diff --git a/.config/btop/btop.conf b/.config/btop/btop.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..aa13161 --- /dev/null +++ b/.config/btop/btop.conf @@ -0,0 +1,212 @@ +#? Config file for btop v. 1.2.13 + +#* Name of a btop++/bpytop/bashtop formatted ".theme" file, "Default" and "TTY" for builtin themes. +#* Themes should be placed in "../share/btop/themes" relative to binary or "$HOME/.config/btop/themes" +color_theme = "gruvbox_dark_v2" + +#* If the theme set background should be shown, set to False if you want terminal background transparency. +theme_background = False + +#* Sets if 24-bit truecolor should be used, will convert 24-bit colors to 256 color (6x6x6 color cube) if false. +truecolor = True + +#* Set to true to force tty mode regardless if a real tty has been detected or not. +#* Will force 16-color mode and TTY theme, set all graph symbols to "tty" and swap out other non tty friendly symbols. +force_tty = False + +#* Define presets for the layout of the boxes. Preset 0 is always all boxes shown with default settings. Max 9 presets. +#* Format: "box_name:P:G,box_name:P:G" P=(0 or 1) for alternate positions, G=graph symbol to use for box. +#* Use whitespace " " as separator between different presets. +#* Example: "cpu:0:default,mem:0:tty,proc:1:default cpu:0:braille,proc:0:tty" +presets = "cpu:1:default,proc:0:default cpu:0:default,mem:0:default,net:0:default cpu:0:block,net:0:tty" + +#* Set to True to enable "h,j,k,l,g,G" keys for directional control in lists. +#* Conflicting keys for h:"help" and k:"kill" is accessible while holding shift. +vim_keys = True + +#* Rounded corners on boxes, is ignored if TTY mode is ON. +rounded_corners = True + +#* Default symbols to use for graph creation, "braille", "block" or "tty". +#* "braille" offers the highest resolution but might not be included in all fonts. +#* "block" has half the resolution of braille but uses more common characters. +#* "tty" uses only 3 different symbols but will work with most fonts and should work in a real TTY. +#* Note that "tty" only has half the horizontal resolution of the other two, so will show a shorter historical view. +graph_symbol = "block" + +# Graph symbol to use for graphs in cpu box, "default", "braille", "block" or "tty". +graph_symbol_cpu = "default" + +# Graph symbol to use for graphs in cpu box, "default", "braille", "block" or "tty". +graph_symbol_mem = "default" + +# Graph symbol to use for graphs in cpu box, "default", "braille", "block" or "tty". +graph_symbol_net = "default" + +# Graph symbol to use for graphs in cpu box, "default", "braille", "block" or "tty". +graph_symbol_proc = "default" + +#* Manually set which boxes to show. Available values are "cpu mem net proc", separate values with whitespace. +shown_boxes = "cpu mem net proc" + +#* Update time in milliseconds, recommended 2000 ms or above for better sample times for graphs. +update_ms = 1000 + +#* Processes sorting, "pid" "program" "arguments" "threads" "user" "memory" "cpu lazy" "cpu direct", +#* "cpu lazy" sorts top process over time (easier to follow), "cpu direct" updates top process directly. +proc_sorting = "cpu lazy" + +#* Reverse sorting order, True or False. +proc_reversed = False + +#* Show processes as a tree. +proc_tree = False + +#* Use the cpu graph colors in the process list. +proc_colors = True + +#* Use a darkening gradient in the process list. +proc_gradient = True + +#* If process cpu usage should be of the core it's running on or usage of the total available cpu power. +proc_per_core = False + +#* Show process memory as bytes instead of percent. +proc_mem_bytes = True + +#* Show cpu graph for each process. +proc_cpu_graphs = True + +#* Use /proc/[pid]/smaps for memory information in the process info box (very slow but more accurate) +proc_info_smaps = False + +#* Show proc box on left side of screen instead of right. +proc_left = False + +#* (Linux) Filter processes tied to the Linux kernel(similar behavior to htop). +proc_filter_kernel = True + +#* Sets the CPU stat shown in upper half of the CPU graph, "total" is always available. +#* Select from a list of detected attributes from the options menu. +cpu_graph_upper = "total" + +#* Sets the CPU stat shown in lower half of the CPU graph, "total" is always available. +#* Select from a list of detected attributes from the options menu. +cpu_graph_lower = "user" + +#* Toggles if the lower CPU graph should be inverted. +cpu_invert_lower = False + +#* Set to True to completely disable the lower CPU graph. +cpu_single_graph = False + +#* Show cpu box at bottom of screen instead of top. +cpu_bottom = False + +#* Shows the system uptime in the CPU box. +show_uptime = True + +#* Show cpu temperature. +check_temp = True + +#* Which sensor to use for cpu temperature, use options menu to select from list of available sensors. +cpu_sensor = "Auto" + +#* Show temperatures for cpu cores also if check_temp is True and sensors has been found. +show_coretemp = True + +#* Set a custom mapping between core and coretemp, can be needed on certain cpus to get correct temperature for correct core. +#* Use lm-sensors or similar to see which cores are reporting temperatures on your machine. +#* Format "x:y" x=core with wrong temp, y=core with correct temp, use space as separator between multiple entries. +#* Example: "4:0 5:1 6:3" +cpu_core_map = "" + +#* Which temperature scale to use, available values: "celsius", "fahrenheit", "kelvin" and "rankine". +temp_scale = "celsius" + +#* Use base 10 for bits/bytes sizes, KB = 1000 instead of KiB = 1024. +base_10_sizes = False + +#* Show CPU frequency. +show_cpu_freq = True + +#* Draw a clock at top of screen, formatting according to strftime, empty string to disable. +#* Special formatting: /host = hostname | /user = username | /uptime = system uptime +clock_format = "/user@/host %X" + +#* Update main ui in background when menus are showing, set this to false if the menus is flickering too much for comfort. +background_update = True + +#* Custom cpu model name, empty string to disable. +custom_cpu_name = "" + +#* Optional filter for shown disks, should be full path of a mountpoint, separate multiple values with whitespace " ". +#* Begin line with "exclude=" to change to exclude filter, otherwise defaults to "most include" filter. Example: disks_filter="exclude=/boot /home/user". +disks_filter = "exclude=/boot /proc /boot/efi" + +#* Show graphs instead of meters for memory values. +mem_graphs = True + +#* Show mem box below net box instead of above. +mem_below_net = False + +#* Count ZFS ARC in cached and available memory. +zfs_arc_cached = True + +#* If swap memory should be shown in memory box. +show_swap = True + +#* Show swap as a disk, ignores show_swap value above, inserts itself after first disk. +swap_disk = True + +#* If mem box should be split to also show disks info. +show_disks = True + +#* Filter out non physical disks. Set this to False to include network disks, RAM disks and similar. +only_physical = True + +#* Read disks list from /etc/fstab. This also disables only_physical. +use_fstab = True + +#* Setting this to True will hide all datasets, and only show ZFS pools. (IO stats will be calculated per-pool) +zfs_hide_datasets = False + +#* Set to true to show available disk space for privileged users. +disk_free_priv = False + +#* Toggles if io activity % (disk busy time) should be shown in regular disk usage view. +show_io_stat = True + +#* Toggles io mode for disks, showing big graphs for disk read/write speeds. +io_mode = False + +#* Set to True to show combined read/write io graphs in io mode. +io_graph_combined = False + +#* Set the top speed for the io graphs in MiB/s (100 by default), use format "mountpoint:speed" separate disks with whitespace " ". +#* Example: "/mnt/media:100 /:20 /boot:1". +io_graph_speeds = "" + +#* Set fixed values for network graphs in Mebibits. Is only used if net_auto is also set to False. +net_download = 1000 + +net_upload = 100 + +#* Use network graphs auto rescaling mode, ignores any values set above and rescales down to 10 Kibibytes at the lowest. +net_auto = True + +#* Sync the auto scaling for download and upload to whichever currently has the highest scale. +net_sync = True + +#* Starts with the Network Interface specified here. +net_iface = "" + +#* Show battery stats in top right if battery is present. +show_battery = True + +#* Which battery to use if multiple are present. "Auto" for auto detection. +selected_battery = "Auto" + +#* Set loglevel for "~/.config/btop/btop.log" levels are: "ERROR" "WARNING" "INFO" "DEBUG". +#* The level set includes all lower levels, i.e. "DEBUG" will show all logging info. +log_level = "WARNING" \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/.config/kitty/kitty.conf b/.config/kitty/kitty.conf new file mode 100644 index 0000000..65a7a97 --- /dev/null +++ b/.config/kitty/kitty.conf @@ -0,0 +1,2245 @@ +# vim:fileencoding=utf-8:foldmethod=marker + +Fonts {{{ + +#: kitty has very powerful font management. You can configure +#: individual font faces and even specify special fonts for particular +#: characters. + +font_family FiraCode Nerd Font +# bold_font auto +# italic_font auto +# bold_italic_font auto + +#: You can specify different fonts for the bold/italic/bold-italic +#: variants. To get a full list of supported fonts use the `kitty +#: +list-fonts` command. By default they are derived automatically, by +#: the OSes font system. When bold_font or bold_italic_font is set to +#: auto on macOS, the priority of bold fonts is semi-bold, bold, +#: heavy. Setting them manually is useful for font families that have +#: many weight variants like Book, Medium, Thick, etc. For example:: + +#: font_family Operator Mono Book +#: bold_font Operator Mono Medium +#: italic_font Operator Mono Book Italic +#: bold_italic_font Operator Mono Medium Italic + +font_size 15.0 + +#: Font size (in pts) + +# force_ltr no + +#: kitty does not support BIDI (bidirectional text), however, for RTL +#: scripts, words are automatically displayed in RTL. That is to say, +#: in an RTL script, the words "HELLO WORLD" display in kitty as +#: "WORLD HELLO", and if you try to select a substring of an RTL- +#: shaped string, you will get the character that would be there had +#: the the string been LTR. For example, assuming the Hebrew word +#: ירושלים, selecting the character that on the screen appears to be ם +#: actually writes into the selection buffer the character י. kitty's +#: default behavior is useful in conjunction with a filter to reverse +#: the word order, however, if you wish to manipulate RTL glyphs, it +#: can be very challenging to work with, so this option is provided to +#: turn it off. Furthermore, this option can be used with the command +#: line program GNU FriBidi +#: to get BIDI +#: support, because it will force kitty to always treat the text as +#: LTR, which FriBidi expects for terminals. + +# symbol_map + +#: E.g. symbol_map U+E0A0-U+E0A3,U+E0C0-U+E0C7 PowerlineSymbols + +#: Map the specified Unicode codepoints to a particular font. Useful +#: if you need special rendering for some symbols, such as for +#: Powerline. Avoids the need for patched fonts. Each Unicode code +#: point is specified in the form `U+`. You +#: can specify multiple code points, separated by commas and ranges +#: separated by hyphens. This option can be specified multiple times. +#: The syntax is:: + +#: symbol_map codepoints Font Family Name + +# narrow_symbols + +#: E.g. narrow_symbols U+E0A0-U+E0A3,U+E0C0-U+E0C7 1 + +#: Usually, for Private Use Unicode characters and some symbol/dingbat +#: characters, if the character is followed by one or more spaces, +#: kitty will use those extra cells to render the character larger, if +#: the character in the font has a wide aspect ratio. Using this +#: option you can force kitty to restrict the specified code points to +#: render in the specified number of cells (defaulting to one cell). +#: This option can be specified multiple times. The syntax is:: + +#: narrow_symbols codepoints [optionally the number of cells] + +disable_ligatures never + +#: Choose how you want to handle multi-character ligatures. The +#: default is to always render them. You can tell kitty to not render +#: them when the cursor is over them by using cursor to make editing +#: easier, or have kitty never render them at all by using always, if +#: you don't like them. The ligature strategy can be set per-window +#: either using the kitty remote control facility or by defining +#: shortcuts for it in kitty.conf, for example:: + +#: map alt+1 disable_ligatures_in active always +#: map alt+2 disable_ligatures_in all never +#: map alt+3 disable_ligatures_in tab cursor + +#: Note that this refers to programming ligatures, typically +#: implemented using the calt OpenType feature. For disabling general +#: ligatures, use the font_features option. + +# font_features + +#: E.g. font_features none + +#: Choose exactly which OpenType features to enable or disable. This +#: is useful as some fonts might have features worthwhile in a +#: terminal. For example, Fira Code includes a discretionary feature, +#: zero, which in that font changes the appearance of the zero (0), to +#: make it more easily distinguishable from Ø. Fira Code also includes +#: other discretionary features known as Stylistic Sets which have the +#: tags ss01 through ss20. + +#: For the exact syntax to use for individual features, see the +#: HarfBuzz documentation . + +#: Note that this code is indexed by PostScript name, and not the font +#: family. This allows you to define very precise feature settings; +#: e.g. you can disable a feature in the italic font but not in the +#: regular font. + +#: On Linux, font features are first read from the FontConfig database +#: and then this option is applied, so they can be configured in a +#: single, central place. + +#: To get the PostScript name for a font, use `kitty +list-fonts +#: --psnames`: + +#: .. code-block:: sh + +#: $ kitty +list-fonts --psnames | grep Fira +#: Fira Code +#: Fira Code Bold (FiraCode-Bold) +#: Fira Code Light (FiraCode-Light) +#: Fira Code Medium (FiraCode-Medium) +#: Fira Code Regular (FiraCode-Regular) +#: Fira Code Retina (FiraCode-Retina) + +#: The part in brackets is the PostScript name. + +#: Enable alternate zero and oldstyle numerals:: + +#: font_features FiraCode-Retina +zero +onum + +#: Enable only alternate zero in the bold font:: + +#: font_features FiraCode-Bold +zero + +#: Disable the normal ligatures, but keep the calt feature which (in +#: this font) breaks up monotony:: + +#: font_features TT2020StyleB-Regular -liga +calt + +#: In conjunction with force_ltr, you may want to disable Arabic +#: shaping entirely, and only look at their isolated forms if they +#: show up in a document. You can do this with e.g.:: + +#: font_features UnifontMedium +isol -medi -fina -init + +# modify_font + +#: Modify font characteristics such as the position or thickness of +#: the underline and strikethrough. The modifications can have the +#: suffix px for pixels or % for percentage of original value. No +#: suffix means use pts. For example:: + +#: modify_font underline_position -2 +#: modify_font underline_thickness 150% +#: modify_font strikethrough_position 2px + +#: Additionally, you can modify the size of the cell in which each +#: font glyph is rendered and the baseline at which the glyph is +#: placed in the cell. For example:: + +#: modify_font cell_width 80% +#: modify_font cell_height -2px +#: modify_font baseline 3 + +#: Note that modifying the baseline will automatically adjust the +#: underline and strikethrough positions by the same amount. +#: Increasing the baseline raises glyphs inside the cell and +#: decreasing it lowers them. Decreasing the cell size might cause +#: rendering artifacts, so use with care. + +# box_drawing_scale 0.001, 1, 1.5, 2 + +#: The sizes of the lines used for the box drawing Unicode characters. +#: These values are in pts. They will be scaled by the monitor DPI to +#: arrive at a pixel value. There must be four values corresponding to +#: thin, normal, thick, and very thick lines. + +}}} + +#: Cursor customization {{{ + +# cursor #cccccc + +#: Default cursor color. If set to the special value none the cursor +#: will be rendered with a "reverse video" effect. It's color will be +#: the color of the text in the cell it is over and the text will be +#: rendered with the background color of the cell. Note that if the +#: program running in the terminal sets a cursor color, this takes +#: precedence. Also, the cursor colors are modified if the cell +#: background and foreground colors have very low contrast. + +# cursor_text_color #111111 + +#: The color of text under the cursor. If you want it rendered with +#: the background color of the cell underneath instead, use the +#: special keyword: background. Note that if cursor is set to none +#: then this option is ignored. + +# cursor_shape block + +#: The cursor shape can be one of block, beam, underline. Note that +#: when reloading the config this will be changed only if the cursor +#: shape has not been set by the program running in the terminal. This +#: sets the default cursor shape, applications running in the terminal +#: can override it. In particular, shell integration +#: in kitty sets +#: the cursor shape to beam at shell prompts. You can avoid this by +#: setting shell_integration to no-cursor. + +# cursor_beam_thickness 1.5 + +#: The thickness of the beam cursor (in pts). + +# cursor_underline_thickness 2.0 + +#: The thickness of the underline cursor (in pts). + +# cursor_blink_interval -1 + +#: The interval to blink the cursor (in seconds). Set to zero to +#: disable blinking. Negative values mean use system default. Note +#: that the minimum interval will be limited to repaint_delay. + +# cursor_stop_blinking_after 15.0 + +#: Stop blinking cursor after the specified number of seconds of +#: keyboard inactivity. Set to zero to never stop blinking. + +#: }}} + +Scrollback {{{ + +# scrollback_lines 2000 + +#: Number of lines of history to keep in memory for scrolling back. +#: Memory is allocated on demand. Negative numbers are (effectively) +#: infinite scrollback. Note that using very large scrollback is not +#: recommended as it can slow down performance of the terminal and +#: also use large amounts of RAM. Instead, consider using +#: scrollback_pager_history_size. Note that on config reload if this +#: is changed it will only affect newly created windows, not existing +#: ones. + +scrollback_pager nvim -c 'setlocal number|Man!' -c "autocmd VimEnter * normal G" - + +#: Program with which to view scrollback in a new window. The +#: scrollback buffer is passed as STDIN to this program. If you change +#: it, make sure the program you use can handle ANSI escape sequences +#: for colors and text formatting. INPUT_LINE_NUMBER in the command +#: line above will be replaced by an integer representing which line +#: should be at the top of the screen. Similarly CURSOR_LINE and +#: CURSOR_COLUMN will be replaced by the current cursor position or +#: set to 0 if there is no cursor, for example, when showing the last +#: command output. + +# scrollback_pager_history_size 0 + +#: Separate scrollback history size (in MB), used only for browsing +#: the scrollback buffer with pager. This separate buffer is not +#: available for interactive scrolling but will be piped to the pager +#: program when viewing scrollback buffer in a separate window. The +#: current implementation stores the data in UTF-8, so approximatively +#: 10000 lines per megabyte at 100 chars per line, for pure ASCII, +#: unformatted text. A value of zero or less disables this feature. +#: The maximum allowed size is 4GB. Note that on config reload if this +#: is changed it will only affect newly created windows, not existing +#: ones. + +# scrollback_fill_enlarged_window no + +#: Fill new space with lines from the scrollback buffer after +#: enlarging a window. + +# wheel_scroll_multiplier 5.0 + +#: Multiplier for the number of lines scrolled by the mouse wheel. +#: Note that this is only used for low precision scrolling devices, +#: not for high precision scrolling devices on platforms such as macOS +#: and Wayland. Use negative numbers to change scroll direction. See +#: also wheel_scroll_min_lines. + +# wheel_scroll_min_lines 1 + +#: The minimum number of lines scrolled by the mouse wheel. The scroll +#: multiplier wheel_scroll_multiplier only takes effect after it +#: reaches this number. Note that this is only used for low precision +#: scrolling devices like wheel mice that scroll by very small amounts +#: when using the wheel. With a negative number, the minimum number of +#: lines will always be added. + +# touch_scroll_multiplier 1.0 + +#: Multiplier for the number of lines scrolled by a touchpad. Note +#: that this is only used for high precision scrolling devices on +#: platforms such as macOS and Wayland. Use negative numbers to change +#: scroll direction. + +#: }}} + +#: Mouse {{{ + +# mouse_hide_wait 3.0 + +#: Hide mouse cursor after the specified number of seconds of the +#: mouse not being used. Set to zero to disable mouse cursor hiding. +#: Set to a negative value to hide the mouse cursor immediately when +#: typing text. Disabled by default on macOS as getting it to work +#: robustly with the ever-changing sea of bugs that is Cocoa is too +#: much effort. + +# url_color #0087bd +# url_style curly + +#: The color and style for highlighting URLs on mouse-over. url_style +#: can be one of: none, straight, double, curly, dotted, dashed. + +# open_url_with default + +#: The program to open clicked URLs. The special value default with +#: first look for any URL handlers defined via the open_actions +#: facility and if non +#: are found, it will use the Operating System's default URL handler +#: (open on macOS and xdg-open on Linux). + +# url_prefixes file ftp ftps gemini git gopher http https irc ircs kitty mailto news sftp ssh + +#: The set of URL prefixes to look for when detecting a URL under the +#: mouse cursor. + +# detect_urls yes + +#: Detect URLs under the mouse. Detected URLs are highlighted with an +#: underline and the mouse cursor becomes a hand over them. Even if +#: this option is disabled, URLs are still clickable. + +# url_excluded_characters + +#: Additional characters to be disallowed from URLs, when detecting +#: URLs under the mouse cursor. By default, all characters that are +#: legal in URLs are allowed. + +# copy_on_select no + +#: Copy to clipboard or a private buffer on select. With this set to +#: clipboard, selecting text with the mouse will cause the text to be +#: copied to clipboard. Useful on platforms such as macOS that do not +#: have the concept of primary selection. You can instead specify a +#: name such as a1 to copy to a private kitty buffer. Map a shortcut +#: with the paste_from_buffer action to paste from this private +#: buffer. For example:: + +#: copy_on_select a1 +#: map shift+cmd+v paste_from_buffer a1 + +#: Note that copying to the clipboard is a security risk, as all +#: programs, including websites open in your browser can read the +#: contents of the system clipboard. + +# paste_actions quote-urls-at-prompt + +#: A comma separated list of actions to take when pasting text into +#: the terminal. The supported paste actions are: + +#: quote-urls-at-prompt: +#: If the text being pasted is a URL and the cursor is at a shell prompt, +#: automatically quote the URL (needs shell_integration). +#: confirm: +#: Confirm the paste if bracketed paste mode is not active or there is more +#: a large amount of text being pasted. +#: filter: +#: Run the filter_paste() function from the file paste-actions.py in +#: the kitty config directory on the pasted text. The text returned by the +#: function will be actually pasted. + +# strip_trailing_spaces never + +#: Remove spaces at the end of lines when copying to clipboard. A +#: value of smart will do it when using normal selections, but not +#: rectangle selections. A value of always will always do it. + +# select_by_word_characters @-./_~?&=%+# + +#: Characters considered part of a word when double clicking. In +#: addition to these characters any character that is marked as an +#: alphanumeric character in the Unicode database will be matched. + +# select_by_word_characters_forward + +#: Characters considered part of a word when extending the selection +#: forward on double clicking. In addition to these characters any +#: character that is marked as an alphanumeric character in the +#: Unicode database will be matched. + +#: If empty (default) select_by_word_characters will be used for both +#: directions. + +# click_interval -1.0 + +#: The interval between successive clicks to detect double/triple +#: clicks (in seconds). Negative numbers will use the system default +#: instead, if available, or fallback to 0.5. + +# focus_follows_mouse no + +#: Set the active window to the window under the mouse when moving the +#: mouse around. + +# pointer_shape_when_grabbed arrow + +#: The shape of the mouse pointer when the program running in the +#: terminal grabs the mouse. Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand. + +# default_pointer_shape beam + +#: The default shape of the mouse pointer. Valid values are: arrow, +#: beam and hand. + +# pointer_shape_when_dragging beam + +#: The default shape of the mouse pointer when dragging across text. +#: Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand. + +#: Mouse actions {{{ + +#: Mouse buttons can be mapped to perform arbitrary actions. The +#: syntax is: + +#: .. code-block:: none + +#: mouse_map button-name event-type modes action + +#: Where button-name is one of left, middle, right, b1 ... b8 with +#: added keyboard modifiers. For example: ctrl+shift+left refers to +#: holding the Ctrl+Shift keys while clicking with the left mouse +#: button. The value b1 ... b8 can be used to refer to up to eight +#: buttons on a mouse. + +#: event-type is one of press, release, doublepress, triplepress, +#: click, doubleclick. modes indicates whether the action is performed +#: when the mouse is grabbed by the program running in the terminal, +#: or not. The values are grabbed or ungrabbed or a comma separated +#: combination of them. grabbed refers to when the program running in +#: the terminal has requested mouse events. Note that the click and +#: double click events have a delay of click_interval to disambiguate +#: from double and triple presses. + +#: You can run kitty with the kitty --debug-input command line option +#: to see mouse events. See the builtin actions below to get a sense +#: of what is possible. + +#: If you want to unmap an action, map it to no_op. For example, to +#: disable opening of URLs with a plain click:: + +#: mouse_map left click ungrabbed no_op + +#: See all the mappable actions including mouse actions here +#: . + +#: .. note:: +#: Once a selection is started, releasing the button that started it will +#: automatically end it and no release event will be dispatched. + +# clear_all_mouse_actions no + +#: Remove all mouse action definitions up to this point. Useful, for +#: instance, to remove the default mouse actions. + +#: Click the link under the mouse or move the cursor + +# mouse_map left click ungrabbed mouse_handle_click selection link prompt + +#:: First check for a selection and if one exists do nothing. Then +#:: check for a link under the mouse cursor and if one exists, click +#:: it. Finally check if the click happened at the current shell +#:: prompt and if so, move the cursor to the click location. Note +#:: that this requires shell integration +#:: to work. + +#: Click the link under the mouse or move the cursor even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+left click grabbed,ungrabbed mouse_handle_click selection link prompt + +#:: Same as above, except that the action is performed even when the +#:: mouse is grabbed by the program running in the terminal. + +#: Click the link under the mouse cursor + +# mouse_map ctrl+shift+left release grabbed,ungrabbed mouse_handle_click link + +#:: Variant with Ctrl+Shift is present because the simple click based +#:: version has an unavoidable delay of click_interval, to +#:: disambiguate clicks from double clicks. + +#: Discard press event for link click + +# mouse_map ctrl+shift+left press grabbed discard_event + +#:: Prevent this press event from being sent to the program that has +#:: grabbed the mouse, as the corresponding release event is used to +#:: open a URL. + +#: Paste from the primary selection + +# mouse_map middle release ungrabbed paste_from_selection + +#: Start selecting text + +# mouse_map left press ungrabbed mouse_selection normal + +#: Start selecting text in a rectangle + +# mouse_map ctrl+alt+left press ungrabbed mouse_selection rectangle + +#: Select a word + +# mouse_map left doublepress ungrabbed mouse_selection word + +#: Select a line + +# mouse_map left triplepress ungrabbed mouse_selection line + +#: Select line from point + +# mouse_map ctrl+alt+left triplepress ungrabbed mouse_selection line_from_point + +#:: Select from the clicked point to the end of the line. + +#: Extend the current selection + +# mouse_map right press ungrabbed mouse_selection extend + +#:: If you want only the end of the selection to be moved instead of +#:: the nearest boundary, use move-end instead of extend. + +#: Paste from the primary selection even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+middle release ungrabbed,grabbed paste_selection +# mouse_map shift+middle press grabbed discard_event + +#: Start selecting text even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+left press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection normal + +#: Start selecting text in a rectangle even when grabbed + +# mouse_map ctrl+shift+alt+left press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection rectangle + +#: Select a word even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+left doublepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection word + +#: Select a line even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+left triplepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection line + +#: Select line from point even when grabbed + +# mouse_map ctrl+shift+alt+left triplepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection line_from_point + +#:: Select from the clicked point to the end of the line even when +#:: grabbed. + +#: Extend the current selection even when grabbed + +# mouse_map shift+right press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection extend + +#: Show clicked command output in pager + +# mouse_map ctrl+shift+right press ungrabbed mouse_show_command_output + +#:: Requires shell integration +#:: to work. + +#: }}} + +#: }}} + +#: Performance tuning {{{ + +# repaint_delay 10 + +#: Delay between screen updates (in milliseconds). Decreasing it, +#: increases frames-per-second (FPS) at the cost of more CPU usage. +#: The default value yields ~100 FPS which is more than sufficient for +#: most uses. Note that to actually achieve 100 FPS, you have to +#: either set sync_to_monitor to no or use a monitor with a high +#: refresh rate. Also, to minimize latency when there is pending input +#: to be processed, this option is ignored. + +# input_delay 3 + +#: Delay before input from the program running in the terminal is +#: processed (in milliseconds). Note that decreasing it will increase +#: responsiveness, but also increase CPU usage and might cause flicker +#: in full screen programs that redraw the entire screen on each loop, +#: because kitty is so fast that partial screen updates will be drawn. + +# sync_to_monitor yes + +#: Sync screen updates to the refresh rate of the monitor. This +#: prevents screen tearing +#: when scrolling. +#: However, it limits the rendering speed to the refresh rate of your +#: monitor. With a very high speed mouse/high keyboard repeat rate, +#: you may notice some slight input latency. If so, set this to no. + +#: }}} + +: Terminal bell {{{ + + enable_audio_bell no + +#: The audio bell. Useful to disable it in environments that require +#: silence. + + visual_bell_duration 0.01 + +#: The visual bell duration (in seconds). Flash the screen when a bell +#: occurs for the specified number of seconds. Set to zero to disable. + + visual_bell_color yellow + +#: The color used by visual bell. Set to none will fall back to +#: selection background color. If you feel that the visual bell is too +#: bright, you can set it to a darker color. + + window_alert_on_bell yes + +#: Request window attention on bell. Makes the dock icon bounce on +#: macOS or the taskbar flash on linux. + + bell_on_tab "🔔 " + +#: Some text or a Unicode symbol to show on the tab if a window in the +#: tab that does not have focus has a bell. If you want to use leading +#: or trailing spaces, surround the text with quotes. See +#: tab_title_template for how this is rendered. + +#: For backwards compatibility, values of yes, y and true are +#: converted to the default bell symbol and no, n, false and none are +#: converted to the empty string. + +# command_on_bell none + +#: Program to run when a bell occurs. The environment variable +#: KITTY_CHILD_CMDLINE can be used to get the program running in the +#: window in which the bell occurred. + +# bell_path none + +#: Path to a sound file to play as the bell sound. If set to none, the +#: system default bell sound is used. Must be in a format supported by +#: the operating systems sound API, such as WAV or OGA on Linux +#: (libcanberra) or AIFF, MP3 or WAV on macOS (NSSound) + +: }}} + +#: Window layout {{{ + +# remember_window_size yes +# initial_window_width 640 +# initial_window_height 400 + +#: If enabled, the window size will be remembered so that new +#: instances of kitty will have the same size as the previous +#: instance. If disabled, the window will initially have size +#: configured by initial_window_width/height, in pixels. You can use a +#: suffix of "c" on the width/height values to have them interpreted +#: as number of cells instead of pixels. + +# enabled_layouts * + +#: The enabled window layouts. A comma separated list of layout names. +#: The special value all means all layouts. The first listed layout +#: will be used as the startup layout. Default configuration is all +#: layouts in alphabetical order. For a list of available layouts, see +#: the layouts . + +# window_resize_step_cells 2 +# window_resize_step_lines 2 + +#: The step size (in units of cell width/cell height) to use when +#: resizing kitty windows in a layout with the shortcut +#: start_resizing_window. The cells value is used for horizontal +#: resizing, and the lines value is used for vertical resizing. + +# window_border_width 0.5pt + +#: The width of window borders. Can be either in pixels (px) or pts +#: (pt). Values in pts will be rounded to the nearest number of pixels +#: based on screen resolution. If not specified, the unit is assumed +#: to be pts. Note that borders are displayed only when more than one +#: window is visible. They are meant to separate multiple windows. + +# draw_minimal_borders yes + +#: Draw only the minimum borders needed. This means that only the +#: borders that separate the inactive window from a neighbor are +#: drawn. Note that setting a non-zero window_margin_width overrides +#: this and causes all borders to be drawn. + +# window_margin_width 0 + +#: The window margin (in pts) (blank area outside the border). A +#: single value sets all four sides. Two values set the vertical and +#: horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal and bottom. Four +#: values set top, right, bottom and left. + +# single_window_margin_width -1 + +#: The window margin to use when only a single window is visible (in +#: pts). Negative values will cause the value of window_margin_width +#: to be used instead. A single value sets all four sides. Two values +#: set the vertical and horizontal sides. Three values set top, +#: horizontal and bottom. Four values set top, right, bottom and left. + +# window_padding_width 0 + +#: The window padding (in pts) (blank area between the text and the +#: window border). A single value sets all four sides. Two values set +#: the vertical and horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal +#: and bottom. Four values set top, right, bottom and left. + +# placement_strategy center + +#: When the window size is not an exact multiple of the cell size, the +#: cell area of the terminal window will have some extra padding on +#: the sides. You can control how that padding is distributed with +#: this option. Using a value of center means the cell area will be +#: placed centrally. A value of top-left means the padding will be +#: only at the bottom and right edges. + +# active_border_color #00ff00 + +#: The color for the border of the active window. Set this to none to +#: not draw borders around the active window. + +# inactive_border_color #cccccc + +#: The color for the border of inactive windows. + +# bell_border_color #ff5a00 + +#: The color for the border of inactive windows in which a bell has +#: occurred. + +# inactive_text_alpha 1.0 + +#: Fade the text in inactive windows by the specified amount (a number +#: between zero and one, with zero being fully faded). + +# hide_window_decorations no + +#: Hide the window decorations (title-bar and window borders) with +#: yes. On macOS, titlebar-only can be used to only hide the titlebar. +#: Whether this works and exactly what effect it has depends on the +#: window manager/operating system. Note that the effects of changing +#: this option when reloading config are undefined. + +# window_logo_path none + +#: Path to a logo image. Must be in PNG format. Relative paths are +#: interpreted relative to the kitty config directory. The logo is +#: displayed in a corner of every kitty window. The position is +#: controlled by window_logo_position. Individual windows can be +#: configured to have different logos either using the launch action +#: or the remote control facility. + +# window_logo_position bottom-right + +#: Where to position the window logo in the window. The value can be +#: one of: top-left, top, top-right, left, center, right, bottom-left, +#: bottom, bottom-right. + +# window_logo_alpha 0.5 + +#: The amount the logo should be faded into the background. With zero +#: being fully faded and one being fully opaque. + +# resize_debounce_time 0.1 + +#: The time to wait before redrawing the screen when a resize event is +#: received (in seconds). On platforms such as macOS, where the +#: operating system sends events corresponding to the start and end of +#: a resize, this number is ignored. + +# resize_draw_strategy static + +#: Choose how kitty draws a window while a resize is in progress. A +#: value of static means draw the current window contents, mostly +#: unchanged. A value of scale means draw the current window contents +#: scaled. A value of blank means draw a blank window. A value of size +#: means show the window size in cells. + +# resize_in_steps no + +#: Resize the OS window in steps as large as the cells, instead of +#: with the usual pixel accuracy. Combined with initial_window_width +#: and initial_window_height in number of cells, this option can be +#: used to keep the margins as small as possible when resizing the OS +#: window. Note that this does not currently work on Wayland. + +# visual_window_select_characters 1234567890ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ + +#: The list of characters for visual window selection. For example, +#: for selecting a window to focus on with focus_visible_window. The +#: value should be a series of unique numbers or alphabets, case +#: insensitive, from the set [0-9A-Z]. Specify your preference as a +#: string of characters. + +# confirm_os_window_close -1 + +#: Ask for confirmation when closing an OS window or a tab with at +#: least this number of kitty windows in it by window manager (e.g. +#: clicking the window close button or pressing the operating system +#: shortcut to close windows) or by the close_tab action. A value of +#: zero disables confirmation. This confirmation also applies to +#: requests to quit the entire application (all OS windows, via the +#: quit action). Negative values are converted to positive ones, +#: however, with shell_integration enabled, using negative values +#: means windows sitting at a shell prompt are not counted, only +#: windows where some command is currently running. Note that if you +#: want confirmation when closing individual windows, you can map the +#: close_window_with_confirmation action. + +#: }}} + +: Tab bar {{{ + + tab_bar_edge top + +#: The edge to show the tab bar on, top or bottom. + +# tab_bar_margin_width 0.0 + +#: The margin to the left and right of the tab bar (in pts). + +# tab_bar_margin_height 0.0 0.0 + +#: The margin above and below the tab bar (in pts). The first number +#: is the margin between the edge of the OS Window and the tab bar. +#: The second number is the margin between the tab bar and the +#: contents of the current tab. + + tab_bar_style powerline + +#: The tab bar style, can be one of: + +#: fade +#: Each tab's edges fade into the background color. (See also tab_fade) +#: slant +#: Tabs look like the tabs in a physical file. +#: separator +#: Tabs are separated by a configurable separator. (See also +#: tab_separator) +#: powerline +#: Tabs are shown as a continuous line with "fancy" separators. +#: (See also tab_powerline_style) +#: custom +#: A user-supplied Python function called draw_tab is loaded from the file +#: tab_bar.py in the kitty config directory. For examples of how to +#: write such a function, see the functions named draw_tab_with_* in +#: kitty's source code: kitty/tab_bar.py. See also +#: this discussion +#: for examples from kitty users. +#: hidden +#: The tab bar is hidden. If you use this, you might want to create a mapping +#: for the select_tab action which presents you with a list of tabs and +#: allows for easy switching to a tab. + +# tab_bar_align left + +#: The horizontal alignment of the tab bar, can be one of: left, +#: center, right. + +# tab_bar_min_tabs 2 + +#: The minimum number of tabs that must exist before the tab bar is +#: shown. + +# tab_switch_strategy previous + +#: The algorithm to use when switching to a tab when the current tab +#: is closed. The default of previous will switch to the last used +#: tab. A value of left will switch to the tab to the left of the +#: closed tab. A value of right will switch to the tab to the right of +#: the closed tab. A value of last will switch to the right-most tab. + +# tab_fade 0.25 0.5 0.75 1 + +#: Control how each tab fades into the background when using fade for +#: the tab_bar_style. Each number is an alpha (between zero and one) +#: that controls how much the corresponding cell fades into the +#: background, with zero being no fade and one being full fade. You +#: can change the number of cells used by adding/removing entries to +#: this list. + +# tab_separator " ┇" + +#: The separator between tabs in the tab bar when using separator as +#: the tab_bar_style. + + tab_powerline_style slanted + +#: The powerline separator style between tabs in the tab bar when +#: using powerline as the tab_bar_style, can be one of: angled, +#: slanted, round. + +# tab_activity_symbol none + +#: Some text or a Unicode symbol to show on the tab if a window in the +#: tab that does not have focus has some activity. If you want to use +#: leading or trailing spaces, surround the text with quotes. See +#: tab_title_template for how this is rendered. + +tab_title_template "{index} {fmt.fg.red}{bell_symbol}{activity_symbol}{fmt.fg.tab}{title}" + +#: A template to render the tab title. The default just renders the +#: title with optional symbols for bell and activity. If you wish to +#: include the tab-index as well, use something like: {index}:{title}. +#: Useful if you have shortcuts mapped for goto_tab N. If you prefer +#: to see the index as a superscript, use {sup.index}. All data +#: available is: + +#: title +#: The current tab title. +#: index +#: The tab index useable with goto_tab N goto_tab shortcuts. +#: layout_name +#: The current layout name. +#: num_windows +#: The number of windows in the tab. +#: num_window_groups +#: The number of window groups (not counting overlay windows) in the tab. +#: tab.active_wd +#: The working directory of the currently active window in the tab (expensive, +#: requires syscall). +#: max_title_length +#: The maximum title length available. + +#: Note that formatting is done by Python's string formatting +#: machinery, so you can use, for instance, {layout_name[:2].upper()} +#: to show only the first two letters of the layout name, upper-cased. +#: If you want to style the text, you can use styling directives, for +#: example: +#: `{fmt.fg.red}red{fmt.fg.tab}normal{fmt.bg._00FF00}greenbg{fmt.bg.tab}`. +#: Similarly, for bold and italic: +#: `{fmt.bold}bold{fmt.nobold}normal{fmt.italic}italic{fmt.noitalic}`. +#: Note that for backward compatibility, if {bell_symbol} or +#: {activity_symbol} are not present in the template, they are +#: prepended to it. + +# active_tab_title_template none + +#: Template to use for active tabs. If not specified falls back to +#: tab_title_template. + +# active_tab_foreground #000 +# active_tab_background #eee +# active_tab_font_style bold-italic +# inactive_tab_foreground #444 +# inactive_tab_background #999 +# inactive_tab_font_style normal + +#: Tab bar colors and styles. + +# tab_bar_background #d84 + +#: Background color for the tab bar. Defaults to using the terminal +#: background color. + +# tab_bar_margin_color none + +#: Color for the tab bar margin area. Defaults to using the terminal +#: background color. + +: }}} + +: Color scheme {{{ + + foreground #dddddd + background #111111 + +#: The foreground and background colors. + +# background_opacity 1.0 + +#: The opacity of the background. A number between zero and one, where +#: one is opaque and zero is fully transparent. This will only work if +#: supported by the OS (for instance, when using a compositor under +#: X11). Note that it only sets the background color's opacity in +#: cells that have the same background color as the default terminal +#: background, so that things like the status bar in vim, powerline +#: prompts, etc. still look good. But it means that if you use a color +#: theme with a background color in your editor, it will not be +#: rendered as transparent. Instead you should change the default +#: background color in your kitty config and not use a background +#: color in the editor color scheme. Or use the escape codes to set +#: the terminals default colors in a shell script to launch your +#: editor. Be aware that using a value less than 1.0 is a (possibly +#: significant) performance hit. If you want to dynamically change +#: transparency of windows, set dynamic_background_opacity to yes +#: (this is off by default as it has a performance cost). Changing +#: this option when reloading the config will only work if +#: dynamic_background_opacity was enabled in the original config. + +# background_image none + +#: Path to a background image. Must be in PNG format. + +# background_image_layout tiled + +#: Whether to tile, scale or clamp the background image. The value can +#: be one of tiled, mirror-tiled, scaled, clamped or centered. + +# background_image_linear no + +#: When background image is scaled, whether linear interpolation +#: should be used. + +# dynamic_background_opacity no + +#: Allow changing of the background_opacity dynamically, using either +#: keyboard shortcuts (increase_background_opacity and +#: decrease_background_opacity) or the remote control facility. +#: Changing this option by reloading the config is not supported. + +# background_tint 0.0 + +#: How much to tint the background image by the background color. +#: This option makes it easier to read the text. Tinting is done using +#: the current background color for each window. This option applies +#: only if background_opacity is set and transparent windows are +#: supported or background_image is set. + +# dim_opacity 0.75 + +#: How much to dim text that has the DIM/FAINT attribute set. One +#: means no dimming and zero means fully dimmed (i.e. invisible). + +# selection_foreground #000000 +# selection_background #fffacd + +#: The foreground and background colors for text selected with the +#: mouse. Setting both of these to none will cause a "reverse video" +#: effect for selections, where the selection will be the cell text +#: color and the text will become the cell background color. Setting +#: only selection_foreground to none will cause the foreground color +#: to be used unchanged. Note that these colors can be overridden by +#: the program running in the terminal. + +#: The color table {{{ + +#: The 256 terminal colors. There are 8 basic colors, each color has a +#: dull and bright version, for the first 16 colors. You can set the +#: remaining 240 colors as color16 to color255. + +# color0 #000000 +# color8 #767676 + +#: black + +# color1 #cc0403 +# color9 #f2201f + +#: red + +# color2 #19cb00 +# color10 #23fd00 + +#: green + +# color3 #cecb00 +# color11 #fffd00 + +#: yellow + +# color4 #0d73cc +# color12 #1a8fff + +#: blue + +# color5 #cb1ed1 +# color13 #fd28ff + +#: magenta + +# color6 #0dcdcd +# color14 #14ffff + +#: cyan + +# color7 #dddddd +# color15 #ffffff + +#: white + +# mark1_foreground black + +#: Color for marks of type 1 + +# mark1_background #98d3cb + +#: Color for marks of type 1 (light steel blue) + +# mark2_foreground black + +#: Color for marks of type 2 + +# mark2_background #f2dcd3 + +#: Color for marks of type 1 (beige) + +# mark3_foreground black + +#: Color for marks of type 3 + +# mark3_background #f274bc + +#: Color for marks of type 3 (violet) + +: }}} + +#: }}} + +: Advanced {{{ + + shell zsh + +#: The shell program to execute. The default value of . means to use +#: whatever shell is set as the default shell for the current user. +#: Note that on macOS if you change this, you might need to add +#: --login and --interactive to ensure that the shell starts in +#: interactive mode and reads its startup rc files. + + editor nvim + +#: The terminal based text editor (such as vim or nano) to use when +#: editing the kitty config file or similar tasks. + +#: The default value of . means to use the environment variables +#: VISUAL and EDITOR in that order. If these variables aren't set, +#: kitty will run your shell ($SHELL -l -i -c env) to see if your +#: shell startup rc files set VISUAL or EDITOR. If that doesn't work, +#: kitty will cycle through various known editors (vim, emacs, etc.) +#: and take the first one that exists on your system. + +# close_on_child_death no + +#: Close the window when the child process (shell) exits. With the +#: default value no, the terminal will remain open when the child +#: exits as long as there are still processes outputting to the +#: terminal (for example disowned or backgrounded processes). When +#: enabled with yes, the window will close as soon as the child +#: process exits. Note that setting it to yes means that any +#: background processes still using the terminal can fail silently +#: because their stdout/stderr/stdin no longer work. + +# remote_control_password + +#: Allow other programs to control kitty using passwords. This option +#: can be specified multiple times to add multiple passwords. If no +#: passwords are present kitty will ask the user for permission if a +#: program tries to use remote control with a password. A password can +#: also *optionally* be associated with a set of allowed remote +#: control actions. For example:: + +#: remote_control_password "my passphrase" get-colors set-colors focus-window focus-tab + +#: Only the specified actions will be allowed when using this +#: password. Glob patterns can be used too, for example:: + +#: remote_control_password "my passphrase" set-tab-* resize-* + +#: To get a list of available actions, run:: + +#: kitty @ --help + +#: A set of actions to be allowed when no password is sent can be +#: specified by using an empty password, for example:: + +#: remote_control_password "" *-colors + +#: Finally, the path to a python module can be specified that provides +#: a function is_cmd_allowed that is used to check every remote +#: control command. See rc_custom_auth +#: +#: for details. For example:: + +#: remote_control_password "my passphrase" my_rc_command_checker.py + +#: Relative paths are resolved from the kitty configuration directory. + +# allow_remote_control no + +#: Allow other programs to control kitty. If you turn this on, other +#: programs can control all aspects of kitty, including sending text +#: to kitty windows, opening new windows, closing windows, reading the +#: content of windows, etc. Note that this even works over SSH +#: connections. The default setting of no prevents any form of remote +#: control. The meaning of the various values are: + +#: password +#: Remote control requests received over both the TTY device and the socket are +#: confirmed based on passwords, see remote_control_password. + +#: socket-only +#: Remote control requests received over a socket are accepted unconditionally. +#: Requests received over the TTY are denied. See listen_on. + +#: socket +#: Remote control requests received over a socket are accepted unconditionally. +#: Requests received over the TTY are confirmed based on password. + +#: no +#: Remote control is completely disabled. + +#: yes +#: Remote control requests are always accepted. + +# listen_on none + +#: Listen to the specified UNIX socket for remote control connections. +#: Note that this will apply to all kitty instances. It can be +#: overridden by the kitty --listen-on command line option, which also +#: supports listening on a TCP socket. This option accepts only UNIX +#: sockets, such as unix:${TEMP}/mykitty or unix:@mykitty (on Linux). +#: Environment variables are expanded and relative paths are resolved +#: with respect to the temporary directory. If {kitty_pid} is present, +#: then it is replaced by the PID of the kitty process, otherwise the +#: PID of the kitty process is appended to the value, with a hyphen. +#: See the help for kitty --listen-on for more details. Note that this +#: will be ignored unless allow_remote_control is set to either: yes, +#: socket or socket-only. Changing this option by reloading the config +#: is not supported. + + env KITTY_TERM=TRUE + +#: Specify the environment variables to be set in all child processes. +#: Using the name with an equal sign (e.g. env VAR=) will set it to +#: the empty string. Specifying only the name (e.g. env VAR) will +#: remove the variable from the child process' environment. Note that +#: environment variables are expanded recursively, for example:: + +#: env VAR1=a +#: env VAR2=${HOME}/${VAR1}/b + +#: The value of VAR2 will be /a/b. + +# watcher + +#: Path to python file which will be loaded for watchers +#: . Can be +#: specified more than once to load multiple watchers. The watchers +#: will be added to every kitty window. Relative paths are resolved +#: relative to the kitty config directory. Note that reloading the +#: config will only affect windows created after the reload. + +# exe_search_path + +#: Control where kitty finds the programs to run. The default search +#: order is: First search the system wide PATH, then ~/.local/bin and +#: ~/bin. If still not found, the PATH defined in the login shell +#: after sourcing all its startup files is tried. Finally, if present, +#: the PATH specified by the env option is tried. + +#: This option allows you to prepend, append, or remove paths from +#: this search order. It can be specified multiple times for multiple +#: paths. A simple path will be prepended to the search order. A path +#: that starts with the + sign will be append to the search order, +#: after ~/bin above. A path that starts with the - sign will be +#: removed from the entire search order. For example:: + +#: exe_search_path /some/prepended/path +#: exe_search_path +/some/appended/path +#: exe_search_path -/some/excluded/path + +# update_check_interval 24 + +#: The interval to periodically check if an update to kitty is +#: available (in hours). If an update is found, a system notification +#: is displayed informing you of the available update. The default is +#: to check every 24 hours, set to zero to disable. Update checking is +#: only done by the official binary builds. Distro packages or source +#: builds do not do update checking. Changing this option by reloading +#: the config is not supported. + +# startup_session none + +#: Path to a session file to use for all kitty instances. Can be +#: overridden by using the kitty --session command line option for +#: individual instances. See sessions +#: in the kitty +#: documentation for details. Note that relative paths are interpreted +#: with respect to the kitty config directory. Environment variables +#: in the path are expanded. Changing this option by reloading the +#: config is not supported. + +# clipboard_control write-clipboard write-primary read-clipboard-ask read-primary-ask + +#: Allow programs running in kitty to read and write from the +#: clipboard. You can control exactly which actions are allowed. The +#: possible actions are: write-clipboard, read-clipboard, write- +#: primary, read-primary, read-clipboard-ask, read-primary-ask. The +#: default is to allow writing to the clipboard and primary selection +#: and to ask for permission when a program tries to read from the +#: clipboard. Note that disabling the read confirmation is a security +#: risk as it means that any program, even the ones running on a +#: remote server via SSH can read your clipboard. See also +#: clipboard_max_size. + +# clipboard_max_size 64 + +#: The maximum size (in MB) of data from programs running in kitty +#: that will be stored for writing to the system clipboard. A value of +#: zero means no size limit is applied. See also clipboard_control. + +# file_transfer_confirmation_bypass + +#: The password that can be supplied to the file transfer kitten +#: to skip the +#: transfer confirmation prompt. This should only be used when +#: initiating transfers from trusted computers, over trusted networks +#: or encrypted transports, as it allows any programs running on the +#: remote machine to read/write to the local filesystem, without +#: permission. + +# allow_hyperlinks yes + +#: Process hyperlink escape sequences (OSC 8). If disabled OSC 8 +#: escape sequences are ignored. Otherwise they become clickable +#: links, that you can click with the mouse or by using the hints +#: kitten . The +#: special value of ask means that kitty will ask before opening the +#: link when clicked. + + shell_integration enabled + +#: Enable shell integration on supported shells. This enables features +#: such as jumping to previous prompts, browsing the output of the +#: previous command in a pager, etc. on supported shells. Set to +#: disabled to turn off shell integration, completely. It is also +#: possible to disable individual features, set to a space separated +#: list of these values: no-rc, no-cursor, no-title, no-cwd, no- +#: prompt-mark, no-complete. See Shell integration +#: for details. + +# allow_cloning ask + +#: Control whether programs running in the terminal can request new +#: windows to be created. The canonical example is clone-in-kitty +#: . +#: By default, kitty will ask for permission for each clone request. +#: Allowing cloning unconditionally gives programs running in the +#: terminal (including over SSH) permission to execute arbitrary code, +#: as the user who is running the terminal, on the computer that the +#: terminal is running on. + +# clone_source_strategies venv,conda,env_var,path + +#: Control what shell code is sourced when running clone-in-kitty in +#: the newly cloned window. The supported strategies are: + +#: venv +#: Source the file $VIRTUAL_ENV/bin/activate. This is used by the +#: Python stdlib venv module and allows cloning venvs automatically. +#: conda +#: Run conda activate $CONDA_DEFAULT_ENV. This supports the virtual +#: environments created by conda. +#: env_var +#: Execute the contents of the environment variable +#: KITTY_CLONE_SOURCE_CODE with eval. +#: path +#: Source the file pointed to by the environment variable +#: KITTY_CLONE_SOURCE_PATH. + +#: This option must be a comma separated list of the above values. +#: This only source the first valid one in the above order. + +# term xterm-kitty + +#: The value of the TERM environment variable to set. Changing this +#: can break many terminal programs, only change it if you know what +#: you are doing, not because you read some advice on "Stack Overflow" +#: to change it. The TERM variable is used by various programs to get +#: information about the capabilities and behavior of the terminal. If +#: you change it, depending on what programs you run, and how +#: different the terminal you are changing it to is, various things +#: from key-presses, to colors, to various advanced features may not +#: work. Changing this option by reloading the config will only affect +#: newly created windows. + +#: }}} + +#: OS specific tweaks {{{ + +# wayland_titlebar_color system + +#: The color of the kitty window's titlebar on Wayland systems with +#: client side window decorations such as GNOME. A value of system +#: means to use the default system color, a value of background means +#: to use the background color of the currently active window and +#: finally you can use an arbitrary color, such as #12af59 or red. + +# macos_titlebar_color system + +#: The color of the kitty window's titlebar on macOS. A value of +#: system means to use the default system color, light or dark can +#: also be used to set it explicitly. A value of background means to +#: use the background color of the currently active window and finally +#: you can use an arbitrary color, such as #12af59 or red. WARNING: +#: This option works by using a hack when arbitrary color (or +#: background) is configured, as there is no proper Cocoa API for it. +#: It sets the background color of the entire window and makes the +#: titlebar transparent. As such it is incompatible with +#: background_opacity. If you want to use both, you are probably +#: better off just hiding the titlebar with hide_window_decorations. + +# macos_option_as_alt no + +#: Use the Option key as an Alt key on macOS. With this set to no, +#: kitty will use the macOS native Option+Key to enter Unicode +#: character behavior. This will break any Alt+Key keyboard shortcuts +#: in your terminal programs, but you can use the macOS Unicode input +#: technique. You can use the values: left, right or both to use only +#: the left, right or both Option keys as Alt, instead. Note that +#: kitty itself always treats Option the same as Alt. This means you +#: cannot use this option to configure different kitty shortcuts for +#: Option+Key vs. Alt+Key. Also, any kitty shortcuts using +#: Option/Alt+Key will take priority, so that any such key presses +#: will not be passed to terminal programs running inside kitty. +#: Changing this option by reloading the config is not supported. + +# macos_hide_from_tasks no + +#: Hide the kitty window from running tasks on macOS (⌘+Tab and the +#: Dock). Changing this option by reloading the config is not +#: supported. + +# macos_quit_when_last_window_closed no + +#: Have kitty quit when all the top-level windows are closed on macOS. +#: By default, kitty will stay running, even with no open windows, as +#: is the expected behavior on macOS. + +# macos_window_resizable yes + +#: Disable this if you want kitty top-level OS windows to not be +#: resizable on macOS. Changing this option by reloading the config +#: will only affect newly created OS windows. + +# macos_thicken_font 0 + +#: Draw an extra border around the font with the given width, to +#: increase legibility at small font sizes on macOS. For example, a +#: value of 0.75 will result in rendering that looks similar to sub- +#: pixel antialiasing at common font sizes. + +# macos_traditional_fullscreen no + +#: Use the macOS traditional full-screen transition, that is faster, +#: but less pretty. + +# macos_show_window_title_in all + +#: Control where the window title is displayed on macOS. A value of +#: window will show the title of the currently active window at the +#: top of the macOS window. A value of menubar will show the title of +#: the currently active window in the macOS global menu bar, making +#: use of otherwise wasted space. A value of all will show the title +#: in both places, and none hides the title. See +#: macos_menubar_title_max_length for how to control the length of the +#: title in the menu bar. + +# macos_menubar_title_max_length 0 + +#: The maximum number of characters from the window title to show in +#: the macOS global menu bar. Values less than one means that there is +#: no maximum limit. + +# macos_custom_beam_cursor no + +#: Use a custom mouse cursor for macOS that is easier to see on both +#: light and dark backgrounds. Nowadays, the default macOS cursor +#: already comes with a white border. WARNING: this might make your +#: mouse cursor invisible on dual GPU machines. Changing this option +#: by reloading the config is not supported. + +# macos_colorspace srgb + +#: The colorspace in which to interpret terminal colors. The default +#: of srgb will cause colors to match those seen in web browsers. The +#: value of default will use whatever the native colorspace of the +#: display is. The value of displayp3 will use Apple's special +#: snowflake display P3 color space, which will result in over +#: saturated (brighter) colors with some color shift. Reloading +#: configuration will change this value only for newly created OS +#: windows. + +# linux_display_server auto + +#: Choose between Wayland and X11 backends. By default, an appropriate +#: backend based on the system state is chosen automatically. Set it +#: to x11 or wayland to force the choice. Changing this option by +#: reloading the config is not supported. + +#: }}} + +#: Keyboard shortcuts {{{ + +#: Keys are identified simply by their lowercase Unicode characters. +#: For example: a for the A key, [ for the left square bracket key, +#: etc. For functional keys, such as Enter or Escape, the names are +#: present at Functional key definitions +#: . +#: For modifier keys, the names are ctrl (control, ⌃), shift (⇧), alt +#: (opt, option, ⌥), super (cmd, command, ⌘). See also: GLFW mods +#: + +#: On Linux you can also use XKB key names to bind keys that are not +#: supported by GLFW. See XKB keys +#: for a list of key names. The name to use is the part +#: after the XKB_KEY_ prefix. Note that you can only use an XKB key +#: name for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. + +#: Finally, you can use raw system key codes to map keys, again only +#: for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. To see the system key +#: code for a key, start kitty with the kitty --debug-input option, +#: kitty will output some debug text for every key event. In that text +#: look for native_code, the value of that becomes the key name in the +#: shortcut. For example: + +#: .. code-block:: none + +#: on_key_input: glfw key: 0x61 native_code: 0x61 action: PRESS mods: none text: 'a' + +#: Here, the key name for the A key is 0x61 and you can use it with:: + +#: map ctrl+0x61 something + +#: to map Ctrl+A to something. + +#: You can use the special action no_op to unmap a keyboard shortcut +#: that is assigned in the default configuration:: + +#: map kitty_mod+space no_op + +#: If you would like kitty to completely ignore a key event, not even +#: sending it to the program running in the terminal, map it to +#: discard_event:: + +#: map kitty_mod+f1 discard_event + +#: You can combine multiple actions to be triggered by a single +#: shortcut with combine action, using the syntax below:: + +#: map key combine action1 action2 action3 ... + +#: For example:: + +#: map kitty_mod+e combine : new_window : next_layout + +#: This will create a new window and switch to the next available +#: layout. + +#: You can use multi-key shortcuts with the syntax shown below:: + +#: map key1>key2>key3 action + +#: For example:: + +#: map ctrl+f>2 set_font_size 20 + +#: The full list of actions that can be mapped to key presses is +#: available here . + +# kitty_mod ctrl+shift + +#: Special modifier key alias for default shortcuts. You can change +#: the value of this option to alter all default shortcuts that use +#: kitty_mod. + +# clear_all_shortcuts no + +#: Remove all shortcut definitions up to this point. Useful, for +#: instance, to remove the default shortcuts. + +# action_alias + +#: E.g. action_alias launch_tab launch --type=tab --cwd=current + +#: Define action aliases to avoid repeating the same options in +#: multiple mappings. Aliases can be defined for any action and will +#: be expanded recursively. For example, the above alias allows you to +#: create mappings to launch a new tab in the current working +#: directory without duplication:: + +#: map f1 launch_tab vim +#: map f2 launch_tab emacs + +#: Similarly, to alias kitten invocation:: + +#: action_alias hints kitten hints --hints-offset=0 + +# kitten_alias + +#: E.g. kitten_alias hints hints --hints-offset=0 + +#: Like action_alias above, but specifically for kittens. Generally, +#: prefer to use action_alias. This option is a legacy version, +#: present for backwards compatibility. It causes all invocations of +#: the aliased kitten to be substituted. So the example above will +#: cause all invocations of the hints kitten to have the --hints- +#: offset=0 option applied. + +#: Clipboard {{{ + +#: Copy to clipboard + +# map kitty_mod+c copy_to_clipboard +# map cmd+c copy_to_clipboard + +#:: There is also a copy_or_interrupt action that can be optionally +#:: mapped to Ctrl+C. It will copy only if there is a selection and +#:: send an interrupt otherwise. Similarly, +#:: copy_and_clear_or_interrupt will copy and clear the selection or +#:: send an interrupt if there is no selection. + +#: Paste from clipboard + +# map kitty_mod+v paste_from_clipboard +# map cmd+v paste_from_clipboard + +#: Paste from selection + +# map kitty_mod+s paste_from_selection +# map shift+insert paste_from_selection + +#: Pass selection to program + +# map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program + +#:: You can also pass the contents of the current selection to any +#:: program with pass_selection_to_program. By default, the system's +#:: open program is used, but you can specify your own, the selection +#:: will be passed as a command line argument to the program. For +#:: example:: + +#:: map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program firefox + +#:: You can pass the current selection to a terminal program running +#:: in a new kitty window, by using the @selection placeholder:: + +#:: map kitty_mod+y new_window less @selection + +#: }}} + +#: Scrolling {{{ + +#: Scroll line up + +# map kitty_mod+up scroll_line_up +# map kitty_mod+k scroll_line_up +# map opt+cmd+page_up scroll_line_up +# map cmd+up scroll_line_up + +#: Scroll line down + +# map kitty_mod+down scroll_line_down +# map kitty_mod+j scroll_line_down +# map opt+cmd+page_down scroll_line_down +# map cmd+down scroll_line_down + +#: Scroll page up + +# map kitty_mod+page_up scroll_page_up +# map cmd+page_up scroll_page_up + +#: Scroll page down + +# map kitty_mod+page_down scroll_page_down +# map cmd+page_down scroll_page_down + +#: Scroll to top + +# map kitty_mod+home scroll_home +# map cmd+home scroll_home + +#: Scroll to bottom + +# map kitty_mod+end scroll_end +# map cmd+end scroll_end + +#: Scroll to previous shell prompt + +# map kitty_mod+z scroll_to_prompt -1 + +#:: Use a parameter of 0 for scroll_to_prompt to scroll to the last +#:: jumped to or the last clicked position. Requires shell +#:: integration +#:: to work. + +#: Scroll to next shell prompt + +# map kitty_mod+x scroll_to_prompt 1 + +#: Browse scrollback buffer in pager + +# map kitty_mod+h show_scrollback + +#:: You can pipe the contents of the current screen and history +#:: buffer as STDIN to an arbitrary program using launch --stdin- +#:: source. For example, the following opens the scrollback buffer in +#:: less in an overlay window:: + +#:: map f1 launch --stdin-source=@screen_scrollback --stdin-add-formatting --type=overlay less +G -R + +#:: For more details on piping screen and buffer contents to external +#:: programs, see launch . + +#: Browse output of the last shell command in pager + +# map kitty_mod+g show_last_command_output + +#:: You can also define additional shortcuts to get the command +#:: output. For example, to get the first command output on screen:: + +#:: map f1 show_first_command_output_on_screen + +#:: To get the command output that was last accessed by a keyboard +#:: action or mouse action:: + +#:: map f1 show_last_visited_command_output + +#:: You can pipe the output of the last command run in the shell +#:: using the launch action. For example, the following opens the +#:: output in less in an overlay window:: + +#:: map f1 launch --stdin-source=@last_cmd_output --stdin-add-formatting --type=overlay less +G -R + +#:: To get the output of the first command on the screen, use +#:: @first_cmd_output_on_screen. To get the output of the last jumped +#:: to command, use @last_visited_cmd_output. + +#:: Requires shell integration +#:: to work. + +#: }}} + +: Window management {{{ + +#: New window + +# map kitty_mod+enter new_window +# map cmd+enter new_window + +#:: You can open a new kitty window running an arbitrary program, for +#:: example:: + +#:: map kitty_mod+y launch mutt + +#:: You can open a new window with the current working directory set +#:: to the working directory of the current window using:: + +#:: map ctrl+alt+enter launch --cwd=current + +#:: You can open a new window that is allowed to control kitty via +#:: the kitty remote control facility with launch --allow-remote- +#:: control. Any programs running in that window will be allowed to +#:: control kitty. For example:: + +#:: map ctrl+enter launch --allow-remote-control some_program + +#:: You can open a new window next to the currently active window or +#:: as the first window, with:: + +#:: map ctrl+n launch --location=neighbor +#:: map ctrl+f launch --location=first + +#:: For more details, see launch +#:: . + +#: New OS window + +# map kitty_mod+n new_os_window +# map cmd+n new_os_window + +#:: Works like new_window above, except that it opens a top-level OS +#:: window. In particular you can use new_os_window_with_cwd to open +#:: a window with the current working directory. + +#: Close window + +# map kitty_mod+w close_window +# map shift+cmd+d close_window + +#: Next window + +# map kitty_mod+] next_window + +#: Previous window + +# map kitty_mod+[ previous_window + +#: Move window forward + +# map kitty_mod+f move_window_forward + +#: Move window backward + +# map kitty_mod+b move_window_backward + +#: Move window to top + +# map kitty_mod+` move_window_to_top + +#: Start resizing window + +# map kitty_mod+r start_resizing_window +# map cmd+r start_resizing_window + +#: First window + +# map kitty_mod+1 first_window +# map cmd+1 first_window + +#: Second window + +# map kitty_mod+2 second_window +# map cmd+2 second_window + +#: Third window + +# map kitty_mod+3 third_window +# map cmd+3 third_window + +#: Fourth window + +# map kitty_mod+4 fourth_window +# map cmd+4 fourth_window + +#: Fifth window + +# map kitty_mod+5 fifth_window +# map cmd+5 fifth_window + +#: Sixth window + +# map kitty_mod+6 sixth_window +# map cmd+6 sixth_window + +#: Seventh window + +# map kitty_mod+7 seventh_window +# map cmd+7 seventh_window + +#: Eight window + +# map kitty_mod+8 eighth_window +# map cmd+8 eighth_window + +#: Ninth window + +# map kitty_mod+9 ninth_window +# map cmd+9 ninth_window + +#: Tenth window + +# map kitty_mod+0 tenth_window + +#: Visually select and focus window + +# map kitty_mod+f7 focus_visible_window + +#:: Display overlay numbers and alphabets on the window, and switch +#:: the focus to the window when you press the key. When there are +#:: only two windows, the focus will be switched directly without +#:: displaying the overlay. You can change the overlay characters and +#:: their order with option visual_window_select_characters. + +#: Visually swap window with another + +# map kitty_mod+f8 swap_with_window + +#:: Works like focus_visible_window above, but swaps the window. + +#: }}} + +: Tab management {{{ + +#: Next tab + +# map kitty_mod+right next_tab +# map shift+cmd+] next_tab + map alt+e next_tab + +#: Previous tab + +# map kitty_mod+left previous_tab +# map shift+cmd+[ previous_tab + map alt+q previous_tab + +#: New tab + +# map kitty_mod+t new_tab +# map cmd+t new_tab + +#: Close tab + +#: default is ctrl+shift+q +# map kitty_mod+q close_tab +# map cmd+w close_tab + + +#: Close OS window + +# map shift+cmd+w close_os_window + +#: Move tab forward + +# map kitty_mod+. move_tab_forward + +#: Move tab backward + +# map kitty_mod+, move_tab_backward + +#: Set tab title + +#: default is ctrl+shift+alt+t + +# map kitty_mod+alt+t set_tab_title +# map shift+cmd+i set_tab_title + + +#: You can also create shortcuts to go to specific tabs, with 1 being +#: the first tab, 2 the second tab and -1 being the previously active +#: tab, and any number larger than the last tab being the last tab:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+1 goto_tab 1 +#: map ctrl+alt+2 goto_tab 2 + +#: Just as with new_window above, you can also pass the name of +#: arbitrary commands to run when using new_tab and new_tab_with_cwd. +#: Finally, if you want the new tab to open next to the current tab +#: rather than at the end of the tabs list, use:: + +#: map ctrl+t new_tab !neighbor [optional cmd to run] +: }}} + +#: Layout management {{{ + +#: Next layout + +# map kitty_mod+l next_layout + + +#: You can also create shortcuts to switch to specific layouts:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+t goto_layout tall +#: map ctrl+alt+s goto_layout stack + +#: Similarly, to switch back to the previous layout:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+p last_used_layout + +#: There is also a toggle_layout action that switches to the named +#: layout or back to the previous layout if in the named layout. +#: Useful to temporarily "zoom" the active window by switching to the +#: stack layout:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+z toggle_layout stack +#: }}} + +#: Font sizes {{{ + +#: You can change the font size for all top-level kitty OS windows at +#: a time or only the current one. + +#: Increase font size + +# map kitty_mod+equal change_font_size all +2.0 +# map kitty_mod+plus change_font_size all +2.0 +# map kitty_mod+kp_add change_font_size all +2.0 +# map cmd+plus change_font_size all +2.0 +# map cmd+equal change_font_size all +2.0 +# map shift+cmd+equal change_font_size all +2.0 + +#: Decrease font size + +# map kitty_mod+minus change_font_size all -2.0 +# map kitty_mod+kp_subtract change_font_size all -2.0 +# map cmd+minus change_font_size all -2.0 +# map shift+cmd+minus change_font_size all -2.0 + +#: Reset font size + +# map kitty_mod+backspace change_font_size all 0 +# map cmd+0 change_font_size all 0 + + +#: To setup shortcuts for specific font sizes:: + +#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size all 10.0 + +#: To setup shortcuts to change only the current OS window's font +#: size:: + +#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size current 10.0 +#: }}} + +#: Select and act on visible text {{{ + +#: Use the hints kitten to select text and either pass it to an +#: external program or insert it into the terminal or copy it to the +#: clipboard. + +#: Open URL + +# map kitty_mod+e open_url_with_hints + +#:: Open a currently visible URL using the keyboard. The program used +#:: to open the URL is specified in open_url_with. + +#: Insert selected path + +# map kitty_mod+p>f kitten hints --type path --program - + +#:: Select a path/filename and insert it into the terminal. Useful, +#:: for instance to run git commands on a filename output from a +#:: previous git command. + +#: Open selected path + +# map kitty_mod+p>shift+f kitten hints --type path + +#:: Select a path/filename and open it with the default open program. + +#: Insert selected line + +# map kitty_mod+p>l kitten hints --type line --program - + +#:: Select a line of text and insert it into the terminal. Useful for +#:: the output of things like: `ls -1`. + +#: Insert selected word + +# map kitty_mod+p>w kitten hints --type word --program - + +#:: Select words and insert into terminal. + +#: Insert selected hash + +# map kitty_mod+p>h kitten hints --type hash --program - + +#:: Select something that looks like a hash and insert it into the +#:: terminal. Useful with git, which uses SHA1 hashes to identify +#:: commits. + +#: Open the selected file at the selected line + +# map kitty_mod+p>n kitten hints --type linenum + +#:: Select something that looks like filename:linenum and open it in +#:: vim at the specified line number. + +#: Open the selected hyperlink + +# map kitty_mod+p>y kitten hints --type hyperlink + +#:: Select a hyperlink (i.e. a URL that has been marked as such by +#:: the terminal program, for example, by `ls --hyperlink=auto`). + + +#: The hints kitten has many more modes of operation that you can map +#: to different shortcuts. For a full description see hints kitten +#: . +#: }}} + +#: Miscellaneous {{{ + +#: Show documentation + +# map kitty_mod+f1 show_kitty_doc overview + +#: Toggle fullscreen + +# map kitty_mod+f11 toggle_fullscreen +# map ctrl+cmd+f toggle_fullscreen + +#: Toggle maximized + +# map kitty_mod+f10 toggle_maximized + +#: Toggle macOS secure keyboard entry + +# map opt+cmd+s toggle_macos_secure_keyboard_entry + +#: Unicode input + +# map kitty_mod+u kitten unicode_input +# map ctrl+cmd+space kitten unicode_input + +#: Edit config file + +# map kitty_mod+f2 edit_config_file +# map cmd+, edit_config_file + +#: Open the kitty command shell + +# map kitty_mod+escape kitty_shell window + +#:: Open the kitty shell in a new window / tab / overlay / os_window +#:: to control kitty using commands. + +#: Increase background opacity + +# map kitty_mod+a>m set_background_opacity +0.1 + +#: Decrease background opacity + +# map kitty_mod+a>l set_background_opacity -0.1 + +#: Make background fully opaque + +# map kitty_mod+a>1 set_background_opacity 1 + +#: Reset background opacity + +# map kitty_mod+a>d set_background_opacity default + +#: Reset the terminal + +# map kitty_mod+delete clear_terminal reset active +# map opt+cmd+r clear_terminal reset active + +#:: You can create shortcuts to clear/reset the terminal. For +#:: example:: + +#:: # Reset the terminal +#:: map f1 clear_terminal reset active +#:: # Clear the terminal screen by erasing all contents +#:: map f1 clear_terminal clear active +#:: # Clear the terminal scrollback by erasing it +#:: map f1 clear_terminal scrollback active +#:: # Scroll the contents of the screen into the scrollback +#:: map f1 clear_terminal scroll active +#:: # Clear everything up to the line with the cursor +#:: map f1 clear_terminal to_cursor active + +#:: If you want to operate on all kitty windows instead of just the +#:: current one, use all instead of active. + +#:: It is also possible to remap Ctrl+L to both scroll the current +#:: screen contents into the scrollback buffer and clear the screen, +#:: instead of just clearing the screen, for example, for ZSH add the +#:: following to ~/.zshrc: + +#:: .. code-block:: zsh + +#:: scroll-and-clear-screen() { +#:: printf '\n%.0s' {1..$LINES} +#:: zle clear-screen +#:: } +#:: zle -N scroll-and-clear-screen +#:: bindkey '^l' scroll-and-clear-screen + +#: Clear up to cursor line + +# map cmd+k clear_terminal to_cursor active + +#: Reload kitty.conf + +# map kitty_mod+f5 load_config_file +# map ctrl+cmd+, load_config_file + +#:: Reload kitty.conf, applying any changes since the last time it +#:: was loaded. Note that a handful of options cannot be dynamically +#:: changed and require a full restart of kitty. Particularly, when +#:: changing shortcuts for actions located on the macOS global menu +#:: bar, a full restart is needed. You can also map a keybinding to +#:: load a different config file, for example:: + +#:: map f5 load_config /path/to/alternative/kitty.conf + +#:: Note that all options from the original kitty.conf are discarded, +#:: in other words the new configuration *replace* the old ones. + +#: Debug kitty configuration + +# map kitty_mod+f6 debug_config +# map opt+cmd+, debug_config + +#:: Show details about exactly what configuration kitty is running +#:: with and its host environment. Useful for debugging issues. + +#: Send arbitrary text on key presses + +#:: E.g. map ctrl+shift+alt+h send_text all Hello World + +#:: You can tell kitty to send arbitrary (UTF-8) encoded text to the +#:: client program when pressing specified shortcut keys. For +#:: example:: + +#:: map ctrl+alt+a send_text all Special text + +#:: This will send "Special text" when you press the Ctrl+Alt+A key +#:: combination. The text to be sent is a python string literal so +#:: you can use escapes like \x1b to send control codes or \u21fb to +#:: send Unicode characters (or you can just input the Unicode +#:: characters directly as UTF-8 text). You can use `kitty +kitten +#:: show_key` to get the key escape codes you want to emulate. + +#:: The first argument to send_text is the keyboard modes in which to +#:: activate the shortcut. The possible values are normal, +#:: application, kitty or a comma separated combination of them. The +#:: modes normal and application refer to the DECCKM cursor key mode +#:: for terminals, and kitty refers to the kitty extended keyboard +#:: protocol. The special value all means all of them. + +#:: Some more examples:: + +#:: # Output a word and move the cursor to the start of the line (like typing and pressing Home) +#:: map ctrl+alt+a send_text normal Word\x1b[H +#:: map ctrl+alt+a send_text application Word\x1bOH +#:: # Run a command at a shell prompt (like typing the command and pressing Enter) +#:: map ctrl+alt+a send_text normal,application some command with arguments\r + +#: Open kitty Website + +# map shift+cmd+/ open_url https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/ + +#: }}} + +#: }}} diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore index 2c8fe8a..9d5aa9e 100644 --- a/.gitignore +++ b/.gitignore @@ -3,17 +3,22 @@ # except: !.zshrc +!.vimrc +!.ideavimrc !.config !.config/nvim !.config/nvim/** +!.config/btop +!.config/btop/** !.config/kitty -!.config/kitty/* +!.config/kitty/** !.gitignore !.zsh !.zsh/** !.tmux.conf !.gitconfig -!.local/share/fzf -!.local/share/nnn -!.local/share/fzf/** -!.local/share/nnn/** +!.local/fzf +!.local/fzf/** +!.local/nvim +!.local/nvim/** +.config/btop/btop.log diff --git a/.ideavimrc b/.ideavimrc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..82baed7 --- /dev/null +++ b/.ideavimrc @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +"" Source your .vimrc +source /home/plex/.vimrc + +"" -- Suggested options -- +" Show a few lines of context around the cursor. Note that this makes the +" text scroll if you mouse-click near the start or end of the window. +set scrolloff=5 + +" Do incremental searching. +set incsearch + +" Do the joining with the ide +set ideajoin + +"" -- Map IDE actions to IdeaVim -- https://jb.gg/abva4t +"" Map \r to the Reformat Code action +"map \r (ReformatCode) + +"" Map d to start debug +"map d (Debug) + +"" Map \b to toggle the breakpoint on the current line +"map \b (ToggleLineBreakpoint) + + +" Find more examples here: https://jb.gg/share-ideavimrc diff --git a/.vimrc b/.vimrc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..107e589 --- /dev/null +++ b/.vimrc @@ -0,0 +1,129 @@ +" GENERAL CONFIGS ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +syntax on " syntax highlighting +set nocompatible " disable compatibility to old-time vi +set number +set nocompatible +set hlsearch " highlight search +set incsearch " incremental search +set tabstop=4 " number of columns occupied by a tab +set softtabstop=4 " see multiple spaces as tab stops so does the right thing +set expandtab " converts tabs to white space +set shiftwidth=4 " width for auto indents +set autoindent " indent a new line the same amount as the line just typed +set number " add line numbers +set wildmode=longest,list " get bash-like tab completions +set cc=100 " set an 100 column border for good coding style +set mouse=a " enable mouse for help file editing and hitting prompts +set cursorline " highlight current cursor line +set ttyfast " Speed up scrolling in Vim +set fdm=indent " folding method syntax +set foldlevel=10 " only fold when a certain complexity is reached by default. + " This applies only at startup. +set numberwidth=4 " How much space the line numbers should take +set signcolumn=yes " Show extra icons in the line numbers (like git marks, errors) +set timeout timeoutlen=400 " How long to wait for non prefix free hotkey melodies +set ttimeoutlen=0 + +" Avoid showing message extra message when using completion +set shortmess+=c + +"allow auto-indenting depending on file type +filetype plugin indent on +filetype plugin on + + +let g:indentLine_char = '│' + +" HOTKEYS ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ +" add lines with double o +noremap oo o +noremap OO O + +" H and L for end and beginning +nmap H ^ +nmap L $ +vmap H ^ +vmap L $ + +" useful functions for arrow keys +" (and force the user to use `hjkl`) + +" right/left to add/remove a tab in the beginning of the line. +nmap << +nmap >> +" same for visual mode (plus reselecting stuff for visual mode) +vmap >gv + +" up and down move lines up and down +nmap :m -2 +nmap :m +1 +" same for visual mode (plus reselecting stuff for visual mode) +vmap :m -2 +vmap :m +1 + +" resize windows +nnoremap :vertical resize -1 +nnoremap :vertical resize +1 +nnoremap :resize -1 +nnoremap :resize +1 + +" hit F3 to toggle search highlighting" +nnoremap :set hlsearch! + +nnoremap +let mapleader=" " +map t :echo "leader tested!" +map h :noh + +" copy to Wayland clipboard when leader is used. (note, install gvim for this) +vnoremap wy y :call system("wl-copy", @") +nnoremap wY Y :call system("wl-copy", @") +nnoremap wy y :call system("wl-copy", @") +nnoremap wyy yy :call system("wl-copy", @") + +" copy to system clipboard when leader is used. (note, install gvim for this) +vnoremap y "+y +nnoremap Y "+Y +nnoremap y "+y +nnoremap yy "+yy + +" don't write the pasted upon stuff in visual mode into the register +vnoremap p pgvy + +" open terminal with F12 +nnoremap :terminal + +" vsplit with , then " +map " :vsplit + +" split with , then %" +map % :split + +" join with j +nnoremap j :join +" join up with J +nnoremap J :move .-2 :join + +" split lines with s +nnoremap s i +" split lines up with S +nnoremap S i V:m -2 + +" move screen a line up/down with alt U/D +nmap kzz +nmap jzz + +" spell checking ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- +set spell spelllang=en + +" set a location +set spellfile=~/.config/nvim/spell/en.utf-8.add + +" go to last or next misspelled word +nnoremap zn ]s +nnoremap zN [s + +" same as above but only with bad words (unrecognized) +nnoremap Zn ]S +nnoremap ZN [S diff --git a/.zsh/zfunc/_cargo b/.zsh/zfunc/_cargo new file mode 100644 index 0000000..351db7f --- /dev/null +++ b/.zsh/zfunc/_cargo @@ -0,0 +1,4 @@ +#compdef cargo +if command -v rustc >/dev/null 2>&1; then + source "$(rustc --print sysroot)"/share/zsh/site-functions/_cargo +fi diff --git a/.zsh/zfunc/_conda b/.zsh/zfunc/_conda new file mode 100644 index 0000000..05bbaa7 --- /dev/null +++ b/.zsh/zfunc/_conda @@ -0,0 +1,734 @@ +#compdef conda mamba micromamba +#description:conda package manager +# +# ZSH Completion for conda (http://conda.pydata.org/) +# +# Author: Valentin Haenel (https://github.com/esc/) +# Licence: WTFPL (http://sam.zoy.org/wtfpl/) +# Version: 0.11-dev +# Homepage: https://github.com/conda-incubator/conda-zsh-completion +# Demo: https://asciinema.org/a/16516 +# +# This completion depends on Python for a json parser, sorry. Unfortunately +# there is no such thing in zsh (yet). +# +# To use this completion, install it somewhere on your hard drive: +# +# $ git clone https://github.com/esc/conda-zsh-completion +# +# And then add it to your $fpath in ~/.zshrc before you call compinit: +# +# fpath+=/path/to/where/you/installed/conda-zsh-completion +# compinit +# +# If you're using oh-my-zsh or Prezto, they will call compinit for you, so +# just add it to your $fpath before calling the OMZ or Prezto initialization +# functions. For example: +# +# git clone https://github.com/esc/conda-zsh-completion ${ZSH_CUSTOM:=~/.oh-my-zsh/custom}/plugins/conda-zsh-completion +# +# And add lines in `.zshrc` +# plugins=(… conda-zsh-completion) +# autoload -U compinit && compinit +# +# If you use oh-my-zsh, you might have to move the "autoload" line to after you sourced +# oh-my-zsh.sh. +# +# To activate the completion cache for packages, add the following to your +# '.zshrc': +# +# zstyle ':completion::complete:*' use-cache 1 +# +# To display subcommand completion in groups, please add the following to your +# '.zshrc': +# +# zstyle ":conda_zsh_completion:*" use-groups true +# +# To display unnamed environments and prefixes of environments, add the following +# to your '.zshrc': +# +# zstyle ":conda_zsh_completion:*" show-unnamed true +# +# To display environments autocompletion sorted in creation order add the following +# to your '.zshrc': +# +# zstyle ":conda_zsh_completion:*" sort-envs-by-time true +# +# The completion will display both global environments (envs located in conda_dir/envs and base env) +# and local environments (located in ~/.conda/envs). +# If enables sort-envs-by-time, it will display local environments first. +# To display global environments first, add the following to your '.zshrc': +# +# zstyle ":conda_zsh_completion:*" show-global-envs-first true +# +# If not enables sort-envs-by-time, then all environments will be sorted by alphabetical order, +# and this option is useless. +# +# To forcefully clean the completion cache, look in '~/.zcompcache' and remove +# file starting with 'conda_'. And/or do 'rm ~/.zcompdump*'. +# +# When developing, you can use the following to reload the completion after +# having modified it: +# +# $ unfunction _conda && autoload -U _conda +# +# Please report any issues at: +# https://github.com/esc/conda-zsh-completion/issues +# +# CHANGELOG +# --------- +# +# * v0.10 +# +# * Search environments in custom environments paths, thanks to Thomas G. (coldfix). +# * Naive mamba support, thanks to olegtarasov +# * Remove path prefix from environments in default location, thanks to 3mb3dw0rk5 +# * Sort environments to be completed by creation time, thanks to m-novikov +# * Check for environment directory before accessing, thanks to huyz-git +# +# * v0.9 +# +# * Improved the completion speed for completing environments, thanks to +# Niels Mündler. +# * Various minor improvements and documentation upgrades +# +# * v0.8 +# +# * Updated installation instructions and added a license file, thanks to +# Andrew Janke +# +# * v0.7 +# +# * Fix alignment during menu-completion +# +# * v0.6 +# +# * conda activate and conda deactivate can now be completed, thanks to +# Taylor Kang Beck +# +# * v0.5 +# +# * conda-env can now be completed +# * conda-build can now be completed +# +# * v0.4 +# +# * conda info can complete available packages +# * conda install and create have rudimentary package version completion +# * remove caching for local package list, it's fast enough +# * conda remove and update are aware of -n or similar and complete only +# packages in the given environment +# * list of packages excludes those installed with pip +# +# * v0.3 +# +# * overhaul of the completion for config +# +# * complete only existing keys +# * complete only existing values +# * differentiate between list and boolean config +# * reader and writer options mutually exclusive +# * complete multiple keys for --get +# +# * -n,--name and -p,--prefix are now mutually exclusive +# +# * v0.2 +# +# * completion cache for packages +# * complete all channels defined in .condarc +# +# * v0.1 +# +# * inital release +# +# TODO +# ---- +# +# * Subcommand grouping is still alpha. +# * Example of activating cache only for conda completion +# * Make cache policy configurable +# * Completion for version numbers is rudimentary: +# only 'install' can complete them and only for a single '=' sign +# * Configuration for external commands: only build and env supported +# * Properly handle package specs on the command line +# * Don't continue to complete options once -- is given +# * None of the commands are aware of channels + +local state line context +local -A opt_args + +__conda_envs(){ + local -a envs unnamed sort globalfirst localenvs globalenvs + local -a ls_opts=("-1") + local -a describe_opts + local localenvspath + # only parse environments.txt (including unnamed envs) if asked by the user + zstyle -s ":conda_zsh_completion:*" show-unnamed unnamed + zstyle -s ":conda_zsh_completion:*" sort-envs-by-time sort + zstyle -s ":conda_zsh_completion:*" show-global-envs-first globalfirst + if test -n "$sort"; then + ls_opts+=("-t") + describe_opts+=("-V") + fi + + # global envs (if exists) and base env. + globalenvs=($([[ -d "${${CONDA_EXE}%bin/conda}/envs" ]] && ls $ls_opts ${${CONDA_EXE}%bin/conda}/envs)) + globalenvs+=("base") + + # local envs (if exists). + if [[ -n "$CONDA_ENVS_PATH" ]]; then + localenvspath="$CONDA_ENVS_PATH" + elif [[ -n "$CONDA_ENVS_DIRS" ]]; then + localenvspath="$CONDA_ENVS_DIRS" + else + localenvspath="${HOME:?}/.conda/envs" + fi + localenvs=($([[ -d "$localenvspath" ]] && ls $ls_opts "$localenvspath")) + + if test -n "$globalfirst"; then + envs=($globalenvs $localenvs) + else + envs=($localenvs $globalenvs) + fi + + # unmaned envs (if show-unammed). + if test -n "$unnamed"; then + envs+=($( (test -n "$unnamed" && cat ${HOME:?}/.conda/environments.txt) | cut -f1 -d' ' | sed -e "s|^$localenvspath/||")) + fi + + _describe $describe_opts -t envs 'conda environments' envs +} + +__conda_packages_installed(){ + local -a installed_packages option environment additional_message + # check for command line overrides + [[ -n "$1" ]] && option="$1" + [[ -n "$2" ]] && environment="$2" + installed_packages=($( conda list --no-pip $option $environment | sed 1,2d | cut -f1 -d' ' )) + [[ -n $option ]] && [[ -n $environment ]] && additional_message=" in environment: '$environment'" + _describe -t installed_packages "installed packages$additional_message" installed_packages +} + +__conda_package_available(){ + zstyle ":completion:${curcontext}:" cache-policy __conda_caching_policy + local -a available_packages + if _cache_invalid conda_available_packages || ! _retrieve_cache conda_available_packages ; then + available_packages=($(conda search --use-index-cache --json | + python -c " +import json, sys +parsed = json.load(sys.stdin) +for k in parsed.keys(): + print(k) + ")) + _store_cache conda_available_packages available_packages + fi + print -l $available_packages + +} + +__describe_conda_package_available(){ + local -a available_packages + available_packages=($( __conda_package_available)) + _describe -t available_packages 'available packages' available_packages +} + +__conda_existing_config_keys(){ + local -a config_keys + config_keys=($(conda config --json --get | + python -c " +import json, sys +keys = json.load(sys.stdin)['get'].keys() +for k in keys: + print(k) + ")) + print -l $config_keys +} + +__conda_describe_existing_config_keys(){ + local -a config_keys + config_keys=($( __conda_existing_config_keys )) + if [ "${#config_keys}" == 0 ] ; then + _message "no keys found!" + else + _describe -t config_keys 'existing configuration keys' config_keys + fi +} + +__conda_describe_existing_list_config_keys(){ + local -a config_keys existing_list_config_keys + config_keys=($( __conda_existing_config_keys )) + existing_list_config_keys=() + for k in $config_keys; do + if (( ${__conda_list_config_keys[(I)$k]} )) ; then + existing_list_config_keys+=$k + fi + done + if [ "${#existing_list_config_keys}" == 0 ] ; then + _message "no keys found!" + else + _describe -t existing_list_config_keys 'existing list configuration keys' existing_list_config_keys + fi +} + +__conda_existing_config_values(){ + local -a config_values search_term + search_term="$1" + config_values=($(conda config --json --get "$search_term" 2> /dev/null | + python -c " +import json, sys +try: + values = json.load(sys.stdin)['get']['$search_term'] + for v in values: + print(v) +except KeyError: + pass +except ValueError: + pass + ")) + print -l $config_values +} + +__conda_describe_existing_config_values(){ + local -a config_values search_term + search_term="$1" + config_values=($( __conda_existing_config_values $search_term )) + if [ "${#config_values}" == 0 ] ; then + _message "no values found for '$search_term'!" + else + _describe -t config_values 'configuration values' config_values + fi +} + +__conda_describe_boolean_config_values(){ + local -a config_values + config_values=(True False) + _describe -t config_values 'boolean configuration values' config_values +} + +__conda_channels(){ + local -a channels + channels=($( __conda_existing_config_values "channels" )) + channels+=(system) + _describe -t channels 'conda channels' channels +} + +local -a __conda_boolean_config_keys __conda_list_config_keys __conda_config_keys + +__conda_boolean_config_keys=( + 'add_binstar_token' + 'always_yes' + 'allow_softlinks' + 'changeps1' + 'use_pip' + 'offline' + 'binstar_upload' + 'binstar_personal' + 'show_channel_urls' + 'allow_other_channels' + 'ssl_verify' + ) + +__conda_list_config_keys=( + 'channels' + 'disallow' + 'create_default_packages' + 'track_features' + 'envs_dirs' + ) + +__conda_config_keys=($__conda_boolean_config_keys $__conda_list_config_keys) + +__conda_describe_boolean_config_keys(){ + _describe -t __conda_boolean_config_keys 'boolean keys' __conda_boolean_config_keys +} + +__conda_describe_list_config_keys(){ + _describe -t __conda_list_config_keys 'list keys' __conda_list_config_keys +} + +__conda_describe_config_keys(){ + _describe -t __conda_config_keys 'conda configuration keys' __conda_config_keys +} + +#__conda_package_specs=('<' '>' '<=' '>=' '==' '!=') +__conda_package_specs=('=') + +__conda_describe_package_specs(){ + _describe -t __conda_package_specs 'conda package specs' __conda_package_specs +} + +__conda_describe_package_version(){ + local -a current_package versions + current_package="$1" + versions=($( conda search --json --use-index-cache $current_package | python -c " +import json,sys +try: + versions = set((e['version'] for e in json.load(sys.stdin)['$current_package'])) + for v in versions: + print(v) +except KeyError: + pass + ")) + _describe -t versions "$current_package version" versions +} + +__conda_commands(){ + local -a package maint environment help config special tmp + package=( + search:'Search for packages and display their information.' + install:'Install a list of packages into a specified conda environment.' + ) + maint=( + update:'Update conda packages.' + clean:'Remove unused packages and caches.' + ) + environment=( + info:'Display information about current conda install.' + create:'Create a new conda environment from a list of specified packages.' + list:'List linked packages in a conda environment.' + remove:'Remove a list of packages from a specified conda environment.' + uninstall:'Alias for conda remove' + activate:'Activate an environment; alias for source activate' + deactivate:'Deactivate an environment; alias for source deactivate' + ) + help=( + help:'Displays a list of available conda commands and their help strings.' + ) + config=( + config:'Modify configuration values in .condarc.' + ) + special=( + run:'Launches an application installed with Conda.' + init:'Initialize conda into a regular environment. (EXPERIMENTAL)' + package:'Low-level conda package utility. (EXPERIMENTAL)' + bundle:'Create or extract a "bundle package" (EXPERIMENTAL)' + ) + external=( + env:'Manage environments.' + build:'tool for building conda packages' + ) + + # This takes care of alignment if the user wanted the subcommand completion + # to be split into groups. + zstyle -s ":conda_zsh_completion:*" use-groups tmp + if [[ -n $tmp ]] ; then + _describe -t package_commands "package commands" package + _describe -t maint_commands "maint commands" maint + _describe -t environment_commands "environment commands" environment + _describe -t help_commands "help commands" help + _describe -t config_commands "config commands" config + _describe -t special_commands "special commands" special + _describe -t external_commands "external commands" external + else + _describe "conda commands" package -- maint -- environment -- help -- config -- special -- external + fi +} + +__conda_caching_policy() { + local -a oldp + oldp=( "$1"(Nmh+12) ) # 12 hour + (( $#oldp )) +} + +local -a opts help_opts json_opts env_opts channel_opts install_opts + +opts=( + '(-h --help)'{-h,--help}'[show this help message and exit]' + '(-V --version)'{-V,--version}'[show program''s version number and exit]' +) + +help_opts=( + '(-h --help)'{-h,--help}'[show this help message and exit]' \ + ) + +json_opts=( + '--json[report all output as json.]' \ + ) + +env_opts=( + '(-n --name -p --prefix)'{-n,--name}'[name of environment]:environment:__conda_envs' \ + '(-n --name -p --prefix)'{-p,--prefix}'[full path to environment prefix]:path:_path_files' \ + ) + +channel_opts=( + '(-c --channel)'{-c,--channel}'[additional channel to search for packages]:channel:__conda_channels'\ + '--override-channels [do not search default or .condarc channels]' \ + '--use-index-cache[use cache of channel index files]' \ + '--use-local[use locally built packages]' \ + ) + +install_opts=( + '(-y --yes)'{-y,--yes}'[do not ask for confirmation]' \ + '--dry-run[only display what would have been done]' \ + '(-f --force)'{-f,--force}'[force install]' \ + '--file[read package versions from file]:file:_path_files' \ + '--no-deps[do not install dependencies]' \ + '(-m --mkdir)'{-m,--mkdir}'[create prefix directory if necessary]' \ + '--offline[offline mode, don''t connect to internet]' \ + '--no-pin[ignore pinned file]' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[do not display progress bar]'\ + '--copy[Install all packages using copies instead of hard- or soft-linking]' \ + '--alt-hint[Use an alternate algorithm to generate an unsatisfiable hint]' \ + ) + +_arguments -C $opts \ + ': :->command' \ + '*:: :->subcmd' + +# the magic function, complete either a package or a package and it's version +__magic(){ + local -a last_item available_packages current_package + last_item=$line[$CURRENT] + available_packages=($( __conda_package_available )) + if compset -P "*=" ; then + current_package="$IPREFIX[1,-2]" + __conda_describe_package_version $current_package + else + __describe_conda_package_available + if [[ -n $last_item ]] && (( ${available_packages[(I)$last_item]} )); then + compset -P '*' + __conda_describe_package_specs + fi + fi +} + +case $state in +(command) + __conda_commands + ;; +(subcmd) + case ${line[1]} in + (info) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + '--json[report all output as json.]' \ + '(-a --all)'{-a,--all}'[show all information, (environments, license, and system information]' \ + '(-e --envs)'{-e,--envs}'[list all known conda environments]' \ + '(-l --license)'{-l,--license}'[display information about local conda licenses list]' \ + '(-s --system)'{-s,--system}'[list environment variables]' \ + '--root[display root environment path]' \ + '*:packages:__describe_conda_package_available' \ + ;; + (help) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + '*:commands:__conda_commands' \ + ;; + (list) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '(-c --canonical)'{-c,--canonical}'[output canonical names of packages only]' \ + '(-e --export)'{-e,--export}'[output requirement string only]' \ + '(-r --revisions)'{-r,--revision}'[list the revision history and exit]' \ + '--no-pip[Do not include pip-only installed packages]' \ + '*:regex:' \ + ;; + (search) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $channel_opts \ + '(-c --canonical)'{-c,--canonical}'[output canonical names of packages only]' \ + '--unknown[use index metadata from the local package cache]' \ + '(-o --outdated)'{-o,--outdated}'[only display installed but outdated packages]' \ + '(-v --verbose)'{-v,--verbose}'[Show available packages as blocks of data]' \ + '--platform[Search the given platform.]' \ + '--spec[Treat regex argument as a package specification]' \ + '*:regex:' \ + ;; + (create) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $install_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $channel_opts \ + '--unknown[use index metadata from the local package cache]' \ + '--clone[path to (or name of) existing local environment]' \ + '--no-default-packages[ignore create_default_packages in condarc file]' \ + '*:packages:__magic' \ + ;; + (install) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $install_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $channel_opts \ + '--revision[revert to the specified revision]:revision' \ + '*:packages:__magic' \ + ;; + (update) + local -a environment options specifier + options=('-n' '--name' '-p' '--prefix') + for i in $options ; do + (( ${line[(I)$i]} )) && specifier=$i + done + [[ -n $specifier ]] && environment="$line[${line[(i)$specifier]}+1]" + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $install_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $channel_opts \ + '--unknown[use index metadata from the local package cache]' \ + '--all[Update all installed packages in the environment]' \ + '*:packages:{__conda_packages_installed $specifier $environment}' \ + ;; + (remove|uninstall) + local -a environment options specifier + options=('-n' '--name' '-p' '--prefix') + for i in $options ; do + (( ${line[(I)$i]} )) && specifier=$i + done + [[ -n $specifier ]] && environment="$line[${line[(i)$specifier]}+1]" + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $channel_opts \ + '(-y --yes)'{-y,--yes}'[do not ask for confirmation]' \ + '--dry-run[only display what would have been done]' \ + '(-a --all)'{-a,--all}'[remove all packages, i.e. the entire environment]' \ + '--features[remove features (instead of packages)]' \ + '--no-pin[ignore pinned file]' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[do not display progress bar]'\ + '--offline[offline mode, don''t connect to internet]' \ + '*:packages:{__conda_packages_installed $specifier $environment}' \ + ;; + (config) + # this allows completing multiple keys when --get is given + local -a last_item get_opts + last_item=$line[$CURRENT-1] + if (( ${line[(I)--get]} )) && (( ${__conda_config_keys[(I)$last_item]} )) ; then + get_opts=('*:keys:__conda_describe_existing_config_keys') + else + get_opts='' + fi + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '--system[write to the system .condarc file]' \ + '--file[write to the given file.]:file:_path_files' \ + '( --add --set --remove --remove-key)--get[get the configuration value]:key:__conda_describe_existing_config_keys' \ + '(--get --set --remove --remove-key)--add[add one configuration value to a list key]:list key:__conda_describe_list_config_keys:value:' \ + '(--get --add --remove --remove-key)--set[set a boolean key]:boolean key:__conda_describe_boolean_config_keys:value:__conda_describe_boolean_config_values' \ + '(--get --add --set --remove-key)--remove[remove a configuration value from a list key]:list key:__conda_describe_existing_list_config_keys:value:{__conda_describe_existing_config_values '$last_item'}' \ + '(--get --add --set --remove )--remove-key[remove a configuration key (and all its values)]:key:__conda_describe_existing_config_keys' \ + '(-f --force)'{-f,--force}'[write to the config file using the yaml parser]' \ + $get_opts + ;; + (init) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + ;; + (clean) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '(-y --yes)'{-y,--yes}'[do not ask for confirmation]' \ + '--dry-run[only display what would have been done]' \ + '(-i --index-cache)'{-i,--index-cache}'[remove index cache]' \ + '(-l --lock)'{-l,--lock}'[remove all conda lock files]' \ + '(-t --tarballs)'{-t,--tarballs}'[remove cached package tarballs]' \ + '(-p --packages)'{-p,--packages}'[remove unused cached packages]' \ + '(-s --source-cache)'{-s,--source-cache}'[remove files from the source cache of conda build]' \ + ;; + (package) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + '(-w --which)'{-w,--which}'[given some path print which conda package the file came from]:path:_path_files' \ + '(-L --ls-files)'{-L,--ls-files}'[list all files belonging to specified package]' \ + '(-r --reset)'{-r,--reset}'[remove all untracked files and exit]' \ + '(-u --untracked)'{-u,--untracked}'[display all untracked files and exit]' \ + '--pkg-name[package name of the created package]:pkg_name:' \ + '--pkg-version[package version of the created package]:pkg_version:' \ + '--pkg-build[package build number of the created package]:pkg_build:' \ + ;; + (bundle) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $env_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '(-c --create)'{-c,--create}'[create bundle]' \ + '(-x --extract)'{-x,--extract}'[extact bundle located at path]:path:_path_files' \ + '--metadump[dump metadata of bundle at path]:path:_path_files' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[do not display progress bar]'\ + '--bundle-name[name of bundle]:NAME:' \ + '--data-path[path to data to be included in bundle]:path:_path_files' \ + '--extra-meta[path to json file with additional meta-data no]:path:_path_files' \ + '--no-env[no environment]' \ + ;; + (build) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + '(-c --check)'{-c,--check}'[only check (validate) the recipe]' \ + '--no-binstar-upload[do not ask to upload the package to binstar]' \ + '--output[output the conda package filename which would have been created and exit]' \ + '(-s --source)'{-s,--source}'[only obtain the source (but don''t build)]' \ + '(-t --test)'{-t,--test}'[test package (assumes package is already build)]' \ + '--no-test[do not test the package]' \ + '(-b --build-only)'{-b,--build-only}'[only run the build, without any post processing or testing]' \ + '(-p --post)'{-p,--post}'[run the post-build logic]' \ + '(-V --version)'{-V,--version}'[show program''s version number and exit]' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[do not display progress bar]' \ + '--python[Set the Python version used by conda build]' \ + '--perl[Set the Perl version used by conda build]' \ + '--numpy[Set the NumPy version used by conda build]' \ + '*:recipe_path:_path_files' \ + ;; + (env) + _arguments -C $opts \ + ': :->command' \ + '*:: :->subcmd' + case $state in + (command) + local -a env + env=( + create:'Create an environment based on an environment file' + export:'Export a given environment' + list:'List the Conda environments' + remove:'Remove an environment' + update:'Update the current environment based on environment file' + ) + _describe -t env_commands "help commands" env + ;; + (subcmd) + case ${line[1]} in + (create) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '(-n --name)'{-n,--name}'[name of environment]:environment:__conda_envs' \ + '(-f --file)'{-f,--file}'[environment definition]:file:_path_files' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[]' \ + ;; + (export) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + '(-n --name)'{-n,--name}'[name of environment]:environment:__conda_envs' \ + '(-f --file)'{-f,--file}'[]:file:_path_files' \ + ;; + (list) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + ;; + (remove) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + $env_opts \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[do not display progress bar]'\ + '(-y --yes)'{-y,--yes}'[do not ask for confirmation]' \ + '--dry-run[only display what would have been done]' \ + ;; + (update) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + $json_opts \ + '(-n --name)'{-n,--name}'[name of environment]:environment:__conda_envs' \ + '(-f --file)'{-f,--file}'[environment definition]:file:_path_files' \ + '(-q --quiet)'{-q,--quiet}'[]' \ + ;; + esac + ;; + esac + ;; + (activate) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + '--stack[activate this environment on top of the previous environment]' \ + '*:environment:__conda_envs' + ;; + (deactivate) + _arguments -C $help_opts \ + ;; + esac + ;; +esac + diff --git a/.zsh/zfunc/_rustup b/.zsh/zfunc/_rustup new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6c91ed2 --- /dev/null +++ b/.zsh/zfunc/_rustup @@ -0,0 +1,786 @@ +#compdef rustup + +autoload -U is-at-least + +_rustup() { + typeset -A opt_args + typeset -a _arguments_options + local ret=1 + + if is-at-least 5.2; then + _arguments_options=(-s -S -C) + else + _arguments_options=(-s -C) + fi + + local context curcontext="$curcontext" state line + _arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'-V[Print version information]' \ +'--version[Print version information]' \ +'*-v[Enable verbose output]' \ +'*--verbose[Enable verbose output]' \ +'(-v --verbose)*-q[Disable progress output]' \ +'(-v --verbose)*--quiet[Disable progress output]' \ +'::+toolchain -- release channel (e.g. +stable) or custom toolchain to set override:' \ +":: :_rustup_commands" \ +"*::: :->rustup" \ +&& ret=0 + case $state in + (rustup) + words=($line[2] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-command-$line[2]:" + case $line[2] in + (dump-testament) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(show) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*-v[Enable verbose output with rustc information for all installed toolchains]' \ +'*--verbose[Enable verbose output with rustc information for all installed toolchains]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__show_commands" \ +"*::: :->show" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (show) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-show-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (active-toolchain) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*-v[Enable verbose output with rustc information]' \ +'*--verbose[Enable verbose output with rustc information]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(home) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(profile) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(install) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--profile=[]: :(minimal default complete)' \ +'*--no-self-update[Don'\''t perform self-update when running the `rustup install` command]' \ +'*--force[Force an update, even if some components are missing]' \ +'*--force-non-host[Install toolchains that require an emulator. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/wiki/Non-host-toolchains]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(uninstall) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(update) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*--no-self-update[Don'\''t perform self update when running the `rustup update` command]' \ +'*--force[Force an update, even if some components are missing]' \ +'*--force-non-host[Install toolchains that require an emulator. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/wiki/Non-host-toolchains]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(check) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(default) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(toolchain) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__toolchain_commands" \ +"*::: :->toolchain" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (toolchain) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-toolchain-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (list) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*-v[Enable verbose output with toolchain information]' \ +'*--verbose[Enable verbose output with toolchain information]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(install) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--profile=[]: :(minimal default complete)' \ +'*-c+[Add specific components on installation]: : ' \ +'*--component=[Add specific components on installation]: : ' \ +'*-t+[Add specific targets on installation]: : ' \ +'*--target=[Add specific targets on installation]: : ' \ +'*--no-self-update[Don'\''t perform self update when running the`rustup toolchain install` command]' \ +'*--force[Force an update, even if some components are missing]' \ +'*--allow-downgrade[Allow rustup to downgrade the toolchain to satisfy your component choice]' \ +'*--force-non-host[Install toolchains that require an emulator. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup/wiki/Non-host-toolchains]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(uninstall) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(link) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':toolchain -- Custom toolchain name:' \ +':path -- Path to the directory:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(target) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__target_commands" \ +"*::: :->target" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (target) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-target-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (list) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'*--installed[List only installed targets]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(add) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::target -- List of targets to install; "all" installs all available targets:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(remove) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::target -- List of targets to uninstall:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(component) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__component_commands" \ +"*::: :->component" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (component) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-component-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (list) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'*--installed[List only installed components]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(add) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'--target=[]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::component:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(remove) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'--target=[]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'*::component:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(override) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__override_commands" \ +"*::: :->override" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (override) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-override-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (list) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(set) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--path=[Path to the directory]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(unset) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--path=[Path to the directory]: : ' \ +'*--nonexistent[Remove override toolchain for all nonexistent directories]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(run) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*--install[Install the requested toolchain if needed]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':toolchain -- Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`:' \ +'*::command:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(which) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':command:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(doc) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'*--path[Only print the path to the documentation]' \ +'*--alloc[The Rust core allocation and collections library]' \ +'*--book[The Rust Programming Language book]' \ +'*--cargo[The Cargo Book]' \ +'*--core[The Rust Core Library]' \ +'*--edition-guide[The Rust Edition Guide]' \ +'*--nomicon[The Dark Arts of Advanced and Unsafe Rust Programming]' \ +'*--proc_macro[A support library for macro authors when defining new macros]' \ +'*--reference[The Rust Reference]' \ +'*--rust-by-example[A collection of runnable examples that illustrate various Rust concepts and standard libraries]' \ +'*--rustc[The compiler for the Rust programming language]' \ +'*--rustdoc[Documentation generator for Rust projects]' \ +'*--std[Standard library API documentation]' \ +'*--test[Support code for rustc'\''s built in unit-test and micro-benchmarking framework]' \ +'*--unstable-book[The Unstable Book]' \ +'*--embedded-book[The Embedded Rust Book]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'::topic -- Topic such as '\''core'\'', '\''fn'\'', '\''usize'\'', '\''eprintln!'\'', '\''core\:\:arch'\'', '\''alloc\:\:format!'\'', '\''std\:\:fs'\'', '\''std\:\:fs\:\:read_dir'\'', '\''std\:\:io\:\:Bytes'\'', '\''std\:\:iter\:\:Sum'\'', '\''std\:\:io\:\:error\:\:Result'\'' etc...:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(man) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'--toolchain=[Toolchain name, such as '\''stable'\'', '\''nightly'\'', or '\''1.8.0'\''. For more information see `rustup help toolchain`]: : ' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':command:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(self) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__self_commands" \ +"*::: :->self" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (self) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-self-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (update) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(uninstall) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*-y[]' \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(upgrade-data) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(set) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +":: :_rustup__set_commands" \ +"*::: :->set" \ +&& ret=0 + + case $state in + (set) + words=($line[1] "${words[@]}") + (( CURRENT += 1 )) + curcontext="${curcontext%:*:*}:rustup-set-command-$line[1]:" + case $line[1] in + (default-host) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':host_triple:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(profile) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':profile-name:(minimal default complete)' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(auto-self-update) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +':auto-self-update-mode:(enable disable check-only)' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +;; +(completions) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'-h[Print help information]' \ +'--help[Print help information]' \ +'::shell:(bash elvish fish powershell zsh)' \ +'::command:(rustup cargo)' \ +&& ret=0 +;; +(help) +_arguments "${_arguments_options[@]}" \ +'*::subcommand -- The subcommand whose help message to display:' \ +&& ret=0 +;; + esac + ;; +esac +} + +(( $+functions[_rustup_commands] )) || +_rustup_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'dump-testament:Dump information about the build' \ +'show:Show the active and installed toolchains or profiles' \ +'install:Update Rust toolchains' \ +'uninstall:Uninstall Rust toolchains' \ +'update:Update Rust toolchains and rustup' \ +'check:Check for updates to Rust toolchains and rustup' \ +'default:Set the default toolchain' \ +'toolchain:Modify or query the installed toolchains' \ +'target:Modify a toolchain'\''s supported targets' \ +'component:Modify a toolchain'\''s installed components' \ +'override:Modify directory toolchain overrides' \ +'run:Run a command with an environment configured for a given toolchain' \ +'which:Display which binary will be run for a given command' \ +'doc:Open the documentation for the current toolchain' \ +'man:View the man page for a given command' \ +'self:Modify the rustup installation' \ +'set:Alter rustup settings' \ +'completions:Generate tab-completion scripts for your shell' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__show__active-toolchain_commands] )) || +_rustup__show__active-toolchain_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup show active-toolchain commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__component__add_commands] )) || +_rustup__component__add_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup component add commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__target__add_commands] )) || +_rustup__target__add_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup target add commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__set__auto-self-update_commands] )) || +_rustup__set__auto-self-update_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup set auto-self-update commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__check_commands] )) || +_rustup__check_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup check commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__completions_commands] )) || +_rustup__completions_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup completions commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__component_commands] )) || +_rustup__component_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'list:List installed and available components' \ +'add:Add a component to a Rust toolchain' \ +'remove:Remove a component from a Rust toolchain' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup component commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__default_commands] )) || +_rustup__default_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup default commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__set__default-host_commands] )) || +_rustup__set__default-host_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup set default-host commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__doc_commands] )) || +_rustup__doc_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup doc commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__dump-testament_commands] )) || +_rustup__dump-testament_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup dump-testament commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__component__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__component__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup component help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__override__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__override__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup override help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__self__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__self__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup self help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__set__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__set__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup set help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__show__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__show__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup show help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__target__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__target__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup target help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain__help_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain__help_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain help commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__show__home_commands] )) || +_rustup__show__home_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup show home commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__install_commands] )) || +_rustup__install_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup install commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain__install_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain__install_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain install commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain__link_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain__link_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain link commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__component__list_commands] )) || +_rustup__component__list_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup component list commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__override__list_commands] )) || +_rustup__override__list_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup override list commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__target__list_commands] )) || +_rustup__target__list_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup target list commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain__list_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain__list_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain list commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__man_commands] )) || +_rustup__man_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup man commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__override_commands] )) || +_rustup__override_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'list:List directory toolchain overrides' \ +'set:Set the override toolchain for a directory' \ +'unset:Remove the override toolchain for a directory' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup override commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__set__profile_commands] )) || +_rustup__set__profile_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup set profile commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__show__profile_commands] )) || +_rustup__show__profile_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup show profile commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__component__remove_commands] )) || +_rustup__component__remove_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup component remove commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__target__remove_commands] )) || +_rustup__target__remove_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup target remove commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__run_commands] )) || +_rustup__run_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup run commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__self_commands] )) || +_rustup__self_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'update:Download and install updates to rustup' \ +'uninstall:Uninstall rustup.' \ +'upgrade-data:Upgrade the internal data format.' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup self commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__override__set_commands] )) || +_rustup__override__set_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup override set commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__set_commands] )) || +_rustup__set_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'default-host:The triple used to identify toolchains when not specified' \ +'profile:The default components installed' \ +'auto-self-update:The rustup auto self update mode' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup set commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__show_commands] )) || +_rustup__show_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'active-toolchain:Show the active toolchain' \ +'home:Display the computed value of RUSTUP_HOME' \ +'profile:Show the current profile' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup show commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__target_commands] )) || +_rustup__target_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'list:List installed and available targets' \ +'add:Add a target to a Rust toolchain' \ +'remove:Remove a target from a Rust toolchain' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup target commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain_commands() { + local commands; commands=( +'list:List installed toolchains' \ +'install:Install or update a given toolchain' \ +'uninstall:Uninstall a toolchain' \ +'link:Create a custom toolchain by symlinking to a directory' \ +'help:Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)' \ + ) + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__self__uninstall_commands] )) || +_rustup__self__uninstall_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup self uninstall commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__toolchain__uninstall_commands] )) || +_rustup__toolchain__uninstall_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup toolchain uninstall commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__uninstall_commands] )) || +_rustup__uninstall_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup uninstall commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__override__unset_commands] )) || +_rustup__override__unset_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup override unset commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__self__update_commands] )) || +_rustup__self__update_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup self update commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__update_commands] )) || +_rustup__update_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup update commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__self__upgrade-data_commands] )) || +_rustup__self__upgrade-data_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup self upgrade-data commands' commands "$@" +} +(( $+functions[_rustup__which_commands] )) || +_rustup__which_commands() { + local commands; commands=() + _describe -t commands 'rustup which commands' commands "$@" +} + +_rustup "$@" diff --git a/.zshrc b/.zshrc index 1c7bd6b..0b4ca36 100644 --- a/.zshrc +++ b/.zshrc @@ -1,11 +1,19 @@ ### ENVVARS -PATH="/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:$HOME/.local/bin:$HOME/.cargo/bin:/usr/local/bin" +PATH="/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:$HOME/.local/bin:$HOME/.cargo/bin:/usr/local/bin:$HOME/.deno/bin" export PATH export EDITOR=nvim export editor=nvim export XDG_CONFIG_HOME=~/.config export TIMEFMT=$'\nreal\t%E\nuser\t%U\nsys\t%S\ncpu\t%P' export ZSH=$HOME/.zsh +export CLIPBOARD_NOGUI=1 # wayland only allows GUI apps to use the clipboard. + # cb would have to open every 2 seconds and steal + # focus. This sucks, so I will have to disable GUI + # integration (yes that means ctrl+v) for now. + # + # For wayland, set this to `1` + # see https://github.com/Slackadays/Clipboard/issues/171 + ### Aliases alias l="ls -lah" @@ -20,11 +28,7 @@ alias isotime='date +"%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S%z"' alias gg=lazygit alias reload="source ~/.zshrc" alias gls=/bin/ls - -### non standard aliases -if [ -f ~/.zsh_aliases ]; then - source ~/.zsh_aliases -fi +alias gotemp="cd $(mktemp -d)" ### Functions function largefiles () { exec 2>/dev/null; du -ah "$@" | grep -P "^\d+(G|T|P|E)\s" } @@ -33,10 +37,15 @@ function smallfiles () { exec 2>/dev/null; du -ah "$@" | grep -P "^\d+(B|K)\s" } function newpass() { LC_ALL=C tr -dc '[:alnum:]' < /dev/urandom | head -c${1:-$0} } +function condac() { + conda activate $@ + export HOST=$(hostname) +} ### ---- zsh options ------------------------------------- setopt autocd setopt HIST_FIND_NO_DUPS +setopt HIST_IGNORE_SPACE setopt HIST_IGNORE_ALL_DUPS setopt appendhistory setopt INC_APPEND_HISTORY @@ -94,6 +103,7 @@ bindkey '^M' expand-dots-then-accept-line PS1='%B%F{red}%n@%m%k %B%F{cyan}%(4~|...|)%3~%F{white} %# %b%f%k' ### ---- ZSH MODULES ----------------------------------- +fpath+=$ZSH/zfunc # enable completion features autoload -Uz compinit compinit -d ~/.cache/zcompdump @@ -175,3 +185,28 @@ else eval "$(zoxide init zsh)" fi +### --- conda Config ------------------------------------- +# >>> conda initialize >>> +# !! Contents within this block are managed by 'conda init' !! +__conda_setup="$('/home/plex/.local/share/miniconda3/bin/conda' 'shell.zsh' 'hook' 2> /dev/null)" +if [ $? -eq 0 ]; then + eval "$__conda_setup" +else + if [ -f "/home/plex/.local/share/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh" ]; then + . "/home/plex/.local/share/miniconda3/etc/profile.d/conda.sh" + else + export PATH="/home/plex/.local/share/miniconda3/bin:$PATH" + fi +fi +unset __conda_setup +# <<< conda initialize <<< +# we don't want to see (base) constantly, so we do this: +PS1=$(echo $PS1 | sed 's/(base) //') # remove base + +### load unversioned zsh code +if [ -f ~/.zsh.local ]; then + source ~/.zsh.local +else + touch ~/.zsh.local +fi +