacad and in the .kshrc ~/.kshrc alias ls=/usr/local/bin/colorls For me it´s ok on the console and on X. For me it's a gimmick. Actually always try to stick to base with everything. Hope it´s on topic. Wish you all the best, Heinz Gesendet: Dienstag, 26. März 2024 um 18:50 Uhr Von: "Chris Bennett" An: "Karel Lucas" , misc@openbsd.org Betreff: Re: No coloring with colorls On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 11:40:52PM +0100, Karel Lucas wrote: > Hi all, > > LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad > I just use TERM=xterm If you use a black background (or some other dark colors), you will want to change LSCOLORS to not use a dark blue. I find that color combo unreadable. I just use alias ls='colorls -Gla'. You can either have other aliases or just type colorls with the same arguments as ls to get other options. -- Regards, Chris Bennett "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." George Orwell - 1984
Re: No coloring with colorls
On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 11:40:52PM +0100, Karel Lucas wrote: > Hi all, > > LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad > I just use TERM=xterm If you use a black background (or some other dark colors), you will want to change LSCOLORS to not use a dark blue. I find that color combo unreadable. I just use alias ls='colorls -Gla'. You can either have other aliases or just type colorls with the same arguments as ls to get other options. -- Regards, Chris Bennett "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." George Orwell - 1984
Re: No coloring with colorls
On Mon, Mar 25, 2024 at 07:03:06PM -0400, Amelia A Lewis wrote: > Note that you need a color-capable terminal to enable colorls. This > means you should set your TERM to "wsvt25" on the wscons(4) console For several releases now, you should be able to set TERM to "xterm" even when using wscons. If there are any issues using TERM=xterm in place of vt220, feel free to let me know.
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-25, Karel Lucas wrote: > In which configuration file can I change this? Is 'wsvt25' universally > suitable for use? For X, it's configured in your terminal emulator, e.g. for xterm you can use one of these :in .Xdefaults XTerm*termName: xterm-color XTerm*termName: xterm-256color For text console, /etc/ttys. For current OpenBSD versions (7.1 and on) xterm-color should be a reasonable choice too (for older versions, pccon). -- Please keep replies on the mailing list.
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 2024-03-25, Karel Lucas wrote: > Hi all, > > After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I > still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the > settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to > know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. > > Default environment: > TERM=vt220 This is a monochrome terminal. Perhaps you want xterm-color. > Added environment: > CLICOLOR=yes > CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes > LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad > > -- Please keep replies on the mailing list.
Re: No coloring with colorls
On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 23:40:52 +0100, Karel Lucas wrote: > After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I > still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the > settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like > to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. > > Default environment: > TERM=vt220 $ pkg_info -q colorls ls(1) that can use color to display file attributes This is a simple hack, taken from FreeBSD, to OpenBSD's ls(1) to use ANSI sequences to display file attributes in color. There is a -G flag (somewhat similar to the -F flag). Take a look at the man page for details. The program is called "colorls", so you may want to use an alias such as ls=/usr/local/bin/colorls. Note that you need a color-capable terminal to enable colorls. This means you should set your TERM to "wsvt25" on the wscons(4) console and to "sun-color" when using the Sun console, not "vt220" and "sun", respectively, which are not color-capable in termcap(5). Maintainer: Christian Weisgerber Amy! -- Amelia A. Lewisamyzing {at} talsever.com Light is the left hand of darkness and darkness the right hand of light. Two are one, life and death, lying together like lovers in kemmer, like hands joined together, like the end and the way. -- Tormer's Lay [Ursula K. Le Guin, "The Left Hand of Darkness"]
Re: No coloring with colorls
Dear Benjamin, In which configuration file can I change TERM? Op 25-03-2024 om 23:46 schreef Benjamin Stürz: On 25.03.24 23:40, Karel Lucas wrote: Hi all, After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. Default environment: TERM=vt220 Added environment: CLICOLOR=yes CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad Try CLICOLOR=1 (and TERM=xterm-256color, if it doesn't help).
Re: No coloring with colorls
Dear Amelia, In which configuration file can I change this? Is 'wsvt25' universally suitable for use? Op 26-03-2024 om 00:03 schreef Amelia A Lewis: On Mon, 25 Mar 2024 23:40:52 +0100, Karel Lucas wrote: After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. Default environment: TERM=vt220 $ pkg_info -q colorls ls(1) that can use color to display file attributes This is a simple hack, taken from FreeBSD, to OpenBSD's ls(1) to use ANSI sequences to display file attributes in color. There is a -G flag (somewhat similar to the -F flag). Take a look at the man page for details. The program is called "colorls", so you may want to use an alias such as ls=/usr/local/bin/colorls. Note that you need a color-capable terminal to enable colorls. This means you should set your TERM to "wsvt25" on the wscons(4) console and to "sun-color" when using the Sun console, not "vt220" and "sun", respectively, which are not color-capable in termcap(5). Maintainer: Christian Weisgerber Amy!
Re: No coloring with colorls
On 25.03.24 23:40, Karel Lucas wrote: Hi all, After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. Default environment: TERM=vt220 Added environment: CLICOLOR=yes CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad Try CLICOLOR=1 (and TERM=xterm-256color, if it doesn't help).
No coloring with colorls
Hi all, After installing colorls and making some adjustments to the system, I still have no colored output from colorls. Below I have indicated the settings that have been made or are present by default. I would like to know what is wrong and what needs to be improved. Default environment: TERM=vt220 Added environment: CLICOLOR=yes CLICOLOR_FORCE=yes LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad