Visual Studio Code on Windows uses PowerShell by default as the integrated terminal. If you want to use Bash from Visual Studio Code, what steps should be followed?
31 Answers
Install Git from https://git-scm.com/download/win
Open Visual Studio Code and press and hold Ctrl + ` to open the terminal.
Open the command palette using Ctrl + Shift + P.
Type - Select Default Profile
Select Git Bash from the options
Click on the + icon in the terminal window
The new terminal now will be a Git Bash terminal. Give it a few seconds to load Git Bash
You can now toggle between the different terminals as well from the dropdown in terminal.
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8This worked for me. I tried all of the other guides by manually adding in the default bash but it just opened up a new terminal window every time. Many thanks– GlenAug 21, 2018 at 10:30
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if ctrl+` doesn't work (as in, nothing happens! even after having installed git and set user settings json), then try this: ctrl+shift+P > Focus Terminal. Feb 27, 2019 at 11:28
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5
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2No one of this solutions work with the new VSCode Version: 1.60.0 (user setup): I still have powershell, when VSCode Startup.. Sep 6, 2021 at 18:59
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4Doesn't work for me. Git Bash doesn't show up in the options. I found the answer here. (other answers had a space character in the
Git Bash
name, which doesn't work - it has to beGitBash
without a space.) Jun 14, 2022 at 8:17
You no longer need to type in bash.exe path manually. This answer is deprecated. Now you can switch to bash directly, if you have git installed in the default path. If you installed git to a different path you need to use the below solution.
Install Git from https://git-scm.com/download/win.
Then open Visual Studio Code and open the command palette using Ctrl + Shift + P. Then type "open user setting", and then select "Open User Settings" from the drop down menu.
Then this tab will open up with default settings on left and your settings on the right:
Now copy this line of code to your own settings page (the pane on the right hand side) and save -
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
Note: "C:\\Program Files\Git\bin\bash.exe"
is the path where the bash.exe
file is located from the Git installation. If you are using the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) Bash shell, the path would be "C:\Windows\System32\bash.exe"
Now press Ctrl + ` to open up the terminal from Visual Studio Code. And you will have Bash -
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6Two infos, that might be helpful: make sure, that you escape backslash characters in your json, when writing the path. Also make sure, that you include the 64 bit version of git bash to your vscode, since the 32 bit version might not have the colors by default. (Just remove the " (x86)" part from the path) Jun 7, 2017 at 8:48
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2Adding to Lajos, if you still cannot see the terminal open up, try restarting vscode.– adityahSep 1, 2017 at 22:30
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5I was facing issue with
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\bin\bash.exe"
, terminal was not opening. Tried"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
. Worked perfectly for me. Dec 16, 2017 at 13:11 -
42FYI, make sure you link to
bash.exe
, and notgit-bash.exe
. The latter will open a terminal outside VS code as a separate window, whilstbash.exe
will run inside VS code.– DariusJan 16, 2018 at 19:16 -
2How to find settings.json in User settings, is not mentioned here and I had to play little bit with VSCode to find it. We need to type 'terminal' in the 'search setting' text box, and you will see a link "Edit in settings.json", you need to click here.– AshuDec 1, 2019 at 6:08
Updated 2023-03-09 : new screenshot. The pull down menu to select the terminal shell or configure the default one is slightly changed. Click Ctrl-'
to select:
Updated: Newer versions of Visual Studio Code have the Select Default Shell command in the terminal pull down menu:
Remember that it just lists the shells that are in your %PATH% environment variable. For shells that aren't in your path, see other answers.
Extra tip: when you start bash it will just execute .bashrc
, if you have initialization commands in .bash_profile
you must copy it to .bashrc
. It's essential for using Conda enviroments in Git Bash.
Before version 1.36 (June 2019)
The easiest way now (at least from Visual Studio Code 1.22 on) is to type Shift + Ctrl + P to open the Command Palette and type:
Select Default Shell
Now you can easily select your preferred shell between the ones found in your path:
For shells that aren't in your %PATH%, see the other answers.
See the complete Visual Studio Code shell reference. There's lot of meaty stuff.
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1This was the answer I was looking for. I wanted to use WSL Bash but the other answers was trying to using the bash that comes with git Jan 29, 2019 at 5:51
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3Is there a way to open a particular shell...without making it the "default?" I think it makes sense to have a "open 'bash' just this one time." Sep 8, 2019 at 23:09
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That must be specific to Linux, none of those are available in my Windows installation.– RedGlyphFeb 19 at 14:01
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1@RedGlyph now the pull down menu is beside the Plus sign. I'll edit the screenshot above.– nevesMar 9 at 21:47
Press and hold Ctrl + ` to open the terminal.
Inside the terminal, type bash
to use Git Bash in the terminal.
Note: Make sure you have Git Bash installed on your machine.
If you wish to use PowerShell again, just type powershell
in the terminal. To use the Windows command line, type cmd
in the terminal.
The setting you choose will be used as your default.
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4
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2To "switch back to powershell" probably you need to
exit
from your bash shell running inside the default shell, then typepowershell
since bash doesn't know what powershell is.– LucasApr 8, 2018 at 15:43
For me this is the only combination worked!
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\git-cmd.exe",
"terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": [
"--command=usr/bin/bash.exe",
"-l",
"-i"
]
With git-bash.exe as the ...shell.windows
, every time the bash was opening outside VS!!
Thank God it worked finally!! Else, I was planning to wipe out VS completely and reinstall it (making me to reinstall all my extensions and redo my customizations!)
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1this really helped me. I got bash working per the previous answers above, but I lost all of my bash and git aliases. This bought them back. Thanks. Jun 22, 2018 at 19:14
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1This is what worked with me: "terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe", "terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": [ "--login", "-i" ] Oct 7, 2018 at 8:57
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1This solution worked for me as well. A caveat to add is that in my case, to reduce lag with gitbash, followed this post stackoverflow.com/questions/32232978/… and set a new HOME environment variable in windows. To get it working properly in VSCode, the above answer worked perfectly.– Rob BJul 8, 2019 at 20:42
Things has been a little bit changed due to the latest updates on Visual Studio Code. The following steps work for me.
Press Ctrl + Shift + P to open the Visual Studio Code command palate.
Type
>preferences: Open Settings (JSON)
in the text area.Add the following lines at the end of the JSON file which is displayed in your right hand pane.
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
Close and reopen your Visual Studio Code instance.
Visual Studio Code can detect and list installed Git Bash
in the menu of config Terminal: Select Default Profile
, as many other answers have already described, but this has never happened to me. For those also not-so-lucky as me, you can add custom profile into Visual Studio Code's settings.json
manually:
{
// Tested in Visual Studio Code version 1.58.2, 1.59.1
// Notice: my git install path is `D:\Git\bin\bash.exe`
//"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
// This works fine for me for a long time,
// but in latest versions this is reported as deprecated,
// you can keep this and sometimes Visual Studio Code will prompt to help
// `migrate` it into new setting.
// This part can be generated by Visual Studio Code
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
// This seems to be a reserved profile name, and also does not work for
// me
"Git Bash": {
"path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
},
"PowerShell": {
"source": "PowerShell",
"icon": "terminal-powershell"
},
"Command Prompt": {
"path": [
"${env:windir}\\Sysnative\\cmd.exe",
"${env:windir}\\System32\\cmd.exe"
],
"args": [],
"icon": "terminal-cmd"
},
// Add your custom one with a different profile name from "Git Bash"
"gitbash": {
"path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
}
},
// Set the custom profile as default
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "gitbash",
// ...
}
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3For
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "gitbash"
- Value is not accepted. Valid values: "PowerShell", "Command Prompt", "Git Bash", "JavaScript Debug Terminal".– RaulSep 10, 2021 at 11:58 -
@Raul It is only a warning, you can try reloading the VS Code window to check the effect. If the profile name you set for
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows"
corresponds to the one added in"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows"
it should work.– rustyhuSep 10, 2021 at 17:14 -
Mine has the following line, and it works on my system:
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash"
Jan 30, 2022 at 15:00 -
@SherylHohman Yeah if the "Git Bash" profile already exists and works it's fine, but if it does not you can also add a custom profile as what my answer introduces.– rustyhuFeb 1, 2022 at 15:18
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1The take-away is that the name you supply must match an existing (self-defined) profile name. It can be named anything you wish, but the name must be the same in both locations...and that is possibly the source of @Raul error. Edit the settings.json file accordingly. Feb 1, 2022 at 16:20
I followed this tutorial from Paul DeCarlo to use the Bash from the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) instead of what comes with Git Bash for Windows. They are the same steps as above in the answer, but use the below in your User Settings instead.
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Windows\\sysnative\\bash.exe",
This worked for me the first time... which is rare for this stuff.
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1
This, at least for me, will make Visual Studio Code open a new Bash window as an external terminal.
If you want the integrated environment you need to point to the sh.exe
file inside the bin
folder of your Git installation.
So the configuration should say C:\\<my-git-install>\\bin\\sh.exe
.
(2021, VSC v.1.55.1)
How to add Git Bash
as default Terminal
, for those who installed their Git Bash not in the default path:
- In Visual Studio Code open
Settings
using Ctrl + , - a) In
Search settings
(red box on screenshot) field typeintegrated automation
b) Or just click through Features -> Terminal (blue boxes on ss)
- Click any Edit in settings.json
- Type your
bash.exe
location into the"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": " "
field
Note1: As it's a JSON file, remember to use double \\
instead of \
in your pathway.
Note2: Don't confuse the bash.exe
(it's in bin
folder) with git-bash.exe
, in first case the bash terminal will stay inside VSC, in second it will be opened externally.
It depends on whether you have installed Git Bash in the current user only or all users:
If it is installed on all users then put "terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
in your User Settings (Ctrl + Comma).
If it is installed on only the current user then put "terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Users\\<name of your user>\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
in your User Settings (Ctrl + Comma).
If the methods listed above do not work then you should try Christer's solution which says -
If you want the integrated environment you need to point to the
sh.exe
file inside thebin
folder of your Git installation.So the configuration should say
C:\\<my-git-install>\\bin\\sh.exe
.
Note: The sh.exe and bash.exe appear completely same to me. There should be no difference between them.
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This worked for me since I (for some reason) installed git for only the current user but I accessed the json settings via: CTRL-SHFT-P then selected 'Preferences: Open Settings (JSON)' Thanks for the code snippet!– AWPJan 5, 2021 at 21:02
This answer is similar to the top voted answer, but with an important distinction: a lot of the previous answers on this question focus on running Git Bash while my answer focuses on running WSL Bash.
Enable Windows Subsystem for Linux on your Windows 10 machine.
Open Visual Studio Code and press and hold Ctrl + ` to open the terminal.
Open the command palette using Ctrl + Shift + P.
Type -
Select Default Shell
.Select
WSL Bash
(NOTGit Bash
) from the options.
- Click on the
+
icon in the terminal window. The new terminal now will be a WSL Bash terminal!
My VS Code version: 1.56.1 (code --version)
User settings for configuring integrated terminals:
- Ctrl + Shift + P
- type: user
- select: Preferences: Open User Settings
- click: Open Settings (JSON) button (near to upper right corner)
settings.json:
{
"terminal.integrated.tabs.enabled": true,
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "<your installation path>\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash",
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"Git Bash": {
"path": "<your installation path>\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
},
"Command Prompt": {
"path": "${env:windir}\\System32\\cmd.exe",
"icon": "terminal-cmd"
},
"Windows PowerShell": {
"path": "C:\\WINDOWS\\System32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe",
"icon": "terminal-powershell"
}
}
}
terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows
This property will only set GitBash to be default when you hit the "add new terminal" ("+") button. It is not enought to make it default on startup.
terminal.integrated.shell.windows
Depricated warning will be shown. But this configuration is needed to make the selected shell (GitBash here) default on startup.
Problem filtering
On PROBLEMS tab, next to the input field, clicking on the filter icon I checked "Show Active File Only" option to make this deprecated error disappear when dealing with anything else.
Latest VS code :
- if you can't see the settings.json, go to menu File -> Preferences -> Settings (or press on
Ctrl+,
) - Settings appear, see two tabs User (selected by default) and Workspace. Go to User -> Features -> Terminal
- Terminal section appear, see link
edit in settings.json
. Click and add"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
- Save and Restart VS code.
Bash terminal will reflect on the terminal.
Add the Git\bin
directory to the Path
environment variable. The directory is %ProgramFiles%\Git\bin
by default. By this way you can access Git Bash with simply typing bash
in every terminal including the integrated terminal of Visual Studio Code.
I had already set up lots of conda
environments on WSL
(Bash on Ubuntu on Windows), so I wanted to use the same Bash installation on Visual Studio Code.
To do that, I just had to specify the path of this particular Bash executable (instead of the Git-Bash
) on Visual Studio Code's settings:
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Windows\\System32\\bash.exe"
PS: to make sure where your Ubuntu on Bash executable is installed on your Windows machine, open the Command prompt
(search: cmd
) and run:
where bash.exe
simply go to settings.json in visual studio code and add this line:
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash",
For scoop users:
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Users\\[YOUR-NAME]\\scoop\\apps\\git\\current\\usr\\bin\\bash.exe",
"terminal.integrated.shellArgs.windows": [
"-l",
"-i"
],
-
This helped me to find a location of my
git-bash
bash.exe: /c/Apps/Git/usr/bin/bash.exe.echo $SHELL
was giving just/usr/bin/bash
– frmbelzAug 11, 2022 at 15:56
VS CODE 1.60.0
As I was facing the preceding problem that Git Bash has not been recognized at all, although being previously installed. To let any of the above-mentioned solutions work, you need to follow the instructions discussed in this thread and listed below.
- Go to your
settings.json
- enable git bash by adding
"git.enabled": true
- and define it's path by adding
"git.path": "<YOUR PATH TO GIT>\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
Afterward, the instructions, for instance as defined by @rustyhu, will work.
PS: Hopefully I'm gonna save you a couple hours of time while debugging the originally stated problem
-
Isn't it
<YOUR PATH TO GIT>\\Git\\bin\\git.exe
instead ofbash.exe
? It is for"git.path"
, path and filename of the git executable.– rustyhuOct 12, 2021 at 11:23 -
Update: (June 2022 , VsCode 1.67)
Many answers here (as this one, highly upvoted) rely on the setting "terminal.integrated.shell.windows"
which is now deprecated.
And many others (as the accepted one) assume Git for Windows to be installed with bash.exe
in the PATH
- which is not the currently recommended/default installation option.
My current recipe:
Add the following to your settings (Ctrl-Shift-P
-> Preferences: Open Settings (JSON)
), replacing with your own bash path:
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"GitBash": {
"path": "C:\\devel\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
}
},
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "GitBash",
Close your current terminals and restart VsCode.
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1This is the way. I have been looking for this solution for several months now. Thank you!– grabearJun 27, 2022 at 1:06
What about detached or unrelated shells and code [args]
support?
While other answers talk about how to configure and use the VScode integrated WSL bash
terminal support, they don't solve the problem of "detached shells": shells which were not launched from within VScode, or which somehow get "disconnected" from the VScode server instance associated with the IDE.
Such shells can give errors like:
Command is only available in WSL or inside a Visual Studio Code terminal.
or...
Unable to connect to VS Code server.
Error in request
Here's a script which makes it easy to solve this problem.
I use this daily to connect shells in a tmux
session with a specific VScode server instance, or to fix an integrated shell that's become detached from its hosting IDE.
#!/bin/bash
# codesrv-connect
#
# Purpose:
# Copies the vscode connection environment from one shell to another, so that you can use the
# vscode integrated terminal's "code [args]" command to communicate with that instance of vscode
# from an unrelated shell.
#
# Usage:
# 1. Open an integrated terminal in vscode, and run codesrv-connect
# 2. In the target shell, cd to the same directory and run
# ". .codesrv-connect", or follow the instruction printed by codesrv-connect.
#
# Setup:
# Put "codesrv-connect somewhere on your PATH (e.g. ~/bin)"
#
# Cleanup:
# - Delete abandoned .codesrv-connect files when their vscode sessions die.
# - Do not add .codesrv-connect files to git repositories.
#
# Notes:
# The VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI environment variable points to a socket which is rather volatile, while the long path for the 'code' alias is more stable: vscode doesn't change the latter even across a "code -r ." reload. But the former is easily detached and so you need a fresh value if that happens. This is what codesrv-connect does: it captures the value of these two and writes them to .codesrv-connect in the current dir.
#
# Verinfo: v1.0.0 - les.matheson@gmail.com - 2020-03-31
#
function errExit {
echo "ERROR: $@" >&2
exit 1
}
[[ -S $VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI ]] || errExit "VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI not defined or not a pipe [$VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI]"
if [[ $(which code) != *vscode-server* ]]; then
errExit "The 'code' command doesn't refer to something under .vscode-server: $(type -a code)"
fi
cat <<EOF >.codesrv-connect
# Temp file created by $(which codesrv-connect): source this into your working shell like '. .codesrv-connect'
# ( git hint: add ".codesrv-connect" to .gitignore )
#
cd "$PWD"
if ! test -S "$VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI"; then
echo "ERROR: $VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI not a socket. Dead session."
else
export VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI="$VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI"
alias code=$(which code)
echo "Done: the 'code' command will talk to socket \"$VSCODE_IPC_HOOK_CLI\" now."
echo "You can delete .codesrv-connect when the vscode server context dies, or reuse it in other shells until then."
fi
EOF
echo "# OK: run this to connect to vscode server in a destination shell:"
echo ". $PWD/.codesrv-connect"
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1For any fish users out there, I compiled something based on this into a small fish plugin github.com/chvolkmann/code-connect-fish-plugin Feb 13, 2021 at 18:59
VSCODE 1.63.2
Even combining the answers here, I couldn't get it to work. Maybe, I have a somewhat exotic setup. I'd get this error, Setting "terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash"
and it would still only open Powershell and Git Bash is nowhere to be seen:
My workaround was to modify the entry for Command Prompt
by changing its path pointing to bash and then set that as default, like so:
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"PowerShell": {
"source": "PowerShell",
"icon": "terminal-powershell"
},
"Command Prompt": {
"path": [
"C:\\Path\\To\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
// "${env:windir}\\Sysnative\\cmd.exe",
// "${env:windir}\\System32\\cmd.exe"
],
"args": [],
"icon": "terminal-cmd"
},
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Command Prompt",
In July 2022, I fixed this by adding the following inside the curly braces.
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash"
Notice the space between Git and Bash.
So, my settings.json
looks like this:
{
"python.defaultInterpreterPath": "C:\\Users\\Prakh\\AppData\\Local\\Programs\\Python\\Python39\\python.exe",
"python.diagnostics.sourceMapsEnabled": true,
"python.linting.pylintEnabled": true,
"python.linting.enabled": true,
"code-runner.runInTerminal": true,
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash"
}
Now restart VS code and close all existing terminals and open a new one.
Ctrl+Shift+P
> Open User Settings > Paste the following inside { }
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"Git Bash": {
"path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
}
},
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash",
"git.enabled": true,
"git.path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
If you are in a Workspace!
Ctrl+Shift+P
> Open Workspace Settings > Paste the following inside "settings": { }
:
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"Git Bash": {
"path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
}
},
"terminal.integrated.defaultProfile.windows": "Git Bash",
"git.enabled": true,
"git.path": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe",
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "D:\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
Finally close all of your Vscode windows/instances, reopen and you're good to go.
With regard to leonbloy and soulshined solutions!
I happen to be consulting for a Fortune 500 company and it's sadly Windows 7 and no administrator privileges. Thus Node.js, Npm, Visual Studio Code, etc.. were pushed to my machine - I cannot change a lot, etc...
For this computer running Windows 7:
Below are my new settings. The one not working is commented out.
{
"update.channel": "none",
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
//"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Windows\\sysnative\\bash.exe"
}
I tried the above answers as of vscode 1.42.1 and they worked inasmuch as to get me a git bash terminal. So, bottom line this setting works just for opening a bash shell from terminal:
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\Program Files\\Git\\bin\\bash.exe"
However it has the unwanted side effect of also being the shell used to build things and that breaks the MS C++ chain because the \
character used for path separator is understood by bash as an escape character. The complete fix for me then required me to add this extra variable, setting it to powershell:
"terminal.integrated.automationShell.windows": "C:\\Windows\\System32\\WindowsPowerShell\\v1.0\\powershell.exe"
Now, I can have my bash terminal and Ctrl-Shift-B
or F5
work without problems.
Oh, and as other posters mentioned, the source for this information is VSCode's documentation.
To open a terminal in Visual Studio Code you do not need to use Ctrl + ` as recommended everywhere, since it's highly inconvenient finger operation. A better solution would be this:
Ctrl + j
If you already have "bash", "powershell" and "cmd" CLI's and have correct path settings then switching from one CLI to another can done by the following ways.
Ctrl + ' : Opens the terminal window with default CLI.
bash + enter : Switch from your default/current CLI to bash CLI.
powershell + enter : Switch from your default/current CLI to powershell CLI.
cmd + enter : Switch from your default/current CLI to cmd CLI.
VS Code Version I'm using is 1.45.0
In the latest stable build, i.e. 1.54, Disabling ConPTY solved my problem. I am writting this incase it does solve yours too.
{
"terminal.integrated.shell.windows": "C:\\path\\to\\bin\\bash.exe",
"terminal.integrated.windowsEnableConpty": false
}
Add this to settings.json
{
"terminal.integrated.profiles.windows": {
"PowerShell": {
"source": "Git Bash",
"icon": "terminal-bash"
},