6 %!postproc(man): "^(\.TH.*) 1 " "\1 5 "
10 grmlzshrc - Grml's zsh setup
14 //zsh// [**options**]...
18 The Grml project provides a fairly exhaustive interactive setup (referred to
19 as //grmlzshrc// throughout this document) for the amazing unix shell zsh
20 (http://zsh.sourceforge.net). This is the reference manual for that
23 To use //grmlzshrc//, you need at least version 3.1.7 of zsh (although not all
24 features are enabled in every version).
26 //grmlzshrc// behaves differently depending on which user loads it. For the
27 root user (**EUID** == 0) only a subset of features is loaded by default. This
28 behaviour can be altered by setting the **GRML_ALWAYS_LOAD_ALL** STARTUP
31 Users may want to keep an up-to-date version of the setup (possibly from the
32 git-sources) in //~/.zshrc//. If that happens on a system where the global
33 zshrc is also a //grmlzshrc// (but possibly an older one), you can inhibit
34 loading the global version by doing:
37 echo setopt no_global_rcs >> ~/.zshenv
40 Note, that this will disable //ANY// global files, except for the global
44 Some of the behaviour of //grmlzshrc// can be altered by setting certain shell
45 variables. These may be set temporarily when starting zsh like this:
49 Or by setting them permanently in **zshrc.pre** (See AUXILIARY FILES below).
52 If set to a value greater than zero and //acpi// installed, //grmlzshrc// will
53 put the battery status into the right hand side interactive prompt.
55 : **COMMAND_NOT_FOUND**
56 A non zero value activates a handler, which is called when a command can not
57 be found. The handler is defined by GRML_ZSH_CNF_HANDLER (see below).
59 : **GRML_ALWAYS_LOAD_ALL**
60 Enables the whole Grml setup for root, if set to a non zero value.
62 : **GRML_ZSH_CNF_HANDLER**
63 This variable contains the handler to be used by COMMAND_NOT_FOUND (see above)
64 and defaults to "/usr/share/command-not-found/command-not-found".
66 : **GRMLSMALL_SPECIFIC**
67 Set this to zero to remove items in zsh config, which do not work in
71 Where zsh saves the history. Default: ${HOME}/.zsh_history.
74 Number of commands to be kept in the history. On a Grml-CD this defaults to
75 500, on a hard disk installation to 5000.
78 Sets the frequency in seconds for zsh to check for new mail. Defaults to 30.
79 A value of zero turns off checking.
82 Non zero values deactivate automatic correction of commands.
85 If set to zero (default), allows selection from a menu, if there are at least
86 five possible options of completion.
89 A non zero value disables precmd and preexec commands. These are functions
90 that are run before every command (setting xterm/screen titles etc.).
93 Show time (user, system and cpu) used by external commands, if they run longer
94 than the defined number of seconds (default: 5).
97 Number of commands to be stored in ${HISTFILE}. Defaults to 1000 on a Grml-CD
98 and to 10000 on an installation on hard disk.
101 As in tcsh(1) an array of login/logout events to be reported by the shell
102 builtin "log". For details see zshparam(1). Defaults to (notme root).
104 : **ZSH_NO_DEFAULT_LOCALE**
105 Import "/etc/default/locale", if set to zero (default).
108 A non zero value causes shell functions to be profiled. The results can be
109 obtained with the zprof builtin command (see zshmodules(1) for details).
112 = FEATURE DESCRIPTION =
113 This is an in depth description of non-standard features implemented by
116 == DIRSTACK HANDLING ==
117 The dirstack in //grmlzshrc// has a persistent nature. It is stored into a
118 file each time zsh's working directory is changed. That file can be configured
119 via the **DIRSTACKFILE** variable and it defaults to **~/.zdirs**. The
120 **DIRSTACKSIZE** variable defaults to **20** in this setup.
122 The **DIRSTACKFILE** is loaded each time zsh starts, therefore freshly started
123 zshs inherit the dirstack of the zsh that most recently updated
126 == DIRECTORY BASED PROFILES ==
127 If you want certain settings to be active in certain directories (and
128 automatically switch back and forth between them), this is what you want.
131 zstyle ':chpwd:profiles:/usr/src/grml(|/|/*)' profile grml
132 zstyle ':chpwd:profiles:/usr/src/debian(|/|/*)' profile debian
135 When that's done and you enter a directory that matches the pattern
136 in the third part of the context, a function called chpwd_profile_grml,
137 for example, is called (if it exists).
139 If no pattern matches (read: no profile is detected) the profile is
140 set to 'default', which means chpwd_profile_default is attempted to
143 A word about the context (the ':chpwd:profiles:*' stuff in the zstyle
144 command) which is used: The third part in the context is matched against
145 **$PWD**. That's why using a pattern such as /foo/bar(|/|/*) makes sense.
146 Because that way the profile is detected for all these values of **$PWD**:
154 So, if you want to make double damn sure a profile works in /foo/bar
155 and everywhere deeper in that tree, just use (|/|/*) and be happy.
157 The name of the detected profile will be available in a variable called
158 'profile' in your functions. You don't need to do anything, it'll just
161 Then there is the parameter **$CHPWD_PROFILE** which is set to the profile,
162 that was active up to now. That way you can avoid running code for a
163 profile that is already active, by running code such as the following
164 at the start of your function:
167 function chpwd_profile_grml() {
168 [[ ${profile} == ${CHPWD_PROFILE} ]] && return 1
173 The initial value for **$CHPWD_PROFILE** is 'default'.
175 === Signaling availabily/profile changes ===
177 If you use this feature and need to know whether it is active in your
178 current shell, there are several ways to do that. Here are two simple
181 a) If knowing if the profiles feature is active when zsh starts is
182 good enough for you, you can put the following snippet into your
186 (( ${+functions[chpwd_profiles]} )) &&
187 print "directory profiles active"
190 b) If that is not good enough, and you would prefer to be notified
191 whenever a profile changes, you can solve that by making sure you
192 start **every** profile function you create like this:
195 function chpwd_profile_myprofilename() {
196 [[ ${profile} == ${CHPWD_PROFILE} ]] && return 1
197 print "chpwd(): Switching to profile: $profile"
202 That makes sure you only get notified if a profile is **changed**,
203 not everytime you change directory.
205 === Version requirement ===
206 This feature requires zsh //4.3.3// or newer.
209 == ACCEPTLINE WRAPPER ==
210 The //accept-line// wiget is the one that is taking action when the **return**
211 key is hit. //grmlzshrc// uses a wrapper around that widget, which adds new
214 This wrapper is configured via styles. That means, you issue commands, that look
218 zstyle 'context' style value
221 The context namespace, that we are using is 'acceptline'. That means, the actual
222 context for your commands look like: **':acceptline:<subcontext>'**.
224 Where **<subcontext>** is one of: **default**, **normal**, **force**, **misc**
228 === Recognized Contexts ===
230 This is the value, the context is initialized with.
231 The //compwarnfmt and //rehash// styles are looked up in this context.
234 If the first word in the command line is either a command, alias, function,
235 builtin or reserved word, you are in this context.
238 This is the context, that is used if you hit enter again, after being warned
239 about the existence of a _completion for the non-existing command you
243 This is the context, you are in if the command line is empty or only
244 consists of whitespace.
247 This context is in effect, if you entered something that does not match any
248 of the above. (e.g.: variable assignments).
251 === Available Styles ===
253 If you set this style to true, the warning about non existent commands,
254 for which completions exist will not be issued. (Default: **false**)
257 The message, that is displayed to warn about the _completion issue.
258 (default: **'%c will not execute and completion %f exists.'**)
259 '%c' is replaced by the command name, '%f' by the completion's name.
262 If this is set, we'll force rehashing, if appropriate. (Defaults to
263 **true** in //grmlzshrc//).
266 This can be a list of wigdets to call in a given context. If you need a
267 specific order for these to be called, name them accordingly. The default value
268 is an **empty list**.
271 The name of a widget, that is called after the widgets from 'actions'.
272 By default, this will be '.accept-line' (which is the built-in accept-line
276 If true in the current context, call the widget in the 'default_action'
277 style. (The default is **true** in all contexts.)
283 == GNU/SCREEN STATUS SETTING ==
284 //grmlzshrc// sets screen's hardstatus lines to the currently running command
285 or **'zsh'** if the shell is idling at its prompt. If the current working
286 directory is inside a repository unter version control, screen status is set
287 to: **'zsh: <repository name>'** via zsh's vcs_info.
290 == PERSISTENT HISTORY ==
291 If you got commands you consider important enough to be included in every
292 shell's history, you can put them into ~/.important_commands and they will be
293 available via the usual history lookup widgets.
297 == ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES ==
298 //grmlzshrc// sets some environment variables, which influence the
299 behaviour of applications.
302 Set to "yes". Some applications read this to learn about properties
303 of the terminal they are running in.
306 If not already set, sets the default editor. Falls back to vi(1),
307 if vim(1) is not available.
310 Some environment variables that add colour support to less(1) for viewing
311 man pages. See termcap(5) for details.
314 The mailbox file for the current user is set to /var/mail/$USER, if not
315 already set otherwise.
318 Set less(1) as default pager, if not already set to something different.
321 Holds the path to shared files for the C++ application framework QT
325 Set explicitly to /bin/zsh, to prevent certain terminal emulators to
326 default to /bin/sh or /bin/bash.
330 Apart from zsh's default options, //grmlzshrc// sets some options
331 that change the behaviour of zsh. Options that change Z-shell's default
332 settings are marked by <grml>. But note, that zsh's defaults vary depending
333 on its emulation mode (csh, ksh, sh, or zsh). For details, see zshoptions(1).
336 Zsh sessions, that use //grmlzshrc//, will append their history list to the
337 history file, rather than replace it. Thus, multiple parallel zsh sessions
338 will all have the new entries from their history lists added to the history
339 file, in the order that they exit. The file will still be periodically
340 re-written to trim it when the number of lines grows 20% beyond the value
341 specified by $SAVEHIST.
344 If a command is issued that can't be executed as a normal command, and the
345 command is the name of a directory, perform the cd command to that directory.
347 : **auto_pushd** <grml>
348 Make cd push the old directory onto the directory stack.
350 : **completeinword** <grml>
351 If the cursor is inside a word, completion is done from both ends;
352 instead of moving the cursor to the end of the word first and starting
355 : **extended_glob** <grml>
356 Treat the '#', '~' and '^' characters as active globbing pattern characters.
358 : **extended_history** <grml>
359 Save each command's beginning timestamp (in seconds since the epoch) and the
360 duration (in seconds) to the history file.
363 Whenever a command completion is attempted, make sure the entire command
364 path is hashed first. This makes the first completion slower.
366 : **histignorealldups** <grml>
367 If a new command line being added to the history list duplicates an
368 older one, the older command is removed from the list, even if it is
369 not the previous event.
371 : **histignorespace** <grml>
372 Remove command lines from the history list when the first character on
373 the line is a space, or when one of the expanded aliases contains a
374 leading space. Note that the command lingers in the internal history
375 until the next command is entered before it vanishes.
377 : **longlistjobs** <grml>
378 List jobs in long format by default.
381 Avoid to beep on errors in zsh command line editing (zle).
384 A wildcard character never matches a leading '.'.
387 Do not send the hangup signal (HUP:1) to running jobs when the shell exits.
389 : **nonomatch** <grml>
390 If a pattern for filename generation has no matches, do not print an error
391 and leave it unchanged in the argument list. This also applies to file
392 expansion of an initial `~' or `='.
395 Report the status of background jobs immediately, rather than waiting until
396 just before printing a prompt.
398 : **pushd_ignore_dups** <grml>
399 Don't push multiple copies of the same directory onto the directory stack.
401 : **share_history** <grml>
402 As each line is added to the history file, it is checked to see if anything
403 else was written out by another shell, and if so it is included in the
404 history of the current shell too. Using !-style history, the commands from
405 the other sessions will not appear in the history list unless you explicitly
406 type the "history" command. This option is activated for zsh versions >= 4,
411 Apart from zsh's default key bindings, //grmlzshrc// comes with its own set of
412 key bindings. Note that bindings like **ESC-e** can also be typed as **ALT-e**
416 Edit the current command buffer in your favourite editor.
419 Deletes a word left of the cursor; seeing '/' as additional word separator.
422 Jump right after the first word.
425 Create directory under cursor or the selected area.
426 To select an area press ctrl-@ and use the cursor.
427 Use case: you type "mv abc ~/testa/testb/testc/" and remember that the
428 directory does not exist yet -> press **CTRL-xM** and problem solved.
431 Searches the last occurence of string before the cursor in the command history.
434 Display help on keybindings and zsh line editor. Press consecutively to page through content.
437 Brings a job, which got suspended with CTRL-z back to foreground.
440 == SHELL FUNCTIONS ==
441 //grmlzshrc// comes with a wide array of defined shell functions to ease the
444 : **855resolution()**
445 If 915resolution is available, issues a warning to the user to run it instead
446 to modify the resolution on intel graphics chipsets.
449 Lists files in current directory, which have been accessed within the
450 last N days. N is an integer to be passed as first and only argument.
451 If no argument is specified N is set to 1.
454 Sets all ulimit values to "unlimited".
457 Lists processes matching given pattern.
460 Login on the host provided as argument using autossh. Then reattach a GNU screen
461 session if a detached session is around or detach a currently attached screen or
462 else start a new screen. This is especially useful for roadwarriors using GNU
466 Simple backup of a file or directory using cp(1). The target file name is the
467 original name plus a time stamp attached. Symlinks and file attributes like mode,
468 ownership and timestamps are preserved.
471 If the original cdrecord is not installed, issues a warning to the user to
472 use the wodim binary instead. Wodim is the debian fork of Joerg Schillings
476 Creates a temporary directory using mktemp. Then changes current
477 working directory to it.
480 Lists files in current directory, which have been changed within the
481 last N days. N is an integer to be passed as first and only argument.
482 If no argument is specified N is set to 1.
485 Returns true if given command exists either as program, function, alias,
486 builtin or reserved word. If the option -c is given, only returns true,
487 if command is a program.
490 Changes directory to $HOME on first invocation of zsh. This is neccessary on
491 grml systems with autologin.
494 Changes current directory to the one supplied by argument and lists the files
495 in it, including file names starting with ".".
498 Shows the changelog of given package in $PAGER.
501 Tells the user to use grml-debootstrap, if she wants to install debian to
505 A trick from $LINUX-KERNELSOURCE/Documentation/power/swsusp.txt. It brings
506 back interactive responsiveness after suspend, when the system is swapping
510 Shows the NEWS file for the given package in $PAGER.
516 Edit given shell function.
519 Reloads an autoloadable shell function (See autoload in zshbuiltins(1)).
522 Use GNU diff with options -ubwd for mercurial.
525 Displays diffstat between the revision given as argument and tip (no
526 argument means last revision).
529 Outputs highlighted diff; needs highstring(1).
532 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4, else false.
535 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4.1, else false.
538 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4.2, else false.
541 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4.2.5, else false.
544 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4.3, else false.
547 Returns true, if zsh version is equal or greater than 4.3.3, else false.
550 Returns true, if running on darwin, else false.
553 Returns true, if running on a grml system, else false.
556 Returns true, if running on a grml system from a live cd, else false.
559 Returns true, if run on grml-small, else false.
562 Changes every occurrence of the string iso885915 or ISO885915 in
563 environment variables to UTF-8.
566 Returns true, if run within an utf environment, else false.
569 Creates directory including parent directories, if necessary. Then changes
570 current working directory to it.
572 : **minimal-shell()**
573 Spawns a minimally set up MirBSD Korn shell. It references no files in /usr,
574 so that file system can be unmounted.
577 Lists files in current directory, which have been modified within the
578 last N days. N is an integer to be passed as first and only argument.
579 If no argument is specified N is set to 1.
582 A helper function for the "e" glob qualifier to list all files newer
583 than a reference file.
587 % NTREF=/reference/file
590 % ls -l *(e:'nt /reference/file':)
594 Runs a command in $SHELL with profiling enabled (See startup variable
595 ZSH_PROFILE_RC above).
598 Reloads functions given as parameters.
601 Creates an alias whith sudo prepended, if $EUID is not zero. Run "salias -h"
602 for details. See also xunfunction() below.
605 Lists the contents of a (compressed) archive with the appropriate programs.
606 The choice is made along the filename extension.
608 : **simple-extract()**
609 Tries to uncompress/unpack given files with the appropriate programs. If an URI
610 starting with https, http or ftp is provided simple-extract tries to download
611 and then uncompress/unpack the file. The choice is made along the filename
612 ending. simple-extract will not delete the original archive (even on .gz,.bz2 or
613 .xz) unless you use the '-d' option.
616 Prints details of symlinks given as arguments.
618 : **smartcompress()**
619 Compresses/archives the file given as first parameter. Takes an optional
620 second argument, which denotes the compression/archive type as typical
621 filename extension; defaults to "tar.gz".
624 Creates directory named shots in user's home directory, if it does not yet
625 exist and changes current working directory to it. Then sleeps 5 seconds,
626 so you have plenty of time to switch desktops/windows. Then makes a screenshot
627 of the current desktop. The result is stored in ~/shots to a timestamped
630 : **ssl-cert-fingerprints**
631 Prints the SHA512, SHA256, SHA1 and MD5 digest of a x509 certificate.
632 First and only parameter must be a file containing a certificate. Use
633 /dev/stdin as file if you want to pipe a certificate to these
637 Prints all information of a x509 certificate including the SHA512,
638 SHA256, SHA1 and MD5 digests. First and only parameter must be a file
639 containing a certificate. Use /dev/stdin as file if you want to pipe a
640 certificate to this function.
642 : **ssl-cert-sha512(), ssl-cert-sha256(), ssl-cert-sha1(), ssl-cert-md5()**
643 Prints the SHA512, SHA256, SHA1 respective MD5 digest of a x509
644 certificate. First and only parameter must be a file containing a
645 certificate. Use /dev/stdin as file if you want to pipe a certificate
648 : **Start(), Restart(), Stop(), Force-Reload(), Reload()**
649 Functions for controlling daemons.
656 Translates a word from german to english (-D) or vice versa (-E).
659 Shows upstreams changelog of a given package in $PAGER.
662 Works around the "print -l ${(u)foo}"-limitation on zsh older than 4.2.
665 Changes every occurrence of the string UTF-8 or utf-8 in environment
666 variables to iso885915.
669 Wrapper for vim(1). It tries to set the title and hands vim the environment
670 variable VIM_OPTIONS on the command line. So the user may define command
671 line options, she always wants, in her .zshrc.local.
674 Searches the history for a given pattern and lists the results by date.
675 The first argument is the search pattern. The second and third ones are
676 optional and denote a search range (default: -100).
679 Tries to cat(1) file(s) given as parameter(s). Always returns true.
680 See also xunfunction() below.
683 Tries to source the file(s) given as parameter(s). Always returns true.
684 See zshbuiltins(1) for a detailed description of the source command.
685 See also xunfunction() below.
688 Changes the title of xterm window from within screen(1). Run without
689 arguments for details.
692 Removes the functions salias, xcat, xsource, xunfunction and zrcautoload.
695 Wrapper around the autoload builtin. Loads the definitions of functions
696 from the file given as argument. Searches $fpath for the file. See also
700 Sources /etc/zsh/zshrc.local and ${HOME}/.zshrc.local. These are the files
701 where own modifications should go. See also zshbuiltins(1) for a description
702 of the source command.
706 //grmlzshrc// comes with a wide array of predefined aliases to ease the user's
707 life. A few aliases (like those involving //grep// or //ls//) use the option
708 //--color=auto// for colourizing output. That option is part of **GNU**
709 implementations of these tools, and will only be used if such an implementation
712 : **acp** (//apt-cache policy//)
713 With no arguments prints out the priorities of each source. If a package name
714 is given, it displays detailed information about the priority selection of the
717 : **acs** (//apt-cache search//)
718 Searches debian package lists for the regular expression provided as argument.
719 The search includes package names and descriptions. Prints out name and short
720 description of matching packages.
722 : **acsh** (//apt-cache show//)
723 Shows the package records for the packages provided as arguments.
725 : **adg** (//apt-get dist-upgrade//)
726 Performs an upgrade of all installed packages. Also tries to automatically
727 handle changing dependencies with new versions of packages. As this may change
728 the install status of (or even remove) installed packages, it is potentially
729 dangerous to use dist-upgrade; invoked by sudo, if necessary.
731 : **ag** (//apt-get upgrade//)
732 Downloads and installs the newest versions of all packages currently installed
733 on the system. Under no circumstances are currently installed packages removed,
734 or packages not already installed retrieved and installed. New versions of
735 currently installed packages that cannot be upgraded without changing the install
736 status of another package will be left at their current version. An update must
737 be performed first (see au below); run by sudo, if necessary.
739 : **agi** (//apt-get install//)
740 Downloads and installs or upgrades the packages given on the command line.
741 If a hyphen is appended to the package name, the identified package will be
742 removed if it is installed. Similarly a plus sign can be used to designate a
743 package to install. This may be useful to override decisions made by apt-get's
744 conflict resolution system.
745 A specific version of a package can be selected for installation by following
746 the package name with an equals and the version of the package to select. This
747 will cause that version to be located and selected for install. Alternatively a
748 specific distribution can be selected by following the package name with a slash
749 and the version of the distribution or the Archive name (stable, testing, unstable).
750 Gets invoked by sudo, if user id is not 0.
752 : **ati** (//aptitude install//)
753 Aptitude is a terminal-based package manager with a command line mode similar to
754 apt-get (see agi above); invoked by sudo, if necessary.
756 : **au** (//apt-get update//)
757 Resynchronizes the package index files from their sources. The indexes of
758 available packages are fetched from the location(s) specified in
759 /etc/apt/sources.list. An update should always be performed before an
760 upgrade or dist-upgrade; run by sudo, if necessary.
762 : **CH** (//./configure --help//)
763 Lists available compilation options for building program from source.
765 : **cmplayer** (//mplayer -vo fbdev//)
766 Video player with framebuffer as video output device, so you can watch
767 videos on a virtual tty. Hint: Using fbdev2 allows you to use the shell
768 while watching a movie.
770 : **CO** (//./configure//)
771 Prepares compilation for building program from source.
773 : **cp** (//nocorrect cp//)
774 cp(1) without spelling correction.
776 : **da** (//du -sch//)
777 Prints the summarized disk usage of the arguments as well as a grand total
778 in human readable format.
780 : **dbp** (//dpkg-buildpackage//)
781 Builds binary or source packages from sources (See: dpkg-buildpackage(1)).
783 : **debs-by-size** (//grep-status -FStatus -sInstalled-Size,Package -n "install ok installed" | paste -sd " \n" | sort -rn//)
784 Prints installed Packages sorted by size (descending).
786 : **default** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
787 Sets font of xterm to "-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-*-140-*-*-c-*-iso8859-15"
788 using escape sequence.
790 : **dir** (//ls -lSrah//)
791 Lists files (including dot files) sorted by size (biggest last) in long and
792 human readable output format.
794 : **fblinks** (//links2 -driver fb//)
795 A Web browser on the framebuffer device. So you can browse images and click
796 links on the virtual tty.
798 : **fbmplayer** (//mplayer -vo fbdev -fs -zoom//)
799 Fullscreen Video player with the framebuffer as video output device. So you
800 can watch videos on a virtual tty.
803 Revision control system by Linus Torvalds.
805 : **ge** (//grep-excuses//)
806 Searches the testing excuses files for a specific maintainer (See:
809 : **grep** (//grep --color=auto//)
810 Shows grep output in nice colors, if available.
812 : **GREP** (//grep -i --color=auto//)
813 Case insensitive grep with colored output.
815 : **grml-rebuildfstab** (//rebuildfstab -v -r -config//)
816 Scans for new devices and updates /etc/fstab according to the findings.
818 : **grml-version** (//cat /etc/grml_version//)
819 Prints version of running grml.
821 : **hbp** (//hg-buildpackage//)
822 Helper program to maintain Debian packages with mercurial.
824 : **http** (//python -m SimpleHTTPServer//)
825 Basic HTTP server implemented in python. Listens on port 8000/tcp and
826 serves current directory. Implements GET and HEAD methods.
828 : **insecscp** (//scp -o "StrictHostKeyChecking=no" -o "UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null"//)
829 scp with possible man-in-the-middle attack enabled. This is convenient, if the targets
830 host key changes frequently, for example on virtualized test- or development-systems.
831 To be used only inside trusted networks, of course.
833 : **insecssh** (//ssh -o "StrictHostKeyChecking=no" -o "UserKnownHostsFile=/dev/null"//)
834 ssh with possible man-in-the-middle attack enabled
835 (for an explanation see insecscp above).
837 : **help-zshglob** (//H-Glob()//)
838 Runs the function H-Glob() to expand or explain wildcards.
840 : **hide** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
841 Tries to hide xterm window using escape sequence.
843 : **hidiff** (//histring -fE '^Comparing files .*|^diff .*' | histring -c yellow -fE '^\-.*' | histring -c green -fE '^\+.*'//)
844 If histring(1) is installed, highlight important stuff in diff(1) output.
846 : **huge** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
847 Sets huge font in xterm ("-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-*-210-*-*-c-*-iso8859-15")
848 using escape sequence.
850 : **j** (//jobs -l//)
851 Prints status of jobs in the current shell session in long format.
853 : **l** (//ls -lF --color=auto//)
854 Lists files in long output format with indicator for filetype appended
855 to filename. If the terminal supports it, with colored output.
857 : **la** (//ls -la --color=auto//)
858 Lists files in long colored output format. Including file names
861 : **lad** (//ls -d .*(/)//)
862 Lists the dot directories (not their contents) in current directory.
864 : **large** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
865 Sets large font in xterm ("-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-*-150-*-*-c-*-iso8859-15")
866 using escape sequence.
868 : **lh** (//ls -hAl --color=auto//)
869 Lists files in long and human readable output format in nice colors,
870 if available. Includes file names starting with "." except "." and
873 : **ll** (//ls -l --color=auto//)
874 Lists files in long colored output format.
876 : **llog** (//$PAGER /var/log/syslog//)
877 Opens syslog in pager.
879 : **ls** (//ls -b -CF --color=auto//)
880 Lists directory printing octal escapes for nongraphic characters.
881 Entries are listed by columns and an indicator for file type is appended
882 to each file name. Additionally the output is colored, if the terminal
885 : **lsa** (//ls -a .*(.)//)
886 Lists dot files in current working directory.
888 : **lsbig** (//ls -flh *(.OL[1,10])//)
889 Displays the ten biggest files (long and human readable output format).
891 : **lsd** (//ls -d *(/)//)
894 : **lse** (//ls -d *(/^F)//)
895 Shows empty directories.
897 : **lsl** (//ls -l *(@)//)
898 Lists symbolic links in current directory.
900 : **lsnew** (//ls -rl *(D.om[1,10])//)
901 Displays the ten newest files (long output format).
903 : **lsold** (//ls -rtlh *(D.om[1,10])//)
904 Displays the ten oldest files (long output format).
906 : **lss** (//ls -l *(s,S,t)//)
907 Lists files in current directory that have the setuid, setgid or sticky bit
910 : **lssmall** (//ls -Srl *(.oL[1,10])//)
911 Displays the ten smallest files (long output format).
913 : **lsw** (//ls -ld *(R,W,X.^ND/)//)
914 Displays all files which are world readable and/or world writable and/or
915 world executable (long output format).
917 : **lsx** (//ls -l *(*)//)
918 Lists only executable files.
920 : **md** (//mkdir -p//)
921 Creates directory including parent directories, if necessary
923 : **mdstat** (//cat /proc/mdstat//)
924 Lists all active md (i.e. linux software raid) devices with some information
927 : **medium** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
928 Sets medium sized font
929 ("-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal--13-120-75-75-c-80-iso8859-15") in xterm
930 using escape sequence.
932 : **mkdir** (//nocorrect mkdir//)
933 mkdir(1) without spelling correction.
935 : **mq** (//hg -R $(readlink -f $(hg root)/.hg/patches)//)
936 Executes the commands on the versioned patch queue from current repository.
938 : **mv** (//nocorrect mv//)
939 mv(1) without spelling correction.
942 Short rmdir(1) (remove directory).
944 : **rm** (//nocorrect rm//)
945 rm(1) without spelling correction.
947 : **rmcdir** (//'cd ..; rmdir $OLDPWD || cd $OLDPWD//)
948 rmdir current working directory
950 : **screen** (///usr/bin/screen -c ${HOME}/.screenrc//)
951 If invoking user is root, starts screen session with /etc/grml/screenrc
952 as config file. If invoked by a regular user, start a screen session
953 with users .screenrc config if it exists, else use /etc/grml/screenrc_grml
956 : **rw-** (//chmod 600//)
957 Grants read and write permission of a file to the owner and nobody else.
959 : **rwx** (//chmod 700//)
960 Grants read, write and execute permission of a file to the owner and nobody
963 : **r--** (//chmod 644//)
964 Grants read and write permission of a file to the owner and read-only to
967 : **r-x** (//chmod 755//)
968 Grants read, write and execute permission of a file to the owner and
969 read-only plus execute permission to anybody else.
977 : **semifont** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
978 Sets font of xterm to
979 "-misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed-*-*-120-*-*-*-*-iso8859-15" using
982 : **small** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
983 Sets small xterm font ("6x10") using escape sequence.
985 : **smartfont** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
986 Sets font of xterm to "-artwiz-smoothansi-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*" using
989 : **su** (//sudo su//)
990 If user is running a grml live-CD, dont ask for any password, if she
993 : **term2iso** (//echo 'Setting terminal to iso mode' ; print -n '\e%@'//)
994 Sets mode from UTF-8 to ISO 2022 (See:
995 http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html#term).
997 : **term2utf** (//echo 'Setting terminal to utf-8 mode'; print -n '\e%G'//)
998 Sets mode from ISO 2022 to UTF-8 (See:
999 http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/unicode.html#term).
1001 : **tiny** (//echo -en [ escape sequence ]//)
1002 Sets tiny xterm font
1003 ("-misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-*-*-80-*-*-c-*-iso8859-15") using escape
1006 : **tlog** (//tail -f /var/log/syslog//)
1007 Prints syslog continuously (See tail(1)).
1009 : **top10** (//print -l ? ${(o)history%% *} | uniq -c | sort -nr | head -n 10//)
1010 Prints the ten most used shell commands.
1012 : **truec** (//truecrypt [ mount options ]//)
1013 Mount a truecrypt volume with some reasonable mount options
1014 ("rw,sync,dirsync,users,uid=1000,gid=users,umask=077" and "utf8", if
1017 : **up** (//aptitude update ; aptitude safe-upgrade//)
1018 Performs a system update followed by a system upgrade using aptitude; run
1019 by sudo, if necessary. See au and ag above.
1021 : **url-quote** (//autoload -U url-quote-magic ; zle -N self-insert url-quote-magic//)
1022 After calling, characters of URLs as typed get automatically escaped, if necessary, to
1023 protect them from the shell.
1025 : **0** (//return 0//)
1026 Gives a clean prompt (i.e. without $?).
1028 : **$(uname -r)-reboot** (//kexec -l --initrd=/boot/initrd.img-"$(uname -r)" --command-line=\"$(cat /proc/cmdline)\" /boot/vmlinuz-"$(uname -r)"//)
1029 Reboots using kexec(8) and thus reduces boot time by skipping hardware initialization of BIOS/firmware.
1031 : **...** (//cd ../..///)
1032 Changes current directory two levels higher.
1036 This is a set of files, that - if they exist - can be used to customize the
1037 behaviour of //grmlzshrc//.
1040 Sourced at the very beginning of //grmlzshrc//. Among other things, it can
1041 be used to permantenly change //grmlzshrc//'s STARTUP VARIABLES (see above):
1044 # show battery status in RPROMPT
1046 # always load the complete setup, even for root
1047 GRML_ALWAYS_LOAD_ALL=1
1051 Sourced right before loading //grmlzshrc// is finished. There is a global
1052 version of this file (/etc/zsh/zshrc.local) which is sourced before the
1056 Directory listing for persistent dirstack (see above).
1058 : **.important_commands**
1059 List of commands, used by persistent history (see above).
1062 = INSTALLATION ON NON-DEBIAN SYSTEMS =
1063 On Debian systems (http://www.debian.org) - and possibly Ubuntu
1064 (http://www.ubuntu.com) and similar systems - it is very easy to get
1065 //grmlzshrc// via grml's .deb repositories.
1067 On non-debian systems, that is not an option, but all is not lost:
1070 % wget -O .zshrc http://git.grml.org/f/grml-etc-core/etc/zsh/zshrc
1073 If you would also like to get seperate function files (which you can put into
1074 your **$fpath**), you can browse and download them at:
1076 http://git.grml.org/?p=grml-etc-core.git;a=tree;f=usr_share_grml/zsh;hb=HEAD
1078 = ZSH REFCARD TAGS =
1079 If you read //grmlzshrc//'s code you may notice strange looking comments in
1080 it. These are there for a purpose. grml's zsh-refcard is automatically
1081 generated from the contents of the actual configuration file. However, we need
1082 a little extra information on which comments and what lines of code to take
1083 into account (and for what purpose).
1085 Here is what they mean:
1087 List of tags (comment types) used:
1089 Next line contains an important alias, that should be included in the
1090 grml-zsh-refcard. (placement tag: @@INSERT-aliases@@)
1093 Next line contains the beginning of an important function. (placement
1094 tag: @@INSERT-functions@@)
1097 Next line contains an important variable. (placement tag:
1098 @@INSERT-variables@@)
1101 Next line contains an important keybinding. (placement tag:
1102 @@INSERT-keybindings@@)
1105 Hashed directories list generation: //start//: denotes the start of a list of
1106 'hash -d' definitions. //end//: denotes its end. (placement tag:
1107 @@INSERT-hasheddirs@@)
1110 Abbreviation expansion list generation: //start//: denotes the beginning of
1111 abbreviations. //end//: denotes their end.
1113 Lines within this section that end in '#d .*' provide extra documentation to
1114 be included in the refcard. (placement tag: @@INSERT-abbrev@@)
1117 This tag allows you to manually generate refcard entries for code lines that
1118 are hard/impossible to parse.
1122 #m# k ESC-h Call the run-help function
1125 That would add a refcard entry in the keybindings table for 'ESC-h' with the
1128 So the syntax is: #m# <section> <argument> <comment>
1131 This tag lets you insert entries to the 'other' hash. Generally, this should
1132 not be used. It is there for things that cannot be done easily in another way.
1133 (placement tag: @@INSERT-other-foobar@@)
1136 All of these tags (except for m and o) take two arguments, the first
1137 within the tag, the other after the tag:
1139 #<tag><section># <comment>
1141 Where <section> is really just a number, which are defined by the @secmap
1142 array on top of 'genrefcard.pl'. The reason for numbers instead of names is,
1143 that for the reader, the tag should not differ much from a regular comment.
1144 For zsh, it is a regular comment indeed. The numbers have got the following
1169 So, the following will add an entry to the 'functions' table in the 'system'
1170 section, with a (hopefully) descriptive comment:
1173 #f1# Edit an alias via zle
1177 It will then show up in the @@INSERT-aliases-system@@ replacement tag that can
1178 be found in 'grml-zsh-refcard.tex.in'. If the section number is omitted, the
1179 'default' section is assumed. Furthermore, in 'grml-zsh-refcard.tex.in'
1180 @@INSERT-aliases@@ is exactly the same as @@INSERT-aliases-default@@. If you
1181 want a list of **all** aliases, for example, use @@INSERT-aliases-all@@.
1185 If you want to help to improve grml's zsh setup, clone the grml-etc-core
1186 repository from git.grml.org:
1188 ``` % git clone git://git.grml.org/grml-etc-core.git
1190 Make your changes, commit them; use '**git format-patch**' to create a series
1191 of patches and send those to the following address via '**git send-email**':
1193 ``` grml-etc-core@grml.org
1195 Doing so makes sure the right people get your patches for review and
1200 This manual page is the **reference** manual for //grmlzshrc//.
1202 That means that in contrast to the existing refcard it should document **every**
1203 aspect of the setup.
1205 This manual is currently not complete. If you want to help improving it, visit
1206 the following pages:
1208 http://wiki.grml.org/doku.php?id=zshrcmanual
1210 http://lists.mur.at/pipermail/grml/2009-August/004609.html
1212 Contributions are highly welcome.
1216 This manpage was written by Frank Terbeck <ft@grml.org>, Joerg Woelke
1217 <joewoe@fsmail.de>, Maurice McCarthy <manselton@googlemail.com> and Axel
1218 Beckert <abe@deuxchevaux.org>.
1222 Copyright (c) 2009-2011 Grml project <http://grml.org>
1224 This manpage is distributed under the terms of the GPL version 2.
1226 Most parts of grml's zshrc are distributed under the terms of GPL v2, too,
1227 except for **accept-line()** which are distributed under the same conditions
1228 as zsh itself (which is BSD-like).