4

I'm configuring my prompt (PS1) via .bashrc and found one issue with my current configuration: I am using a 256 color scheme. This is not compatible with the classical terminal (accessible via e.g. Ctrl+Alt+F2) but looks beautiful in graphical terminals such as gnome-terminal, terminator, etc.

So I have to change my prompt depending on the type of terminal. To do this, I need a condition for if clause to test the type of terminal. Do you know how to do this?

1
  • FYI, "classic terminal" is known as the console. Jul 23, 2013 at 18:15

5 Answers 5

5

the TERM variable indicates the terminal type. when running in an x-terminal, it is usually xterm (but can also be xterm-color-256 as Dmitry has hinted in his answer). the following code checks whether the value of $TERM starts with xterm (and thus catches several cases):

case "$TERM" in
   xterm*)
      echo "running as an x-terminal"
      ;;
   *)
      echo "not running as an x-terminal"
      ;;
esac
3

echo $TERM would give you the terminal type

2

This should work:

if [ "$TERM" == "xterm-color-256" ]; then echo "YES"; fi
2

Another approach: look at the parent process of the current shell. If its "login", you're in a console

parent=$(ps --pid $(ps --pid $$ --no-headers --format ppid) --no-headers --format cmd)
if [[ $parent == login* ]]; then
    echo console
    PS1='plain> '
else
    echo assume you can get away with more
    PS1='fancy> '
fi
1

You could use the value of $TERM to decide if you have a color terminal or not, but this value could be modified. The question is where this environment variable is being set when a new terminal window is opened.

This would be in the .bashrc file. However, a word of warning:

  • The value of $TERM may be a lie. This is just an environment variable that's set. How it is set is determined by the terminal program (on the Mac, the Terminal.app can set the terminal to xterm, xterm-color, vt100, ansi, and several others..
  • The terminal could be a color terminal, but doesn't use ANSI color codes. You could be in trouble if you simply assume that a particular escape sequence gets you a particular color.
  • If your prompt is set in the .bashrc file, changing the value of $TERM won't change the prompt.

That said, I would probably do something like this:

case $TERM in
    *color*)    PS1=...;;
    *)          PS1=...;;
esac

This way, my terminal will be set to color if I said it was an xterm-color or xterm-256color.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.