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feat(theme-and-appearance): allow disabling gnu-ls in bsd
To disable gnu-ls (`gls`) even if it's installed in freeBSD and macOS you can set it up with: ```zsh zstyle ':omz:lib:theme-and-appearance' gnu-ls no ``` Closes #11647
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2 changed files with 30 additions and 19 deletions
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README.md
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README.md
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@ -40,6 +40,7 @@ To learn more, visit [ohmyz.sh](https://ohmyz.sh), follow [@ohmyzsh](https://twi
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- [Manual Installation](#manual-installation)
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- [Installation Problems](#installation-problems)
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- [Custom Plugins and Themes](#custom-plugins-and-themes)
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- [Disable GNU ls in macOS and freeBSD systems](#disable-gnu-ls)
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- [Skip aliases](#skip-aliases)
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- [Getting Updates](#getting-updates)
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- [Updates verbosity](#updates-verbosity)
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@ -278,6 +279,18 @@ If you have many functions that go well together, you can put them as a `XYZ.plu
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If you would like to override the functionality of a plugin distributed with Oh My Zsh, create a plugin of the same name in the `custom/plugins/` directory and it will be loaded instead of the one in `plugins/`.
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### Disable GNU ls in macOS and freeBSD systems
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<a name="disable-gnu-ls"></a>
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The default behaviour in Oh My Zsh is to use GNU `ls` even in macOS and freeBSD systems if it's installed (as
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`gls` command) when enabling colorized `ls` in `lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh`. If you want to disable this
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behaviour you can use zstyle-based config before sourcing `oh-my-zsh.sh`:
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```zsh
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zstyle ':omz:lib:theme-and-appearance' gnu-ls no
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```
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### Skip aliases
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<a name="remove-directories-aliases"></a>
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@ -20,10 +20,25 @@ if command diff --color /dev/null{,} &>/dev/null; then
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}
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fi
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# Don't set ls coloring if disabled
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[[ "$DISABLE_LS_COLORS" != true ]] || return 0
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# Default coloring for BSD-based ls
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export LSCOLORS="Gxfxcxdxbxegedabagacad"
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# Default coloring for GNU-based ls
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if [[ -z "$LS_COLORS" ]]; then
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# Define LS_COLORS via dircolors if available. Otherwise, set a default
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# equivalent to LSCOLORS (generated via https://geoff.greer.fm/lscolors)
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if (( $+commands[dircolors] )); then
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[[ -f "$HOME/.dircolors" ]] \
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&& source <(dircolors -b "$HOME/.dircolors") \
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|| source <(dircolors -b)
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else
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export LS_COLORS="di=1;36:ln=35:so=32:pi=33:ex=31:bd=34;46:cd=34;43:su=30;41:sg=30;46:tw=30;42:ow=30;43"
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fi
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fi
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function test-ls-args {
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local cmd="$1" # ls, gls, colorls, ...
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local args="${@[2,-1]}" # arguments except the first one
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@ -50,7 +65,7 @@ case "$OSTYPE" in
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test-ls-args ls -G && alias ls='ls -G'
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# Only use GNU ls if installed and there are user defaults for $LS_COLORS,
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# as the default coloring scheme is not very pretty
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[[ -n "$LS_COLORS" || -f "$HOME/.dircolors" ]] \
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zstyle -T ':omz:lib:theme-and-appearance' gnu-ls \
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&& test-ls-args gls --color \
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&& alias ls='gls --color=tty'
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;;
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@ -64,20 +79,3 @@ case "$OSTYPE" in
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esac
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unfunction test-ls-args
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# Default coloring for BSD-based ls
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export LSCOLORS="Gxfxcxdxbxegedabagacad"
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# Default coloring for GNU-based ls
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if [[ -z "$LS_COLORS" ]]; then
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# Define LS_COLORS via dircolors if available. Otherwise, set a default
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# equivalent to LSCOLORS (generated via https://geoff.greer.fm/lscolors)
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if (( $+commands[dircolors] )); then
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[[ -f "$HOME/.dircolors" ]] \
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&& source <(dircolors -b "$HOME/.dircolors") \
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|| source <(dircolors -b)
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else
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export LS_COLORS="di=1;36:ln=35:so=32:pi=33:ex=31:bd=34;46:cd=34;43:su=30;41:sg=30;46:tw=30;42:ow=30;43"
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fi
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fi
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