alternatively use: http://geoff.greer.fm/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.
LS_COLORS='di=1:fi=0:ln=31:pi=5:so=5:bd=5:cd=5:or=31'
The parameters for LS_COLORS (di, fi, ln, pi, etc) refer to different file types:
di Directory
fi File
ln Symbolic Link
pi Fifo file
so Socket file
bd Block (buffered) special file
cd Character (unbuffered) special file
or Symbolic Link pointing to a non-existent file (orphan)
mi Non-existent file pointed to by a symbolic link (visible when you type ls -l)
ex File which is executable (ie. has 'x' set in permissions).
Through trial and error I worked out the color codes for LS_COLORS
to be:
0 = Default Colour
1 = Bold
4 = Underlined
5 = Flashing Text
7 = Reverse Field
31 = Red
32 = Green
33 = Orange
34 = Blue
35 = Purple
36 = Cyan
37 = Grey
40 = Black Background
41 = Red Background
42 = Green Background
43 = Orange Background
44 = Blue Background
45 = Purple Background
46 = Cyan Background
47 = Grey Background
90 = Dark Grey
91 = Light Red
92 = Light Green
93 = Yellow
94 = Light Blue
95 = Light Purple
96 = Turquoise
100 = Dark Grey Background
101 = Light Red Background
102 = Light Green Background
103 = Yellow Background
104 = Light Blue Background
105 = Light Purple Background
106 = Turquoise Background
These codes can also be combined with one another:
di=5;34;43
Color Codes
Sorry, as far as the color goes, these are standard VT100 terminal codes. They are the numeric representation of the code used to "begin the color" (or effect), ... The code to begin color can be summed up as
\e[<CODE>m
where \e is escape (ESC or 0x1B (27) in ASCII). To end color you send code "0". So, to start and end writing in a bright red + bold, it would look like:Of course, replacing <0x1B> with a byte equaling that.