Modifiez votre ~/.profile avec ce qui suit. Vous pouvez également mettre ceci dans votre ~/.bashrc ou ~/.bash_profile en fonction de ce que vous avez et utilisez déjà. NOTE : ceci montre la configuration de couleur par défaut. Changez le premier e en B si vous voulez voir des répertoires rouges.
LSCOLORS=exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad
export LSCOLORS
export CLICOLOR=1
Sauvegardez votre ~/.profil et faites ensuite un :
. .profile
Depuis la ligne de commande.
Voici les différents paramètres de couleur et l'ordre des attributs, tirés de la page de manuel ls :
LSCOLORS The value of this variable describes what color to use for which attribute when colors are enabled with CLICOLOR. This string is a
concatenation of pairs of the format fb, where f is the foreground color and b is the background color.
The color designators are as follows:
a black
b red
c green
d brown
e blue
f magenta
g cyan
h light grey
A bold black, usually shows up as dark grey
B bold red
C bold green
D bold brown, usually shows up as yellow
E bold blue
F bold magenta
G bold cyan
H bold light grey; looks like bright white
x default foreground or background
Note that the above are standard ANSI colors. The actual display may differ depending on the color capabilities of the terminal in
use.
The order of the attributes are as follows:
1. directory
2. symbolic link
3. socket
4. pipe
5. executable
6. block special
7. character special
8. executable with setuid bit set
9. executable with setgid bit set
10. directory writable to others, with sticky bit
11. directory writable to others, without sticky bit
The default is "exfxcxdxbxegedabagacad", i.e. blue foreground and default background for regular directories, black foreground and red
background for setuid executables, etc.