Here is my current PS1:
export PS1='[\u@\h \W$(__git_ps1 " (%s)")]\$ '
How can I display the current branch in a different color?
Here is, part by part (and no Ruby):
function color_my_prompt {
local __user_and_host="\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h"
local __cur_location="\[\033[01;34m\]\w"
local __git_branch_color="\[\033[31m\]"
#local __git_branch="\`ruby -e \"print (%x{git branch 2> /dev/null}.grep(/^\*/).first || '').gsub(/^\* (.+)$/, '(\1) ')\"\`"
local __git_branch='`git branch 2> /dev/null | grep -e ^* | sed -E s/^\\\\\*\ \(.+\)$/\(\\\\\1\)\ /`'
local __prompt_tail="\[\033[35m\]$"
local __last_color="\[\033[00m\]"
export PS1="$__user_and_host $__cur_location $__git_branch_color$__git_branch$__prompt_tail$__last_color "
}
color_my_prompt
Looks like this (with my own terminal palette):
local __git_dirty='`git rev-parse 2>/dev/null && (git diff --no-ext-diff --quiet --exit-code 2> /dev/null || echo -e \*)`'
You can wrap the part that you want in colour with the following:
\e[0;32m
- sets colour (in this case, to green)
\e[m
- sets colour back to the default
For example, this sets the prompt to the last token of the current path, in green, followed by $
in the default colour:
export PS1='\e[0;32m\w\e[m $'
Other colours are available too. Have a look at this article under colorization for a comprehensive list of alternatives.
\[
and \]
, otherwise you could end up having problems with a long command line not wrapping correctly because bash counts the wrong number of characters: askubuntu.com/questions/24358/…
$(tput setaf 2)
(2 for green, 1 for red, 3 for yellow, etc), $(tput bold)
for bold and $(tput sgr0)
to reset. See mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/037 . And use the suggested \[
and \]
if assigning to PS1
: mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/053
Aug 17, 2020 at 2:15
export PS1='\[\e[0;32m\]\w\[\e[0m\] $ '
Dec 16, 2020 at 21:32
Here is my PS1 line:
\n\[\e[1;37m\]|-- \[\e[1;32m\]\u\[\e[0;39m\]@\[\e[1;36m\]\h\[\e[0;39m\]:\[\e[1;33m\]\w\[\e[0;39m\]\[\e[1;35m\]$(__git_ps1 " (%s)")\[\e[0;39m\] \[\e[1;37m\]--|\[\e[0;39m\]\n$
function pc {
[ -d .git ] && git name-rev --name-only @
}
PS1='\e];\s\a\n\e[33m\w \e[36m$(pc)\e[m\n$ '
This is my PS1 solution.
It looks great on a Mac with the Novel theme. Sorry, but my indentation got munged a bit. Hack it till you like it.
function we_are_in_git_work_tree {
git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree &> /dev/null
}
function parse_git_branch {
if we_are_in_git_work_tree
then
local BR=$(git rev-parse --symbolic-full-name --abbrev-ref HEAD 2> /dev/null)
if [ "$BR" == HEAD ]
then
local NM=$(git name-rev --name-only HEAD 2> /dev/null)
if [ "$NM" != undefined ]
then echo -n "@$NM"
else git rev-parse --short HEAD 2> /dev/null
fi
else
echo -n $BR
fi
fi
}
function parse_git_status {
if we_are_in_git_work_tree
then
local ST=$(git status --short 2> /dev/null)
if [ -n "$ST" ]
then echo -n " + "
else echo -n " - "
fi
fi
}
function pwd_depth_limit_2 {
if [ "$PWD" = "$HOME" ]
then echo -n "~"
else pwd | sed -e "s|.*/\(.*/.*\)|\1|"
fi
}
COLBROWN="\[\033[1;33m\]"
COLRED="\[\033[1;31m\]"
COLCLEAR="\[\033[0m\]"
# Export all these for subshells
export -f parse_git_branch parse_git_status we_are_in_git_work_tree pwd_depth_limit_2
export PS1="$COLRED<$COLBROWN \$(pwd_depth_limit_2)$COLRED\$(parse_git_status)$COLBROWN\$(parse_git_branch) $COLRED>$COLCLEAR "
export TERM="xterm-color"
If you are checked out at a branch, you get the branch name.
If you are in a just init'd Git project, you just get '@'.
If you are headless, you get a nice human name relative to some branch or tag, with an '@' preceding the name.
If you are headless and not an ancestor of some branch or tag you just get the short SHA1.
In addition, a red '-' signifies a clean work directory and index, and a red '+' signifies the opposite.
python3 -m pip install powerline-status
) up and running in iTerm2 in a short amount of time. I think I like it!
Dec 22, 2022 at 20:17
Put it either in your .bashrc or better: save it in /etc/bash-prompt and source it from your .bashrc.
Using tput is supposed to be the right way to do colors.
#!/bin/bash
set_prompt()
{
local last_cmd=$?
local txtreset='$(tput sgr0)'
local txtbold='$(tput bold)'
local txtblack='$(tput setaf 0)'
local txtred='$(tput setaf 1)'
local txtgreen='$(tput setaf 2)'
local txtyellow='$(tput setaf 3)'
local txtblue='$(tput setaf 4)'
local txtpurple='$(tput setaf 5)'
local txtcyan='$(tput setaf 6)'
local txtwhite='$(tput setaf 7)'
# unicode "✗"
local fancyx='\342\234\227'
# unicode "✓"
local checkmark='\342\234\223'
# Line 1: Full date + full time (24h)
# Line 2: current path
PS1="\[$txtbold\]\[$txtwhite\]\n\D{%A %d %B %Y %H:%M:%S}\n\[$txtgreen\]\w\n"
# User color: red for root, yellow for others
if [[ $EUID == 0 ]]; then
PS1+="\[$txtred\]"
else
PS1+="\[$txtyellow\]"
fi
# Line 3: user@host
PS1+="\u\[$txtwhite\]@\h\n"
# Line 4: a red "✗" or a green "✓" and the error number
if [[ $last_cmd == 0 ]]; then
PS1+="\[$txtgreen\]$checkmark \[$txtwhite\](0)"
else
PS1+="\[$txtred\]$fancyx \[$txtwhite\]($last_cmd)"
fi
# Line 4: green git branch
PS1+="\[$txtgreen\]$(__git_ps1 ' (%s)')\[$txtwhite\]"
# Line 4: good old prompt, $ for user, # for root
PS1+=" \\$ "
}
PROMPT_COMMAND='set_prompt'
For my Mac with the Homebrew theme, this works really well. Fully debugged and very fast, and completely self-contained. BONUS: Smart enough to ONLY show a git branch as part of the prompt when you're actually in a git repo! :)
# Color prompt for git
reset=$(tput sgr0)
boldgreen=$(tput setaf 2)$(tput bold)
cyan=$(tput sgr0)$(tput setaf 6)
boldred=$(tput setaf 1)$(tput bold)
boldwhite=$(tput setaf 7)$(tput bold)
boldyellow=$(tput setaf 3)$(tput bold)
PARENCLR=$'\001\e[0;36m\002'
BRANCHCLR=$'\001\e[1;33m\002'
alias branchname="git branch 2>/dev/null | sed -ne 's/^* \(.*\)/ ${PARENCLR}(${BRANCHCLR}\1${PARENCLR}\)/p'"
GIT_STATUS='$(branchname)'
PROMPT_CHAR="\$"
PS1="\[$boldgreen\]\u\[$cyan\]::\[$boldred\]\h \[$cyan\]{\[$boldwhite\].../\W\[$cyan\]}\[$reset\]$GIT_STATUS\[$reset\]$PROMPT_CHAR "
Here's what it looks like: Mac + Homebrew + Color Git Prompt
If you want to have the full path (or remove the .../), then just change the -W to -w (and remove the .../).
Quick hack:
~/.bashrc
:parse_git_branch() {
git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* \(.*\)/(\1)/'
}
export PS1="\u@\h \[\e[32m\]\w \[\e[91m\]\$(parse_git_branch)\[\e[00m\]$ "
~/.bashrc
:More detail: https://medium.com/@thucnc/how-to-show-current-git-branch-with-colors-in-bash-prompt-380d05a24745
Modified version of @cmcginty's prompt that adds in the git
parsing function and uses slightly different spacing:
# So I know where I am in repos:
parse_git_branch() {
git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -e '/^[^*]/d' -e 's/* \(.*\)/ (\1)/'
}
# Modified from:
# https://stackoverflow.com/a/4138531/2662028
export PS1='\n\[\e[1;37m\]|-- \[\e[1;32m\]\u\[\e[0;39m\]@\[\e[1;36m\]\h\[\e[0;39m\]:\[\e[1;33m\]\w\[\e[0;39m\]\[\e[1;35m\]$(parse_git_branch " (%s)")\[\e[0;39m\] \[\e[1;37m\]--|\[\e[0;39m\]\n\$ '
This also uses \$
in the prompt instead of $
, which means you will get #
when you are root.
Just invoke tput
with the appropriate parameters. See the tput(1)
and terminfo(5)
man pages.
tput
command in \[
and \]
so the characters it outputs are not counted in the length of the prompt. This will keep the prompt from getting messed up when you scroll through history, for example.
Nov 9, 2010 at 16:18
Take a look at liquidprompt:
https://github.com/nojhan/liquidprompt
Maybe a bit too heavy for your requirements, but you can switch features off by setting
LP_ENABLE_...=0
See the documentation on above page.
Here's mine
export PS1="\n\[\033[1;30m\][$$:$PPID - \j:\!\[\033[1;30m\]]\[\033[0;36m\] \T \
\[\033[1;30m\][\[\033[1;34m\]\u@\H\[\033[1;30m\]:\[\033[0;37m\]${SSH_TTY:-o} \
\[\033[0;32m\]+${SHLVL}\[\033[1;30m\]] \[\033[1;37m\]\w\[\033[0;37m\]\[\033[1;34m\]\$(__git_ps1 \" (%s)\") \[\033[0;37m\] \n\$ "
Here is a Windows/Cygwin/Bash solution.
Add the following to your ~/.bashrc
file.
xxx is the location of your local Git repository.
GetBranch()
{
cat /cygdrive/c/xxx/.git/HEAD | sed 's+^ref: refs/heads/++'
}
export PS1="\[\e]0;\w\a\]\n\[\e[32m\]\u@\h \[\e[36m\]\$(GetBranch) \[\e[33m\]\w \[\e[0m\] \n\$ "
This PS1 will color your current git branch in yellow:
export PS1="[\033[38;5;11m]\u[$(tput sgr0)]@\h:[$(tput sgr0)][\033[38;5;6m][\w][$(tput sgr0)][\033[38;5;226m]($(git branch 2>/dev/null | grep '^*' | colrm 1 2))[$(tput sgr0)]: [$(tput sgr0)]"
To see in a more interactive way the how the building of a PS1 string can be done (other ways are possible obviously), here the link to a very handy PS1 string generator for your .bashrc. I used it for the string above:
It solves in a simple way your question and more generally the issue of building of a customized and colorized shell prompt, including the current git branch