Is there any easy way to convert bash output to HTML? For example, if I have some colorized output in bash (something like htop
), how can I convert it to HTML, with corresponding stylings/tags/css/etc.
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1What would the conversion results look like? There is no recognizable structure here that could be converted into HTML tags. What exactly are you trying to achieve?– PekkaJan 9, 2010 at 12:08
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Your data seems to be full of ANSI control sequences. Is that intentional?– anonJan 9, 2010 at 12:09
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2Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/245121/…– TobuJan 9, 2010 at 12:20
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If you are using Konsole terminal emulator you can File -> Save Output As... then choose File type: HTML document, to save everything to HTML– AlmirJan 24, 2023 at 13:53
5 Answers
There's ansifilter
plus some tools like highlight
will produce colorized html from plain text such as source files.
Both available here.
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3This is exactly what I want ... ansifilter -i file -H -o file.html Jan 10, 2010 at 14:11
As suggested in @eli's answer, you can use script
to capture the colored output to a file.
You can then convert the output to HTML with aha
, the "Ansi HTML Adapter", which should be available in your distribution's repositories: apt install aha
or yum install aha
for Debian-based or Redhat-based distributions.
If you want to capture only a single command, use the -c
option:
script -c "grep --color ..."
This will save the output to a file named typescript
in your current directory.
To save to a different file, add the file name at the end:
script -c "grep --color ..." my_grep_colored_output
See man script
for other options.
To capture several commands from an interactive session, just start script
without a command, and enter Ctrl-d to exit script when done.
To just view the file in color, use less -R
.
To convert it to HTML with aha
:
aha -s -f typescript > output.html
or
aha -s < typescript > output.html
The -s
option makes it write a style sheet in the html header instead of using inline styles through the file. That makes it easier to change colors if some background/foreground combinations turn out hard to read in a browser.
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aha
did the trick for me, and was available in the debian repositories, thanks! Dec 6, 2022 at 9:21
Without any pretty-printing, the simplest thing you can always do is to escape everything that needs escaping, and wrap a basic HTML shell around (the following should be valid minimal HTML5). For example, get a hold of fastesc: http://raa.ruby-lang.org/project/fastesc/, and that wrap it into an HTML shell.
If you want to preserve the ANSI magic, then you need to convert that to HTML, perhaps with http://ansi-sys.rubyforge.org/
And then do something like this, depending on your needs:
require 'ansisys'
def ansi_escape(string)
terminal = AnsiSys::Terminal.new
terminal.echo(string)
terminal.render
end
def to_html(string)
%Q{ <!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Converted to html</title>
<pre>
#{ansi_escape(string)}
</pre>
}
end
1.) check that ansifilter
and script
programs are installed
2.) script -c 'ansible-playbook -i /tmp/or/some /tmp/other/command.yml' -O /tmp/myTypescriptOutput.file
(script
writes the output of a command to a file in typescript notation)
3.) convert to html, e.g. to view with your browser:
ansifilter -i /tmp/myTypescriptOutput.file -H -o output.html
convert to rtf, e.g. to view with libreoffice or word
ansifilter -i /tmp/myTypescriptOutput.file -R -o output.rtf
see man ansifilter
for other options (latex, tex, svg, pangot, txt, ...)
(additional, if highlight
is installed:
highlight /tmp/myTypescriptOutput.file --force
... this will print the saved-shell output in color, like if it was executed at first time)